Starting with A Boat Tour in Comox Ending With a Surprise Orca Sunset in Nanoose Bay

Starting with A Boat Tour in Comox Ending With a Surprise Orca Sunset in Nanoose Bay
This Day Trip Features:

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PROJECT AWJ Chasing The Herring Spawn
Chasing The Herring Spawn Vancouver Island 2025

Highlights

An Overview

There’s a special kind of anticipation that comes with booking a wildlife tour – a heady mix of hope, skepticism, and a healthy dose of “let’s just see.” That morning in Comox, as we stowed camera gear and zipped up extra layers for a day on the water with Wild Waterways Adventures, our checklist was short and ambitious: orcas, herring spawn, and maybe a little magic if the tides were feeling generous. The Pacific, of course, has its own script.

Within minutes of leaving the dock, the group chat lit up with news: “Orcas in Nanaimo. Just off the marina!” We all shared a laugh – of course, the moment we set out from Comox, the stars of the show made their entrance at the exact place we’d just left behind. It was a classic lesson in humility, the kind you can only really appreciate when you spend enough time chasing wild things. Sometimes, it feels like the herring and the orcas are in cahoots, playing a long game of hide and seek with anyone holding a camera.

But the Salish Sea has a way of rewarding patience and presence. The water was impossibly still, reflecting the soft, pearly sky – a mirror for all the anticipation we carried. Rubin, our guide, stood quietly at the bow, scanning the horizon with an ease born of years out here, a translator for the wild’s subtle signals. Around the bluffs of Hornby, the world unfolded in layers: eagles balanced with mathematical grace atop wind-bent firs, their gold eyes fixed on the invisible banquet below; sea lions, rotund and unhurried, lounged on sun-bleached rocks like old sailors trading stories; gulls and cormorants swept from perch to perch, restless and loud.

Then came the first sign – Rubin pointed to a distant helix of birds, a raucous, spiraling column that could only mean one thing. Where birds gather in such numbers, the sea is busy. We eased closer, the engines hushed to a murmur. The water changed shade, suddenly alive with flashes – a living mosaic of silver as herring schooled just beneath the surface. The energy was wild but ordered: every creature locked into the same ancient choreography, feasting and swirling in a celebration as old as the coast.

We watched for a while, drinking it all in – sea lions porpoising through the turquoise, eagles diving with precision, the air thick with the scent of salt and fish. It was a spectacle in its own right, a collision of abundance.

Then, like the best plot twists, the ping came through: “Orcas, northbound!” The message was crisp, urgent, and instantly electrifying. Rubin swung us around, throttling up as the sun began to break through – a golden spill of light suddenly igniting the glassy expanse. We sped toward Cotton Point, the horizon wide and shimmering, every eye fixed forward.

What happened next defied every “plan.” The water near the point was suddenly a riot – turquoise ribbons, herring flashing silver, schools scattering in panic as sea lions lunged through the foam. Then Robin, always sharper-eyed than me, called it: dorsal fins. Sleek, black, unmistakable against the gold-lit water. First one, then two, then a whole thread of orcas cruising with effortless majesty through the chaos.

For a minute, instinct said “Fly the drone!” but some moments demand you set the tech aside. I grabbed the long lens and just watched, heart pounding. In the lens, the orcas seemed to move through worlds at once – cutting across currents, scattering flocks of birds, surfacing and vanishing in a pattern as old as the tides. They were impossibly close, so wild and immediate it felt like we’d stepped into someone else’s dream.

Sea lions and orcas shared the stage – predator and prey, but also fellow travelers in this seasonal explosion of life. Gulls swooped overhead; the coastline behind seemed to glow, perfectly out of focus, as if the whole world had resolved into this one scene. Light and life, hunger and grace, all wrapped together.

As the sun dipped low, the sky flushed with impossible colors – gold, then violet, then that deep Pacific blue that feels like the world’s natural resting state. And just as the last orca fin slipped beneath the surface, the moon rose – a blood-red disc hanging over the water, a final punctuation mark that no scriptwriter could have dreamed up.

We lingered in the afterglow, everyone suddenly quiet, the boat rocking gently. For a few precious minutes, none of us were guides or photographers or planners – we were simply there, present, part of a story the coast had written long before we ever arrived.

It was everything we’d come for, and more: the proof that even when you chase wildness and it sprints in another direction, sometimes, if you’re lucky and stubborn enough, you end up exactly where you’re supposed to be.

See You Out There...

JJ
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