Travellers in search of a different holiday could profit by reading
Mark Carwardine’s On the Trail of the Whale (Thunder Bay Publishing, Guildford,
pp 158, £9.95 pbk). Carwardine has followed whales and dolphins around
the world, swimming with pilot whales in the Canary Islands, paddling after
them in a kayak along the coast of Mexico and struggling to photograph them
through an excited barrage of Japanese tourists. His love of sea mammals
shines through the book, informing the guidelines he gives for observing
and photographing them. He suggests that you take your pace from the slowest
whale in the group if you are following them by boat, that you keep your
distance and limit your visit to a quarter of an hour.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
The world's fastest spider tops 3.5 metres per second
2
Babies are born with the neural foundations for maths
3
Where, when and how to watch the 2026 solar eclipse
4
The race to understand how and when Thwaites glacier will collapse
5
Our verdict on The Selfish Gene: An unpopular piece of popular science
6
We’ve uncovered a master gene that switches on human development
7
Humans sleep the least of all apes – is it the secret to our success?
8
US government wants to have a useful quantum computer by 2028
9
The most detailed survey of the universe ever conducted starts now
10
I’m the first person whose life was saved by CRISPR base editing



