Day three of our trip found us on a boat out in the middle of the deep blue sea on a tour of Resurrection Bay and the Kenai Fjords. We used a group called Kenai Fjords Tours. Would highly recommend them to anybody. The captain had been doing the tours for several years, and one would think that he was a Marine biologist or something before he became the boat captain. He was so extremely knowledgeable, and the love he had for his job was very evident in the way he delivered his narration to the folks on the boat.
We went and saw puffins, seals, even an Eagle. I got some pretty good pics. Then the swells in the water got to be a bit on the high side. I had to go and ask one of the crew members what the proper etiquette was for feeding the fishies. Thankfully, she had a "sick sack." I may have been the first to need such a device, but I certainly wasn't the last. And this, even after I had taken some seasickness medicine (the "nondrowsy" type). Bless the heart of somebody on the boat who had some "real" Dramamine. Went and sat down at my seat on the lower deck, and fell asleep for a while. Woke up when we were at the glaciers.
Oh, the glaciers. These things were magnificent! Blue like you've never seen before! And it had nothing to do with the sky being blue, according to our captain. The sound of the glacier calving and the ice falling into the water was awesome. And it was a bit unnerving to see all of the very large ice chunks - some as large as a school bus - was a bit unnerving (and it has been YEARS since I've seen "Titanic").
On the way back into Resurrection Bay we were extremely fortunate to not only run into a pod of Orcas, but a MegaPod. There were at least a couple of dozen Orcas out there. So many that the captain - who has seen Orcas in Resurrection Bay quite often - was very impressed with what we saw. I got several excellent photos, one of which I am going to enter into a photo contest. I'm not going to post that one here, but I'll post a couple others. Truly worth every moment of seasickness to see these magnificent beasts of the Deep Blue.