Enormous orca breaches from Salish Sea

Orca breaches from the Strait of Juan de Fuca by GPS artist Stephen Lund in Victoria, BC, Canada GPS Garmin Strava art cyclist cycling creativity animals marine ocean orca killer whale Strait of Juan de Fuca

This breaching killer whale – another enormous GPS-art creation by Stephen Lund – required approximately 60 kilometres (37 miles) of cycling on the streets of Victoria, BC

For recreational whale-watchers and serious marine researchers alike, the waters surrounding Victoria, BC, are a choice destination.

From spring through fall, southern resident killer whales from three pods comprising approximately 80 whales are frequently seen in the protected waters of the Salish Sea.

Members of another community of killer whales, called transients, also appear often in the Salish Sea. Numbering more than 250, transients tend to travel alone or in small groups up to five individuals.

Killer whales can grow to a length of nine metres (30 feet) – nowhere near as large as my GPS doodle, which measures more than six kilometres (20,000 feet) from the tip of its rostrum (snout) to its tail.

See it on Strava *

* Note: The GPS points will render correctly only if you are logged in at Strava.com

About Stephen

Brand strategist and creative director by day. Hyper-competitive GPS-art obsessed cyclist most of the rest of the time.
This entry was posted in gps art and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Enormous orca breaches from Salish Sea

  1. wtcbank says:

    Reblogged this on wtcbank.

    Like

  2. Pingback: A Bike, A GPS and 70 Kilometers Travel a Day To Create Stunning Doodles

Leave a reply to wtcbank Cancel reply