CELEBRATE
MIGRATING GRAY WHALES OFF VANCOUVER ISLAND
Ucluelet, Tofino
and Pacific Rim National Park Reserve welcome migrating gray whales
with regional festival
Released on
= February 23, 2005, 3:18 pm
Press Release
Author = For details on the Pacific Rim Whale Festival, visit
www.pacificrimwhalefestival.org or call (250)726-7798. To receive
an information package outlining 2005 Festival events, plus local
attractions and services, please call Ucluelet Chamber of Commerce
at (250) 726-4600 or the Tofino Long Beach Chamber of Commerce (250)
725-3414.
Industry = Entertainment
Press Release
Summary = WEST COAST VANCOUVER ISLAND – March is fast approaching
and so are about 25,000 gray whales en route from Mexico along North
America’s west coast. Ucluelet, Tofino and Pacific Rim National
Park are celebrating the migration of these whales March 19-27,
with the 19th Annual, nine-day Pacific Rim Whale Festival.
Press Release
Body = Besides watching whales, over 70 events are planned, including
Ucluelet’s famous “Chowder Chow Down,” a seafood
chowder competition among local
restaurants dotting the west coast between Ucluelet and Tofino.
For a few toonies, taste and judge the best for yourself.
Cheer for your
favorite float in the “Parade of Whales” along Tofino’s
historic Main Street. Or, watch local “Artists in Action”
in Ucluelet, Tofino and in Pacific Rim National Park.
Opening ceremonies
on the beach next to the Park’s Wickaninnish Interpretive
Center include a totem pole-raising ceremony by the Ucluelet First
Nations people,
sandcastle building and a Tug-o-Whale between Ucluelet and Tofino.
On the edge of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in the heart
of the largest coastal temperate rainforest in the world, sit Pacific
Rim National Park and the villages of Ucluelet and Tofino (populations
1,800 and 1,600). Perched on the Pacific Ocean and surrounded by
millennia-old rain forest, the area is well poised to witness the
gray whale migration. Once declared extinct, these 35-ton wandering
giants return en mass after winter breeding in Mexican lagoons.
At its peak in March, some 25,000 gray whales pass waters during
spring migration, often within five kilometers of the rugged west
coast shore. The whales are headed for their summer feeding ground
in the Arctic’s
Bering and Chukchi seas, where they will feed voraciously to gain
back the third of their body weight lost during migration.
“You can
literally watch whales 30 to 40 feet right off the rocky coast here,”
says Steve Sperger of the Pacific Rim Whale Festival.
Although gray
whales are flooding the waters during spring migration, orca and
humpback whales can be seen as well.
As winter storms
begin to subside, a hike along Ucluelet’s 8.5 km Wild Pacific
Trail offers an exceptional vantage point, especially at Amphitrite
Point Lighthouse.
Adventure-seekers can watch up close on zodiac or floatplane tours
or rent a surfboard to take advantage of waves averaging 3-5 feet,
reaching 6-8 feet on good
days. Ucluelet is a four-hour drive and Tofino a five-hour drive
from Victoria, BC. Each is about a 45-minute flight from both Vancouver
and Seattle. The Government of Canada has contributed funding to
this initiative.
Web Site = http://
Contact Details
= Chris Higgins
Director & Owner Seasmoke PR Inc.
Phone: (250) 721-2739
Fax: (250) 385-2730
E-mail: chris@seasmokepr.com
Web: www.seasmokepr.com
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