What it’s like swimming with marine life at Orlando’s Discovery Cove

Dive in.

I sit on a rock in an artificial lagoon, watching workers feed rays. “One for Pinky!” a worker calls as she throws a fish to a large pink whipray. Another woman notes the treat on a clipboard. There’s only one pink whipray in the lagoon, but I’m really impressed when the keepers can tell the five spotted eagle rays apart. These tropical rays can reach 10 feet wide and 16 feet long. Despite looking pretty flat, they tip the scales at more than 500 pounds. Here, the biggest eagle ray weighs in at a svelte 290.

In a land of theme parks, Orlando, Florida’s Discovery Cove is a relaxing respite from lining up for rides. Owned by SeaWorld, it’s a manicured nature experience — the fake coral is brightly painted like an amusement park ride backdrop, and the rays have their barbs clipped so they can’t sting you. It’s part aquarium, part water park, and a lot of fun if you can stomach animals in captivity. While I’m always conflicted about animal attractions, I really enjoyed my day at Discovery Cove.

An eagle ray swimming underwater at Orlando's Discovery Cove.
An eagle ray at Discovery Cove. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

About Discovery Cove

Discovery Cove opened in 2000 and bills itself as “an all-inclusive day resort.” You arrive in the morning between 7 and 9, show your ID, get your lanyard, then enter the lush grounds.

Breakfast and lunch at a big cafeteria are included in your admission, as are shorty wetsuits, towels, lockers, and animal-safe sunscreen. Guests can add extra amenities such as a private beach cabana or animal experiences like snorkeling with sharks or feeding flamingos.

A thatched roof covering a boardwalk at Discovery Cove in Orlando, Florida.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

Freshwater swimming at Discovery Cove

The park is divided into three main water areas: freshwater, the Grand Reef, and a dolphin lagoon. After eating breakfast — they made a special vegan tofu scramble for me, which was very nice — I decided to start with the warm freshwater area, with a water temperature in the low 80s. You can lounge in a couple of lagoons or grab a pool noodle and float along the lazy river.

I wound up drifting the lazy river three times over the course of the day. The best part is after passing through a pounding curtain of water, you float right into a fabulous aviary with gorgeous tropical birds flying overhead. You can float on through or get out of the water and feed birds from cups of chopped fruit. The lazy river alternates between being shallow enough to stand and depths of about 8 feet.

A green aracari sitting on a branch in the aviary at Orlando's Discovery Cove.
A green aracari in the aviary. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Exploring the Grand Reef

My favorite part of the park was swimming with rays and tropical fish in the Grand Reef. It was a little crowded, with snorkelers bumping into each other at times, but exciting to be so close to so many rays. There were shallow parts where people could stand and deeper parts for floating or swimming.

The shovelnose ray, which mostly spends its time on the sandy bottom, was especially large and odd-looking. People who are anxious about real-life snorkeling in the ocean will appreciate the safety of having the park’s sharks separated from the main lagoon.

Shovelnose rays swimming underwater at Discovery Cove.
Shovelnose rays swimming underfoot. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Swim with dolphins

Swimming with bottlenose dolphins is perhaps Discovery Cove’s most popular animal interaction — and the most controversial. The Humane Society and other animal welfare organizations have come out strongly against swim with dolphin attractions. It was not something I’d ever planned to do. But as a visiting travel writer, I found myself with a booked appointment time. The dolphin swim was going to happen with or without me, so I decided to see for myself what it was all about.

At the appointed time, participants were divided into groups of about 10 or 12, paired with a trainer, an assistant, and a dolphin. Coral, 23 years old and born into captivity, was our dolphin. We humans waded into the chilly lagoons, wearing our wetsuits. When the trainer signaled, Coral swam up to us. We got a little education, a lot of photo ops where we took turns posing with Coral, and a few dolphin tricks. It was cool to get up close and pet her rubbery tail, but I was embarrassed to see a creature smarter than I am reduced to making fart sounds for laughing tourists.

A group of tourists standing in water at Orlando's Discovery Cove.
People prepare to meet dolphins at Discovery Cove. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Throughout my day at Discovery Cove, I asked various employees what they thought about swim with dolphin experiences. The strongest justification is the same one that’s always used for zoos: people don’t care about things we don’t see and experience. The idea is that if we see animals in captivity, we’ll care about preserving them in the wild. This could lead to votes and dollars benefiting conservation efforts.

One employee said that she believes this is the most humane swim with dolphin concession, and she wouldn’t do it anywhere else. The keepers assured me that the dolphins can choose whether or not to participate on any given day, and they get the same amount of food either way.

I asked what the dolphins get out of towing visitors across the lagoon while we hold onto their dorsal fins and flippers. “It’s enrichment,” the trainer said, adding that she wished she knew more about how much Coral was really enjoying herself. The trainer emphasized that the dolphins have different personalities and different relationships with the trainers. While Coral is keen on interacting with humans, some dolphins can only tolerate us for about five minutes. The trainer told me she hadn’t worked with Coral for a while, so the dolphin probably wanted to hang out with her.

Except for the very oldest dolphins, who were captured before the laws changed, all the Discovery Cove dolphins were born in captivity. Maybe it’s sort of like a different culture. If you’re born in captivity and spend your life in an artificial lagoon, you take whatever fun is on offer —whether that’s interactions with humans or the rich, complex relationships that these creatures have with each other.

If you visit Discovery Cove

If you decide to visit Discovery Cove, sign up ahead, as some of the animal experiences sell out. Wait until you get there to apply sunscreen; the park has animal-safe lotions on tap. If you want a nice base of operations for your group, splurge on a private cabana.

Despite my unease about dolphin swims, this activity gets very high TripAdvisor reviews, with people finding it very special and magical. I was glad to see that all the trainers care about the animals, knowing them by name and treating them as individuals — whether dolphins, flamingos, or eagle rays.

A private cabana at Orlando's Discovery Cove.
One of Discovery Cove’s private cabanas. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Disclaimer: While this article was not sponsored, Outdoors Wire did visit Kissimmee during a press trip with Experience Kissimmee and its partners. As always, Outdoors Wire operates independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Los Cabos angler lands massive “cow” tuna, first of season

Nathan Browne’s catch could signal an early start to the season for catching giant yellowfin tuna off Cabo San Lucas.

A report from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, implies that the first “cow” yellowfin tuna of 2024 was likely caught Saturday after a two-hour fight in the Sea of Cortez.

“First COW of the season!? 270 POUND Yellowfin Tuna Caught Yesterday by La Playita local Nathan Browne on 50 lb test with live bait aboard his friend Miguel’s Panga,” Pisces Sportfishing Fleet announced Sunday via social media.

Cabo San Lucas has long been referred to as the marlin capital of the world, but giant yellowfin tuna attract international anglers every summer and fall.

A yellowfin tuna earns “cow” status if it tops 200 pounds. More rare are “super-cow” tuna weighing at least 300 pounds.

According to the International Game Fish Assn., the current world record was set off Cabo San Lucas in September 2012 with the catch of a 427-pound yellowfin tuna.

Yellowfin catches topping 400 pounds are exceedingly rare.

–Image courtesy of Pisces Sportfishing Fleet

Watch: Alligator nabs angler’s catch with astonishing speed

Footage shows the large reptile chasing the hooked fish onto shore and reappearing into frame with the catch between its jaws.

A Florida angler hooked and landed an impressive fish recently, but a super-speedy alligator raced ashore and stole his catch.

The accompanying footage shows the fish striking a lure and the alligator speeding after the fish as it’s being reeled toward shore. The gator pauses briefly as the fish is pulled onto land, then follows the fish out of frame.

Moments later, the gator reappears with its prize.

“WOW! Check out this gator quickly lunge out of the water to steal a fish for an easy dinner in Estero, Florida,” Matt Devitt of WINK News exclaimed Wednesday via X, crediting the footage to Gavin Borsky.

It’s unclear if Borsky staged the scene. But the footage reveals how swiftly alligators can maneuver: up to 20 mph in the water and 11 mph on land.

According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, alligators are opportunistic predators that commonly feed on fish.

Apparently, this gator has discovered, a hooked fish is easier to catch than a free-swimming fish.

–Alligator image courtesy of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

‘Fish Bandit’ arrested for taping fish to ATM machines

His Instagram bio: “Live, laugh, tape fish on ATMs.”

A teen whose Instagram username is @fish_bandit84 has been arrested in Provo, Utah, for taping fish to ATMs and other objects.

The 17-year-old executed these bizarre pranks more than a dozen times from last August through December, ABC4 and FOX13 in Salt Lake City reported, but they weren’t always in the Provo and Orem areas.

He did some of these strange antics internationally, too, posting videos of them on his Instagram account, where his bio states “Live, laugh, tape fish on ATMs.”

One Instagram video shows a fish taped to an ATM in Tokyo in what appears to be a subway station. “We’re going international,” the perpetrator wrote on the post. Other “fishy” videos were purported to have been taken in Frankfurt, Germany; Guatemala City, Guatemala; and Phoenix.

And yet another was taken in a bathroom stall of a Bass Pro Shops store.

He used a variety of fish such as trout, bluegill, bass, catfish, carp and crappie. One fish had a cigarette in its mouth.

In one incident, he taped trout to a Provo police car.

The teen faces two charges of property damage stemming from the cost of the cleanup, ABC4 reported. The case was referred to Juvenile Justice and Youth Services.

Photos courtesy of the Provo Police Department.

Loreto Bay National Park invites you to dive into the aquarium of the world

Explore the bay.

I’m all geared up with snorkel and flippers, ready to jump off a boat beside a sea lion colony near Baja California’s Coronado Island. About 100 of them are barking their heads off. It’s deafening. I’m a little leery, as I’ve heard stories of sea lions elsewhere being less than welcoming. But my guide, Ivette Granados Marines, assures me that the local sea lions are friendly. They only bite rude people who stick Go Pros in their faces.

I let go of the boat and fall into the deep warm water. An enormous sea lion torpedoes under me, staring with round black eyes. Sure enough, I am watched but unbitten while snorkeling in the unreal turquoise waters of Parque Nacional Bahía de Loreto. Here’s what you should know before visiting the park for yourself.

Cliffs rising out of water.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

The marine park

Parque Nacional Bahía de Loreto, which translates to Loreto Bay National Park, includes five uninhabited islands and 510,000 acres within the Gulf of California. The Mexican government established the park in 1996. Since then, it’s gained the added distinction and protection of being declared a Ramsar site in 2004 and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2005. Ramsar sites indicate internationally important wetland areas.

A blue kayaking approaching a shore.
Approaching Honeymoon Beach on Danzante Island. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

The Gulf of California, also called the Sea of Cortez, is the Pacific Ocean inlet between the Mexican mainland and the eastern coast of Baja California. I spent three days exploring Loreto Bay National Park and the nearby Baja town of Loreto.

 

Wildlife in the Sea of Cortez

Locals and tourists alike enjoy taking boats out to snorkel, swim, fish, dive, and kayak in the park. While the moniker “aquarium of the world” has made the area vital to the local tourism economy, the point of being a park is to protect the area’s many non-human inhabitants. In addition to friendly sea lions, other big mammals who swim here include dolphins, orcas, fin whales, and humpback whales. The world’s largest mammal, the blue whale, migrates through the park in February and March.

Shells laid out on pebbles and rocks.
Shells of some of the smaller Sea of Cortez residents. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

As we boated back from a glorious kayaking and paddle boarding excursion on Danzante Island, Ramon Arce told me about blue whales, his favorite Sea of Cortez animal. “They are huge,” said Arce, an elite kayaking guide with Sea Kayak Baja Mexico. “Sometimes when they show up and you don’t expect them, maybe you get scared for a few seconds. But then they just pass nearby.” While it’s against marine park rules to intentionally go whale watching in a kayak, sometimes they’ll come towards you, Arce said. “In February and March, it’s pretty common to see them.”

 

A person SUPing on water near an arch rock formation.
Ramon Arce leading our paddling excursion. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Each of the five islands — Coronado, Danzantes, Santa Catalina, Del Carmen, and Montserrat — has slightly different species of the same animals. Santa Catalina Island, the most remote, has seven endemic reptile species found nowhere else in the world. These include the leaf-toed gecko, the desert iguana, and a very disconcerting rattlesnake.

The critically endangered Santa Catalina Island rattlesnake lacks a functioning rattle. Instead, the buttonlike base of the snake falls off every time it sheds its skin, preventing a rattle from growing. “The snake doesn’t need that rattle,” said Granados Marines, a geologist by training who is now operations manager for the central-northern region of Visit Baja California Sur. “Why? Because no one on the island is going to attack the snake.” Uh, but isn’t their courteous warning one of the best things about rattlers?

A cactus growing above a rocky cliff.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

The importance of algae

While few people would question the awesomeness of a huge creature like the blue whale, sometimes it’s the lower-profile organisms that make a difference. As we sit offshore in our boat, admiring Isla Coronado, Granados Marines tells us a story of the hero of the marine park: algae beds called rhodoliths.

“Those algaes are like the nurseries of the Gulf of California,” she said. If you cut into a rhodolith you can find up to 140 species of different eggs of fish, nudibranchs, shrimp, sea stars, and other critters, Granados Marines explained. “That was the motivation that the community wanted to create the marine park. To defend the bottoms of the sea here. Because without rhodoliths, we don’t have a place for some of the species of fish to put their eggs.”

A seagull on shore looking at a sea lion sticking its head above water.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

Snorkeling the Sea of Cortez

While I love paddleboarding and kayaking, there’s nothing like being in the water with whatever animals live in the area or are passing through. After visiting the sea lion colony, we went ashore for some beach time. I spent my time in the water, cruising around looking for critters. Colorful king angelfish and surgeonfish are beautiful, but I especially enjoy the surprising fish. I got a shock when a long, tubular trumpetfish silently passed beneath me. And when I was examining some rocks on the sea floor, I realized one had eyes. It was a stonefish, an ambush predator that zaps its prey with highly venomous spines on its back!

Two snorkelers underwater among fish.
Taking a look inside the turquoise water. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

If you go

The small town of Loreto is the best base for visiting the marine park. You’ll need an outfitter to take you to the islands on a boat. There are many choices, but both options I went with — Dolphin Dive Baja and Sea Kayak Baja Mexico — were excellent. 

Loreto offers many lodging options, too. If you want to stay in the town square amid all the action (and near La Route bike and espresso shop), I recommend Posada de las Flores. It features an airy courtyard and rooftop pool. For a beachier experience, Hotel Oasis is right on the malecon, so you can gaze at the Sea of Cortez from your hammock.

Disclaimer: While this article was not sponsored, Outdoors Wire did visit Loreto on a press trip hosted by Visit Baja California Sur. As always, Outdoors Wire operates independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

These are 8 of the best places to go fishing in the United States

Find the country’s best fishing.

Pack up your tackle box and get your rod ready for a day full of fishing. By now, most experienced anglers know the places to avoid. Many lakes and ponds simply don’t have what it takes to be quality fishing holes. Identifying the best places to go fishing can be more difficult, though.

In the United States, there are countless places to cast a line, but few qualify as top fishing spots. If you’re planning a weekend fishing trip, don’t waste your time at lackluster lakes. Instead, explore this list of the country’s best fishing locations. These eight destinations promise peak conditions for pro anglers.

Watch: Huge carp wrestled from flooded California street

Video footage has surfaced showing two men wrestle a giant carp from a flooded street in Watsonville, Ca.

During extensive flooding, streets can resemble rivers complete with fish that have been swept over the banks of actual rivers and lakes.

The accompanying footage, featured Tuesday by KSBW Action News 8, shows two men wrestling what looks like a huge carp from a flooded street in Watsonville, Ca.

Laughter abounds as one man uses his body and arms to trap the carp against a curb before the other man plucks the fish from the water.

“We received more videos of people fishing in the flood waters around Watsonville,” the network tweeted. “This catch took a little more dedication than the first one.”

ALSO: Rare footage shows hippos attacking lion stranded on rock

That was a reference to the March 11 capture of a large carp on College Road in Watsonville. The fish apparently became dinner.

Watsonville is in Central California, a region battered by atmospheric rivers, which have prompted flood warnings and caused levee failures.

–Image courtesy of KSBW Action News 8

The 5 worst states for fishing and why anglers should avoid them

Which waters aren’t worth your time?

Some waters simply aren’t made for fishing. While a few states enjoy plenty of thriving fishing holes, other areas have little to offer anglers. Ever wondered which states are the absolute worst for fishing? Opinions on this controversial topic differ based on the kind of fishing a person prefers, but a 2021 study by Lawn Love sheds light on general rankings for each state. 

The study analyzed data from Bass Pro Shops, Cabela’s, and Dick’s Sporting Goods to rank all 50 states. Factors such as community activity, access to water sources and fishing gear, and fishing license costs all influenced the rankings. Based on these metrics, here are the five worst states for fishing.

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The world’s weirdest fish and where to find them

What’s lurking in the water?

All fish look a little strange. With scales, fins, and gills, these creatures are built to navigate a weird, watery world. As a result, fish can sport some odd features. But what are some of the most peculiar fish the world has to offer? And where can you find them? Dive into this list of four of the world’s weirdest fish to learn more.

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Snook poacher nabbed after an attempt to ‘slip away’

A Florida wildlife officer acting on a tip and vehicle description located a poaching suspect who was found in possession of 35 out-of-season and undersized snook.

A Florida wildlife officer acting on a tip and vehicle description located a poaching suspect who was found in possession of 35 out-of-season and undersized snook.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission stated Monday that the unidentified suspect also was cited for the illegal use of a cast net.

If it were open season on snook, only hook-and-line fishing would be allowed, and the bag limit would be one snook per day.

The FWC stated that the officer who responded to a tip arrived at the unidentified Lee County location to find that “the snook stealer [had] slipped away.”

ALSO: Record size hammerhead shark released out of respect

But after receiving a description of the suspect and vehicle, the officer located the “wet and sandy” suspect and discovered a cast net and 35 snook, plus a mangrove snapper, in the truck’s bed.

Snook fishing in the region, from Sarasota Bay through Gordon Pass in Collier County, is catch-and-release only through Aug. 31.