Whale Watching On Nova Scotia's Most Northern Coastline at the Top of Cape Breton Island
Sunfish and Basking Sharks Sighted on Whale Watching Tours
- Size: Roughly 20 ft/6m - 26 ft/8m Long
- Migratory: sighted in July and August
- Sightings: Difficult to spot, but worth it when we do.
- Feeding: mainly krill and plankton, similar to a baleen whale
Basking Shark sighted off Fraser's Beach.
- Size: Roughly 4.9 ft/1.8 m to 10.8/3.3 m
- Frequency: Most sightings happens after mid-June
- Sightings: Difficult to spot, as it surfaces quickly: we look for single fin (left)
- Feeding: mainly jellyfish
- "Prehistoric" looking, "flat fish" style shape.
Basking Sharks
A sunfish fin northwest of Meat Cove
Whale Tour Highlights:
Oshan Whale Watch
3384 Bay St. Lawrence Road, Bay St. Lawrence, Victoria County, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada. B0C 1G0
(C) 1998-2013 Oshan Whale Watch. All Rights Reserved.
1-877-383-2883
In addition to baleen whales, the waters outside Bay St. Lawrence form the ideal habitat for migrating sunfish and basking sharks.
The shelter provided by Cape North to the east and Cape St. Lawrence to the west corrals the water into St. Lawrence's Bay, which
mixes with mineral rich water from the numerous rivers and waterfalls in the area, and creates an ideal breeding ground for plankton.
Because of this plankton rich water, jellyfish and krill come into St. Lawrence's Bay to feed, while the whales, seabirds, dolphins,
sunfish and basking sharks quickly follow.
Because sunfish and basking sharks do not travel in pods (groups) they hard to
spot, but they are fun to watch and are a photographic challenge. Naturally, while whale watching we take the time to enjoy these
magnificent creatures. In fact, if we spot a sunfish or a basking shark, it usually means that whale pods are close by.
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