A visit to a Whale Museum.

Hermanus in the western cape province is the hot spot to see whales.
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But sadly, the whales have not arrived yet, and we settled for a visit to a whale museum.

They have a whale crier here that blows a horn as soon as he spots the whales. But on this day, his horn did not sound. We travelled a far way, crossing two mountain passes to get to Hermanus, and it would have been a folly to return immediately when we saw that there were no whales. There are many other attractions that we have not seen, and now we are glad that we decided to stay for a while, as we have unearthed some gems as you will see in here. The canon monument is right opposite the whale museum. There is also the "Old Harbour Museum" and a "Photo Museum", that we will visit on a future occasion.
But for now, let's see what I have to share.

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An interesting building with no great fanfare, as it matches the surrounding buildings. All of them historical, of course.
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There are also some great whale action photos inside the museum. Such as the two below.
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In case it is difficult for you to read the details in the close up of the photo above, here are some whale stats.
Adult female length: 15,5 meters
Adult weight: 50 tons
Measurement at birth: Around 4-6 meters
Lifespan: +50 years

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The town is noted for the presence of whales that often swim within sight of the coastline of the town. Although the Southern Right whale is the most prolific species in Hermanus bay, it is not the only species in the area. The whales can be seen from the cliffs all along the coast from as early as June and usually depart in early-December. They were once hunted in the nearby town of Betty's Bay but are now protected. The Old Harbour Museum contains several exhibitions that explain the local whaling industry, and the De Wetshuis Photo Museum houses an exhibition of photos by T. D. Ravenscroft that depicts the history of Hermanus. The Whale Museum houses a skeleton of a whale and shows an audio-visual presentation of whales and dolphins twice daily

Source

Note: Apart from the Wikipedia source, there are many other sites on the web with stories about the whales in Hermanus. So, do yourself a favor, if you are interested, to have a look around on Google.

A whale upper jaw on show and it is very big.
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As usual, there is always the dark side to things. The flensing knives below were used to butcher the whales, but thankfully all whaling has been discontinued, and the whales are now a protected species.
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The last two pictures can speak for themselves.
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We also explored the area a bit, and I have some great material to share in future posts. We are really in trouble on this planet, as not only do we try our best to destroy nature, but now the oceans are also being invaded by our quick and comfortable plastic castaways. How long can this all go on before it will all be gone? Yet another achievement of mankind that is not to be applauded. And so, I will only appeal to you to start to speak up about the desecration of this planet.

I simply had to include the warning photos with the hope that those who do not care will start to realise the danger of the current situation. It turned out to be a wonderful visit for us, and we are glad that we decided to explore the area instead of returning home. On the way to Hermanus we stopped to have a meeting with the principal of a local school as he asked for the meet, and then he unpacked all of the needs that they have at the school and asked for Papillon's assistance. The thing is that donors have become scarce, not only for the school but all over the country.
So, as usual, we will see what we can do to help.
Such is life.

I hope you enjoyed the pictures and the story.

Photos by Zac Smith. All-Rights-Reserved.

Camera: Canon PowershotSX70HS Bridge camera.

Thank you kindly for supporting this post.



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24 comments
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Wow it's very informative and actrective for me . Thanks 👍 for sharing a nice 🙂 Story.

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🎉🎉🥳 Congratulations 🥳🎊🎊


Your post has just been curated and upvoted by Ecency


keep up the good work


Always nice to see that South African language with so many Dutch language in it .

Not sure what kind of Donors you are looking for , but companies need to switch hardware end of this year if they are still using old computers running win 10 and can't upgrade to win11 .

So maybe those computers could still be usefull for education to some degree.

"Windows 10's end of life is on October 14, 2025. After this date, Microsoft will no longer provide free security updates, non-security updates, assisted support, or technical content updates for Windows 10."
source : https://www.techzine.eu/blogs/applications/131786/these-are-the-eol-dates-for-windows-10-and-windows-11/



Join us on the Ecency Discord

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Ahhh damn so no whales on the day you were there? Thats a bummer. When we were in the region more to the east we saw some random ones just popping u[, and when we went to do a whale tour we didnt see any...so it is all any random day.

Cool you went to the museum though!

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Nope, no whales, but thankfully there was much else to see. I just fail to understand why we did not visit the museum before, on one of our previous visits. We were fortunate to see the whales with their babies on one of our visits, but as you say, it is all any random day.

!PIZZA and !LUV

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Hermanus a great place to visit, first time, not having a private vehicle used Railway bus way back when.

Whales are still here off our coastline, they most probably a little late, hope you see them soon, very exciting watching them move down the coast often with calves all together.

Keep well and enjoy!
!LUV
!PIZZA

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Wow, that was indeed a long time ago, and I didn't even know that there was a railway bus way back when. We did see the whales with their calves on one of our previous visits, and the great thing was that the whales came right up to the rocks that we were standing on.
Always a next time though !LOL

!PIZZA and !LUV

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(Edited)

PIZZA!

$PIZZA slices delivered:
joanstewart tipped papilloncharity
@papilloncharity(4/15) tipped @goga22
papilloncharity tipped karinxxl
papilloncharity tipped joanstewart

Come get MOONed!

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These are wonderful posts where you can learn a lot that you wouldn't otherwise know. Great dear Friend
!DIY

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Thank you Lady Gordana, and my aim was to make the post informative, and it seems to have worked.
!PIZZA and !LUV

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A very beautiful and detailed pictures 👍 providing essential information about whale as a specie. Thank you for sharing this sir @papilloncharity

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We've been lucky to see some whales, but we have to travel for that. Having them on the doorstep would be amazing. We went to a little whale museum in Canada. We have to do our best to keep the oceans safe for all types of life. It is not a bottomless resource for us to exploit.

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Wow! so you know all about it, and I am sorry that it seems to be some distance from you. I like how you have touched on each of the points that I mentioned, as it tells me that you read the post. Readers are scarce these days, even as I have mostly read every post that I vote on.
Our oceans are in trouble, and we will really have a great problem when the sea life starts to die off.
Have a look at the latest documentary "Oceans" by David Attenborough.

!BEER

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I can imagine how it must’ve felt traveling all that way and having to shift plans

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