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Fellowship of the Whales
Introduction

In Hawaii, where new land is born as volcanic rock, another birth takes place. A baby humpback enters the world and joins the 3,000 or more whales that congregate in the warm waters off Hawaii each winter to mate and give birth. This is the story of her first year of life. Over twelve months she will learn many skills from her mother, and eventually they will make the several-thousand-mile journey together to Alaska’s southeast coast.

Humpbacks travel between Hawaii and Alaska every year, guided by their internal compass. The krill-rich waters of Alaska’s Alexander Archipelago are the whales’ summer feeding grounds, an environment very different from the calving grounds they have left behind in Hawaii. Here, more than the water temperature changes, the behavior of the whales changes, as well. While fiercely competitive in the breeding season in Hawaii, fighting for mates and protecting young, the opposite is true in Alaska. Whales cooperate, working in teams to gather food in the most efficient way possible. When the summer ends and the food is gone, mother and baby will head back to Hawaii again.

The young humpback calf has only a year to learn the subtleties of whale society before she is left by her mother to continue her education on her own, learning from observation and experience. It’s an incredible journey between two strikingly different environments that reveals the true complexity of the fellowship of the whales.

NATURE’s Fellowship of the Whales premieres Sunday, November 15 at 8pm (check local listings).

Photo © 2008 (Peggy Stap / Hawaii Whale Research Foundation) under NMFS Research Permit No. 587-1767-01

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8 responses
Brian Swierczynski -- October 22nd, 2009 at 4:42 pm

Ah dude! Where you guys there when that mother Humpback and her baby swam up the Sacramento River?

Ester Quintana -- November 14th, 2009 at 5:22 pm

Is there a DVD about this program that can be purchased online? Thank you!!

NATURE Online -- November 15th, 2009 at 11:34 am

Ester, to find out how to purchase DVDs of this and other NATURE programs, click the “shop” link at the top of the page.

Laurel Mancini -- November 15th, 2009 at 11:00 pm

What an elegant program. Nice weaving of Alaskan and Hawaiian geography and Humpback biology.

wynette -- November 16th, 2009 at 12:26 am

We have observed this behavior from Maui and this video enriched our world and knowledge . Thank you for making us know l we must go back to Maui this year.

John Hastings -- November 16th, 2009 at 9:29 am

Acutally did a week long trip with Cynthia D’Vincent the week before they did the first summer of filming scouting sites. She has great pictures available for sale if you hit the Intersea website.

Rose -- November 16th, 2009 at 8:46 pm

There are no DVDs listed for these titles at this time on PBS shop online!! Please tell me how to get copies. Thanks

Miriam -- November 18th, 2009 at 11:16 pm

Beautiful. Precious. Thank you.

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