
size: 537958 sha1: e762e3cedb65fe4128300467a375fbc92918cc5e sha256: cd0b5c0915886882a9f8d637e1bf9fc43b012470fff839f069fe41be64b0410d

size: 461319 sha1: 6835733317b2968aeb7c9adb54db03a39083b17d sha256: 08cc890d86bc820f6397ac7f0e5249788ae780b97b98eca3f7e648209fa6d5a2
Way back in June 2013, my wife and I were in Alaska for a couple of weeks, renting a car and driving around the Kenai peninsula. At one point, we took a whale watching tour out of Seward, which turned out to be extremely enjoyable, as we ended up next to a pod of Orcas. The crew lowered a hydrophone over the side, and could then hear them. It was the BEST boat tour we’d ever been on, and one the boat crew had ever been on as well.
Appex preditor = Randy Orton.