If you want to have your socks knocked off, visit the seals during the month of December. It is at that time that the older males, the beachmasters, arrive to stake out their territories. These huge animals, some 16 ft. long and weighing up to 5,000 lbs. are a sight to behold, especially when they raise their massive heads and girth up six feet to bark out their presence and challenge. We have seen 20-30 of these boys lined up in a straight line, huge heads pointing toward the water as they anxiously await the incoming females. They are much larger than a Volkswagen Bug and could easily crush it flat if they had to "slide" over one to get at another male. And don't let their massive size lull you to think they are just a gigantic "slug." They can move really fast...as you will see when the huge bulls engage in battles to determine who is in charge. The dominant "alpha" bulls do most of the breeding and are kept pretty busy protecting their harem from other "sneeky" males trying to get lucky and steal a tryst with an isolated female.
Migration...directed, regular or systematic movement in our natural world. The steelhead arrive to their streams in the fall...the saga of the Monarch butterfly pauses on the Pacific coast in the winter...the gray whales on their northern journey in the spring. The BlaNic's odyssey continues to originate and adjourn via Cambria...35° 33′ 14.51″ N, 121° 5′ 14.62″ W
Jan 9, 2010
The Elephant Seals of Piedras Blancas
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