Great white sharks reclaim spotlight at San Diego Beach

The sighting Friday of three great white sharks off Black’s Beach in San Diego provides strong evidence that perhaps dozens of juvenile sharks are still utilizing the area between Black’s and Del Mar.

The sighting Friday of three great white sharks off Black’s Beach in San Diego illustrates that several juvenile sharks are still utilizing coastal waters between Black’s and Del Mar.

In the middle of this area is Torrey Pines State Beach, which contains bluff-top trails from which sharks can be spotted when conditions are right.

The following is a repost from last fall – “Great white sharks now a tourist attraction at San Diego beach” – with images I’ve since captured from one of the trails:

©Pete Thomas

Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve and State Beach is known for its sweeping views of the Pacific. Migrating whales are sometimes spotted in the distance.

But these days great white sharks are a premier attraction for some hikers at the reserve near San Diego. Dozens of juvenile white sharks have spent the summer and early fall off Torrey Pines and Del Mar, just to the north.

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The sharks have been feeding on stingrays and other bottom fishes, keeping a fairly low profile until recently.

Anglers began to hook them and on Oct. 30 the carcass of an 8-foot white shark was discovered on the shore at Torrey Pines. The shark died as a result of fishing activity. (White sharks are protected and targeting them while fishing is illegal.)

©Pete Thomas

On Nov. 4, a distance swimmer was bitten by a shark off Del Mar and hospitalized. Lyn Jutronich told NBC San Diego that the shark shook briefly before releasing its grip. Jutronich was hospitalized and treated for puncture wounds to her right thigh.

The type of shark was not confirmed, but it was presumed to be a juvenile white shark.

On Nov. 6, the Torrey Pines reserve posted a Facebook image of a white shark in a wave.

The Facebook post advertised the presence of sharks and listed spots from which they might be seen: Yucca Point, Razor Point and the Guy Fleming overlooks.

“For best results, plan your trip before 11 a.m. and during high tide,” the Torrey Pines reserve advised. “Sunglasses with polarized lenses and binoculars both also help.”

To be sure, the temporary white shark aggregation site at Torrey Pines is substantial.

Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab at California State University Long Beach, told FTW Outdoors that several white sharks tagged off Southern California in recent years are in the area.

“We’ve detected 31 tagged juvenile white sharks (in the last month) out the 62 tagged at Solana Beach, Del Mar and Torrey Pines over the last three years,” Lowe said. “We’ve seen up to 12 sharks in a single drone video frame at Torrey Pines in the last few months.

“This is now the largest aggregation since the Santa Barbara aggregation has broken down.”

It’s not clear how long the sharks will remain in the area.

Stunning footage shows gray whale hanging out with surfers

The swell was fading, but for surfers at a SoCal beach on Sunday, the presence of a whale more than made up for any lack of waves.

The swell might have been fading, but for surfers at a popular Southern California beach on Sunday, the presence of a whale more than made up for any lack of waves.

The first video accompanying this post, captured by Daina Buchner at Black’s Beach in San Diego County, shows a juvenile gray whale lolling just yards from the shore, at times surfacing in the lineup as surfers paddled for waves.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4Q–29bM-Y]

“As for the surfers’ reactions, most of them looked curious and in disbelief,” Buchner told For The Win Outdoors. “Mostly they were trying to stay out of the whale’s way, but sometimes the whale was obscured by the water and that’s when the surfers were surfing next to it.”

At 53 seconds, a wave breaks over the whale, with surfers riding the wave on either side of the whale. The whale does not seem bothered by the wave or the presence of surfers.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MV6RR7VnSoM]

About 25,000 gray whales are migrating down the coast, from feeding areas off Alaska to nursing and breeding areas off Mexico.

Juvenile whales, not in a great hurry, sometimes appear to be more curious and adventurous, and might linger in one spot for hours.

Trystan Snodgrass, who captured the drone footage in the second video accompanying this post, was first to locate the gray whale at Black’s Beach.

His morning footage shows the whale in remarkably clear water south of the surfing area, in almost nonexistent surf. The whale, measuring 20-plus feet, seems to be lounging in a turquoise sea of tranquility.

“Apparently they’re known to take a breather once they reach Southern California and the waters warm up,” Snodgrass said. “It was there for at least a few hours on Sunday, and the next morning it was spotted by a friend and I saw it finally leaving the area around noon on Monday.”

Alisa Schulman-Janiger, a Southern California-based whale researcher, told For The Win Outdoors that juvenile gray whales are more likely to travel closer to shore.

The whale in the footage, she said, might have been relaxing and enjoying the turbulence against its body. But it might also have been searching for food, opportunistically, in the sediment.

“This whale quite possibly swam all the way from Alaska, traveling by itself,” Schulman-Janiger said. “That’s not unusual, so maybe it just stopped to rest and enjoy some stimulation in the waves and mud, to roll in the sand and remove parasites, and possibly forage.”

Gray whale sightings are starting to increase off Southern California. The peak period, according to Schulman-Janiger, is often around the third week of January.

–Follow Daina Buchner and Trystan Snodgrass on Instagram