Chargers to hold Day 1 of mandatory minicamp at Camp Pendleton

The Chargers are returning to San Diego for a day.

The Chargers’ mandatory minicamp will be held at Hoag Performance Center in Costa Mesa, CA, but only for two days.

The first day, which is on June 11, will be at the Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in Oceanside, CA, per the military base’s website.

Located at 11 Area Football Field, practice is open to base patrons from 12:15 to 2 p.m. No registration is required.

A meet-and-greet will also be held with the players from the Chargers.

This will be the Chargers’ first return to the San Diego area since they moved to Los Angeles ahead of the 2017 season.

Jim Harbaugh returns to his old stomping grounds, as he played quarterback for the then-San Diego Chargers during the 1999 and 2000 seasons.

Watch: Dolphin enjoys belly rub against swift-moving boat

Whale watchers out of Oceanside, Calif., on Monday watched a Pacific white-sided dolphin enjoying a belly rub against the boat.

Who doesn’t love a good belly rub? And who says you have to be stationary to enjoy the sensation?

For whale watchers out of Oceanside, Calif., on Monday, it was fun just watching Pacific white-sided dolphins swim beneath the 50-foot Oceanside Adventures catamaran. The mammals are a fairly common sight during the winter, according to Donna Kalez, owner of Oceanside Adventures.

But suddenly, in a rarely observed behavior, one dolphin turned upside down and rubbed its white belly against one of the catamaran’s pontoons for nearly two minutes, as though it were relieving an itch.

“We love them and they’re super cute and fun, but normally not that playful,” Kalez said. “But that dolphin was having blast!”

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Most dolphin species, including killer whales, are known to swim near and beneath fast-moving vessels, and to surf and leap in their wakes. But physical contact, such as the seemingly effortless belly rub shown in the video, is not commonly observed.

Pacific white-sided dolphins are named because of the light coloration that runs along their sides and into the facial area. The mammals have black beaks and and a black ring around each eye.

The footage was captured via iPad by Oceanside Adventures first mate Chris Fairbanks. Capt. Shane Hansen was driving the boat.

–Top image courtesy of Oceanside Adventures; generic Pacific white-sided dolphin image courtesy of NOAA Fisheries