Our second day in the San Juan Islands of Washington was spent exploring the second largest, and most populated island, in the San Juan Island Archipelago. About 8,000 people inhabit this island, and 2,200 of them live in the only incorporated town in the all-island county of around 16,000 full time residents. Our morning options were touring the island by bus, visiting a farm, exploring town, and the Whale Museum. After lunch, we left the town behind and motored just a few miles to the north, anchoring at Jones Island, where we explored the uninhabited state marine park by foot or Zodiac tour.
- Daily Expedition Reports
- 07 Oct 2019
Friday Harbor and Jones Island, 10/7/2019, National Geographic Venture
- Aboard the National Geographic Venture
- Pacific Northwest
John Pachuta, Naturalist
John’s passion is lifelong learning and sharing what he learns about the natural world with explorers young and old. He grew up in rural Ohio and graduated from Marietta College with a BA in Recreation Management. Wanderlust hit when John decided t...
Read MoreNathan Kelley, Naturalist/Certified Photo Instructor
Nathan Kelley developed his love for nature as a kid at his family’s cabin in Northern Wisconsin. Family fishing trips, camping, hiking and a trip to his first National Park in the Everglades, all vigorously shaped his passion for the natural world. ...
Read MoreShare Report
Exploring British Columbia and the San Juan Islands
VIEW ITINERARYRelated Reports
10/18/2024
Read
National Geographic Venture
San Juan Island, Roche Harbor
The forecast for wind and weather was not off to a strong start on Friday morning approaching the San Juan Islands. But strong winds and unpredictable rains did not stop us. This is a National Geographic-Lindblad expedition, after all! Rolling with the punches is what we do best. And today it meant a morning of braving the conditions for adventurous Zodiac tours outside Roche Harbor and an afternoon of exploration on land to a sculpture garden and hauntingly eery mausoleum. Our morning Zodiac tours jetted through Mosquito Pass and circumnavigated Henry Island. Beachfront homes and luxury yachts would not satiate our need for wildlife discovery and as we cruised around the southern tip of Henry Island, Naturalist Eric Guth spotted a mass of gulls and seabirds collecting atop a suspected bait ball below the bellowing ocean surface. No one knew what to expect when all five Zodiacs zipped and zig-zagged up to the dazzling zenith of these buzzing birds ablaze with hunger, but our mildest expectations were quite literally blown out of the water. For what would gently plop up but one of the most beautiful and elusive pelagic birds of the area, the ancient murrelet! This was a bird I’d been searching for all year, a lifer or first-time bird for me. It has a small, football-shaped body, a yellow beak, and little white eyebrows. Like all unexpected and great things, it was no coincidence that this happened on the last Zodiac tour of the last trip of the last itinerary of the season in the Pacific Northwest. And it was a joy to be able to share it with everyone here!
10/17/2024
Read
National Geographic Venture
Princess Louisa Inlet
National Geographic Venture continued her passage into the fjord system of British Columbia along the Sunshine Coast. Just before sunrise our floating home slowed inside Jervis Inlet at the entrance of Princess Luisa Inlet and Marine Provincial Park. The privilege of being able to see this small piece of paradise is because of one man, James F. “Mac” Macdonald. Mac first saw Princess Louisa Inlet in 1919. This small fjord stole Mac’s heart, and he made it his life’s mission to call this place home. After many years prospecting, Mac struck it rich and was able to purchase 45 acres at the back end of Princess Louisa Inlet right next to Chatterbox Falls, where he remained for the rest of his life. After hosting many visiting small boats, Mac turned his property over to the boating public in 1953 and it eventually became a British Columbia Provincial Marine Park in 1965. In chilly temperatures and clear skies, we explored the five-mile stretch of Princess Louisa Inlet by Zodiacs, also landing in two different sections of this marine park to go hiking, enjoying its beauty from many different perspectives.