Whale of a workshop is set for Jan. 24

It’s that time of year again when Whidbey Islanders will gather to talk about whales, whales and more whales.

It’s that time of year again when Whidbey Islanders will gather to talk about whales, whales and more whales.

Orca Network’s annual Ways of Whales Workshop is 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 24, in the Coupeville Middle School Performing Arts Center, 501 S. Main St., Coupeville.

The 2015 workshop features presentations on a variety of cetaceans, from North Puget Sound gray whales who feed in Possession Sound and Saratoga Passage each spring and the thriving populations of humpback whales that visit the Salish Sea to the endangered Southern Resident orcas, coastal water blue whales and the acrobatic Pacific white-sided dolphins.

The day will feature presentations by the region’s top cetacean experts and advocates. That includes Howard Garrett, Orca Network; John Durban, with the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration Fisheries; and John Calambokidis with Cascadia Research.

The event will also include a special song from Dana Lyons. Environmental education displays and materials will be available throughout the day, including a table from Orca Network’s Langley Whale Center gift shop, with whale books, DVDs, CDs, field guides and more.

Cost of the workshop is $35 ($25 for students and seniors), and a hot lunch may be available for purchase for an additional $10.

Finally, a post-workshop fundraiser for Orca Network is 5-8 p.m. It will include food and drink, a discussion of the day’s workshop and a special screening of the new documentary “Fragile Waters,” produced for Orca Network by filmmakers Rick Wood and Shari Macy, about Southern Resident Orcas and their need for salmon. Rick and Shari  will attend the screening and hold a question-and-answer session after the movie.

This event will be held at the Nordic Lodge, 63 Jacobs Road, south of Coupeville. Cost is $25/person.

Further information and online registration are available at www.orcanetwork.org Orca Network can be reached by email at info@orcanetwork.org or by calling 360-331-3543 or 1-866-ORCANET.

 

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