BBC Wildlife - UK (2021-12)

(Maropa) #1

114 BBC WILDLIFE December 2021


We had just begun our dive,
heading towards a rocky wall
on Al Qibliyah, one of the
four small islands of Oman’s
Hallaniyat archipelago, when I heard
an uncanny sound. A series of moans,
accompanied by a clicking and knocking
that reverberated through my body.

I looked up to see our guide vigorously
signalling to follow him into the blue –
clearly the dive site we had planned to visit
could wait.
The sounds got louder and louder until
all of a sudden a dark shape came into focus
ahead of us, the enormous form of what I
found out later was a juvenile humpback.

My fellow divers and I came to a halt
as the magnificent creature approached. At
least 3m long, its dark grey skin dotted with
barnacles, the whale described a wide circle
around us. It was moving fast but there
was nothing threatening about the whale’s
behaviour – we were visitors in its world
and it had simply come to find out what we
were doing there.
Breathless with excitement, I pirouetted
in the water so as not to have to take my
eyes off the whale for a single second.
Passing within a couple of metres of where
I was waiting, it was close enough for me to
look it in the eye. 
Having satisfied its curiosity about
this small group of humans in neoprene,
the whale sailed off, its moans and clicks
gradually fading into silence. Shaking our
heads in disbelief at what we had just
experienced, we swam back the way we
had come.
On the boat that evening – we
were spending a week on a ‘liveaboard’,
diving three or four times each day – the
humpback was all we could talk about.
Experienced divers all, none of us had ever
had an encounter like it.
The following morning, on a dive at
another site, while the others got stuck
into photographing the reef, I kept finding
myself looking over my shoulder. I didn’t
really think I would spot another whale but
I couldn’t help myself from gazing out into
the blue just in case.
Then it happened. A humpback – the
same individual as the previous day, a
different one, I have no idea – swept past.
It was gone before I could get anyone else’s
attention. My own private show.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jo Caird is a freelance
journalist who has dived all
over the world, from the
Great Barrier Reef to the
Norwegian fjords. Read
more about her work at
jocaird.com.

Have a wild tale to tell? Email a brief synopsis
to [email protected]

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Eye to eye with a humpback


whale in the Middle East


AL QIBLIYAH, OMAN

ST

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E^ P

RE

TT

Y

The Arabian Sea
hosts a small
subpopulation of
humpback whales
Free download pdf