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Kestrel

Built for Adventure
Keep Up with Kestrel

Kestrel is our dedicated Adventure Tour vessel! This boat is perfect for intimate nature viewing and exciting boat experiences. 

Kestrel boat

Kestrel Quick Facts

  • 20 Passengers
  • Minimum age of 8 years old
  • Restroom on board
  • Full line of sight across the boat
  • Covered seating available
  • Suits offered XS-2XL
  • Great for smaller groups looking for an adventure!

4-Hour Private Charter: $3,495 + taxes and fees

Tours Aboard Kestrel
Adventure Whale Watch from Friday Harbor

Adventure Whale Watch & Wildlife Tour @ Friday Harbor

  • Almost water-level views
  • Smallest vessel in the fleet
  • Fast, safe, and comfortable
  • Provided warm suits keep you comfy & dry
  • Restroom on board
  • 360° walk around viewing deck

Adult: $150.00
Child: $150.00

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boarding kestrel

Private Charters & Groups

We offer custom private tour experiences for groups of 1 to 100 participants, focusing on seamless service, complimentary itinerary planning, and personalized attention to detail.  Arrange a private activity for a variety of groups and occasions!

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Tufted Puffin on the water

Birding Safari

Charter one of our boats for a Birding Safari which is 3 - 4 hours in search of birds and wildlife in obscure coves and backwaters of the San Juan Islands.  Come see all the wildlife that the great Pacific Northwest has to offer!

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Whale Reports from Kestrel
Read about our recent sightings aboard Kestrel

Our naturalists love to share their exciting adventures on the water. These reports include photos and information about the wildlife encouters on recent tours!

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Spyhopping T069s in the Canadian Gulf Islands

7/21/22

MV Kestrel

2pm

Helena

 

We journeyed north up San Juan Channel following reports of wildlife in Boundary Pass. With the base of Mount Baker off our starboard side, the group was buzzing for the potential of what we might encounter!

 

Captain Michael slowed down first at the Cactus Islands through New Channel. This serene area east of Spieden Island was perfect for viewing some Harbor Seals and their newborn pups! There are nearly 40,000 individual harbor seals in the Salish...

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A Full Day Adventuring for Wildlife feat. Orcas, Humpbacks, and Sea Lions

Haleigh | M/V Kestrel | July 19, 2022 | 10:00am & 2:00pm

 

10:00 am

 

Today’s trip was a spectacular showing of the abundant wildlife seen around the Salish Sea! We departed from Friday Harbor for our first trip in pursuit of reported killer whales along Vancouver Island, BC. En route, we scanned the glass-calm waters where we spotted Harbor Porpoises surfacing around. Confirmation of two Bigg’s Killer Whales guided us towards Sidney, BC, and James Island. The two orcas were...

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Biggs Killer Whales in Georgeson Pass

Maxx K. | M/V Kestrel | 07/18/2022 | 2:00pm

    I had a blast on today's tour! Kestrel raced out of Friday Harbor towards the north, stopping first to admire a bald eagle that sat looming over the San Juan Channel. We ended up seeing at least eleven eagles during the duration of our tour today and I’m confident we must’ve missed at least a handful more during our journey. The Salish Sea has the second largest breeding population of bald eagles outside of southeast Alaska so keep your...

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Orcas, Sheep, and Eagles, Oh My!

Elle | M/V Kestrel | July 15, 2022 | 2:00pm

We saw all sorts of wildlife on today’s adventure tour. We followed the interisland ferry route from Friday Harbor between Shaw Island and Lopez Island towards Orcas Island through Upright Channel and Harney Channel. This is where we came across two fifteen-year-old male Orca whales, T65A3 and T49A2 who have been perusing the Salish Sea together for the last few days. The boys even “mugged” our boat when they swam directly underneath us...

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The Adventures of Two Teenage Bigg’s Killer Whales

Haleigh | M/V Kestrel | July 10, 2022 | 10:00am & 2:00pm

 

10:00am

 

As we departed from Friday Harbor on today’s adventure tour, we reviewed the many possibilities of wildlife we could spot and some of the tips and tricks in identifying each individual. We memorized the 15-20 foot spout of a Humpback Whale, the bobbing head of a Harbor Seal, and the piercing black dorsal fin of a Killer Whale, all with the hopes of actually spotting one of these animals. 

 

We traveled northwest...

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Humpback Mom and Calf in the Haro Strait

7/9/2022

Helena

MV Kestrel

2pm

 

The adventure tour this afternoon went north up San Juan Channel, through Speiden Channel and off the western coast of Stuart Island where we encountered not one but two Humpback Whales! This duo was actually a mother and her calf and the two were taking long (10-ish minute) dives heading south in the Haro Strait

 

The population of humpbacks migrating to the Salish Sea every summer are coming to their feeding grounds here. They will eat up to 3,000...

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T65As Bigg's Killer Whales and Puffins in the Strait of Juan de Fuca

​Helena 7/10/2022 MV Kestrel 10am   MV Kestrel had a jam packed Saturday with wildlife everywhere we looked! We began our adventure heading south as we received some reports from other vessels south of Lopez Island in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. With the Olympics peeking out behind the clouds, we made it through Cattle Pass and out of the San Juan Channel. We quickly caught up with a pod of the mammal-eating ecotype of orca whale in the Salish Sea, Bigg's Killer Whales! On scene were...
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Biggs Killer Whales in Boundary Pass

July 8th, 2022

Abby Dahl

2pm Kestrel

Captain Gabe and I zipped out of the harbor with hopes of seeing some Biggs killer whales spotted in Boundary Pass; the same group we saw that morning. They were the T065A’s, my favorite matriline in all the Salish Sea, quite possibly my favorite whales in the entire world.

The T065A’s are made up of:

  • T065A “Artemis” (1986, Female, Mother of all listed below)
    • T065A2 “Ooxjaa” (2004, Male)
    • T065A3 “Amira” (2007, Gender Unknown)
    • T065A4 “Ellifrit”...
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T065A's; A Biggs Killer Whale Matriline

July 8th, 2022

Abby Dahl

10am Kestrel

Captain Gabe and I zipped out of the harbor with hopes of seeing some Biggs killer whales spotted north. Rumor had it that they were the T065A’s, my favorite matriline in all the Salish Sea, quite possibly my favorite whales in the entire world.

The T065A’s are made up of:

  • T065A “Artemis” (1986, Female, Mother of all listed below)
    • T065A2 “Ooxjaa” (2004, Male)
    • T065A3 “Amira” (2007, Gender Unknown)
    • T065A4 “Ellifrit” (2011, Female)
    • T065A5 “Elsie”...
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Humpback Whales amidst the Misty Islands

Haleigh | M/V Kestrel | July 3, 2022 | 10:00 am

Today’s whale and wildlife excursion aboard M/V Kestrel reaffirmed the title of our Adventure Tour! Guests suited up in the rain and endured the gusts of wind as we traveled north through the San Juan Channel. We made our way to White Rock to scan for wildlife. All along the rocky crevices, pelagic birds like Glaucous-Winged Gulls and Pigeon Guillemots burrowed into a nesting formation. At the water’s edge, Harbor Seals hauled out...

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