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So. Cal. whale census yields record number

VAN2001042114 - 21 APRIL 2001 - VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA: Bjossa the killer whale pokes her head out of the water in the Vancouver Aquarium's medical holding pool awaiting darkness before she is hoisted aboard ground transport for her ride to the airport to be loaded on a Hercules aircraft and flown to San Diego and SeaWorld, April 21, 2001. hr/H. Ruckemann UPI
VAN2001042114 - 21 APRIL 2001 - VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA: Bjossa the killer whale pokes her head out of the water in the Vancouver Aquarium's medical holding pool awaiting darkness before she is hoisted aboard ground transport for her ride to the airport to be loaded on a Hercules aircraft and flown to San Diego and SeaWorld, April 21, 2001. hr/H. Ruckemann UPI | License Photo

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 28 (UPI) -- Migrating gray whales are swimming through Southern California waters in record numbers this winter, longtime whale watchers say.

Whale spotters stationed at Point Vicente in Rancho Palos Verdes have recorded a record 163 sightings so far in December, more than have been logged at that location in 28 years, the Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday.

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The abundance of the marine mammals traveling south along the coast to Mexico is delighting tourists, boaters and divers, the newspaper said.

"I've seen some pretty good years but never anything like this," said Joyce Daniels, a volunteer in the whale census, noting more than two dozen sightings on Monday.

"We had whales everywhere. So many I was having trouble figuring out which whale was which," she said. "It's a real adrenaline rush to have so many whales."

By this point in December last year, the observers had logged 26 gray whales; the previous record was 133 observed in 1996.

More than 20,000 gray whales migrate each year from the arctic to Baja California, where females give birth. They migrate back north in the spring.

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