Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Elephant Seal Season at Ano Nuevo State Reserve

Face off. Males fighting. Photo by C.G.
Each year from December to April, crowds flock to Ano Nuevo State Reserve south of Pescadero to catch a glimpse of the world's best deep water divers: elephant seals. Weighing in at 6,000 lbs a pop for alpha males, 60 lbs for newborn pups, these mighty swimmers mostly live underwater - up to 90% of the time. Each winter, colonies of thousands of elephants travel from Alaska to the California coast and set up camp on land at Ano Nuevo for romantic courtship, beach fights and baby showers. If you want to see this seasonal treat, there's only one way: reserve a guided walk now. My brother's family and us took our kids (10 months, 2.5 years, 5 years, 7 years) in late December and without exception, they all loved it. Come on, big seals flopping on the beach?

Point Ano Nuevo. Photo by C.G.
 History
La Punta de Ano Nuevo was named on January 3rd, 1603 by Father Antonio de la Ascension, chaplain for the Spanish maritime explorer Don Sebastian Vizcaino. Comissioned to map Alta Calfornia by the Spanish Viceroy of Mexico, Vizcaino sailed a crew of 130 men on 3 ships and recorded ecological features from the San Diego bay up to Oregon. This is how Ano Nuevo got its name - one of the oldest place names in Northern California. Had Vizcaino's expedition landed that day, they would not have found any elephant seals on the beach. Not a single one. Grizzly bears were the kings of California on land then. Elephant seal pups would have been no match for the fierce bears. Surprisingly, elephant seals only started appearing at Ano Nuevo in the early 1970s. Almost 40 years later, the colony has grown from a few hundred to 6,000 animals in the park by early February each year.

The guided walk

Going to see the elephant seals. Photo by C.G.
As we arrived at Ano Nuevo's visitor center, we checked in with the rangers and received a trail map. Our group had already started but the ranger called the docent on duty we'd be joining 10 minutes later. We followed the easy sandy trail and arrived at the staging station, where seven people were observing marine mammal skulls. We introduced ourselves to the ranger. There were two other families that day, two people from San Francisco and their visiting relatives from South Africa with two tweens.

Immediately, ranger Phil included us in the group and we started off towards the sand dunes. The sand dunes is where the elephants seals can be seen. Ranger Phil was amazing with the kids, involving them in the elephant seal explanations and getting the message across in words they understood. I was impressed. We walked past the gate that indicates the restricted zone and past the "Wild Elephant Seals - stay back 25 feet" sign. "This must be the most photographed sign of California!" joked the ranger. Ha! We all took turns to photograph ourselves in front of it and proved his point.

Gee, what a snout! Photo by C.G.

The 25-feet part is for real, ranger Phil explained. Though enormous and gelatinous, elephant seals can be fast animals and if you are in the way of the object of their desire, you'll end up as beach burger. His advice? Buddy up with people around you and don't let kids get close. Parents, it's not OK to ask a toddler to pose in front of a 5-ton wild animal. Just sayin'.

We left the dirt trail to continue up the sand dunes, between thickets of low willow and lupine bushes. Brown pelicans flew overhead, out to the ocean. Soon we met ranger Chick stationed between two dunes. Twenty feet away, we saw our first elephant seal, a sleepy sluggish guy completely inland. "He has probably been kicked off the beach by another male," explained ranger Chuck. A deep gurggly sound came from the beach. "That's the male threat call," explained ranger Phil. As in: get-out-of-my-way threat call. You can listen to a recorded male northern elephant seal call here, it could remind you of your snoring grand-dad.

Elephant seal swimming off Ano Nuevo. Photo by C.G.

The threat call completely got our attention. Was it the anticipation before an action scene? The realization that we were entering a boxing ring? Whichever it is, we all moved more cautiously and surveyed every single bush as if they were about to jump at us. The route to the southern dunes was blocked by two elephant seals on the move so we headed to the northern observation platform first.

Ranger Phil was just explaining how elephant seals can touch their nose with their tail bending backwards when we reached the top of the dune and took in Ano Nuevo Beach. What a sight!


Coyote grocery-shopping on the beach. Photo by C.G.
 Though we were still early in the season, there were elephant seals lying on the beach, others wading in the water, a pup giving us the cute look. Cameras went crazy.

To top it off, a sorry-looking coyote crossed the beach looking for dead pups to eat. It was Discovery Channel Central here! Poor thing I thought about the coyote. Looking miserable and hunting for dead food to fatten up? I thought coyotes were predators, not scavengers.



Ano Nuevo Beach. Photo by C.G.
Tough life yes, but not as tough as the life of northern male elephant seals around us. For most of them, Ano Nuevo is a one-way ticket from the Aleutian islands. Between the great white sharks and killer whales in the water, heat exhaustion and male fights on the beach, many of the alpha males never return.

In sharp contrast, females live 7 years older and pick the male of their choosing. They are also the best divers, having been recorded 30 to 40 minutes a mile deep. But as far as moms, they aren't very caring. After pups are born, females nurse them 28 days on the beach and one foggy morning, they swim away and it's "Ciao baby! Time to go get your food." I guess it takes that to toughen them up and get them ready for the hard knock life ahead of them but still... 28 days isn't much of a pampered childhood.

Eventually we made our way to the southern observation platform, narrowly avoiding being blocked off by another Jabba the Hut contender, and trailed back to the visitor center. For a real life experience, check out this video of our trip edited by my brother Lionel (an awesome web designer and designated videocam-man on family trips).


To go to Ano Nuevo during the elephant seal season
  • Guided Public Walks are offered December 15 through March 31 and can be booked 56 days in advance and no later than one day before arrival.
  • Ano Nuevo Public Seal Walks can be booked online or over the phone at 650-879-2033.
  • The price for the walk is $7.00 per person. Children 3 and under are free, and do not need a ticket.
  • Walks last about 2.5 hours, and consist of a moderately strenuous 3 mile hike over sand and sloping terrain.
  • No pets are allowed.
  • Leave a picnic in your car so you can eat your lunch at the picnic tables before or after the walk.

3 comments:

Debi said...

We're scheduled for one of the guided walks later this month. So great to read about your experience first! Love the video, BTW.

Christine said...

Laure - I seem to recall that the moms spend that 28 days on the beach without sustenance (no food, no water). If I am correct about this, then that is a tough life too! I can see why they are ready to dive back in the water, without looking back.

Anonymous said...

Christine you're right. Moms lose one third of their weight in 28 days. That said, males lose 1,500 lbs out of 5- or 6,000 lbs between December and February. Less drastic but still impressive. Ah, the power of love!