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Press Kit

Director’s diary with the whales.

The Hawaiian word puka means hole. Whale biologists use the term puka to describe the large calm, hole on the surface of the ocean created by the vortex as the whales tail is drawn down from just under the surface producing a flat spot in the waves. We positioned the research boat, Deep Blue, over the puka as this was the last know sighting of the singer. I donned my scuba tank and manoeuvred the underwater camera to the dive platform attached to the stern of the boat. Entering the water the heavy camera which requires two people to lift in the air, is instantly weightless as I check the settings. Below the boat the singer could be heard loud and but he was to deep to see. I peer down through the clear cobalt blue and descend toward the noise booming up from the depths. Small Apula fish which usually accompany the humpbacks feeding on their sloughed skin, give me a hint on the direction to swim. I follow the school of Apula as they swim deeper and through the clear water I can clearly see the whale motionless angled at a forty five degree position, tail up. The song is extremely loud now as approach from behind so as not to disturb his performance.

For this kind of close approach I would usually use a closed circuit re-breather as this kind of underwater breathing apparatus is silent and there are no noisy bubbles. As I was using open circuit scuba I was aware the bubbles would most likely alert the whale of my presence. I knew my time was limited by depth and how long it would take for the whale to notice me. I swam up only a couple of metres from him and focused the HD camera on his big tail. The sound was extraordinary, much like standing next to a speaker at a rock concert. The song seemed to engulf me, I could feel it in the air spaces of my body, shaking the very flesh on my bones. It was me and the whale all alone surrounded by the big blue of the Pacific Ocean…….It some how seemed surreal and I pondered if this was one of the most special events of my life.

The Film

“HUMPBACKS- From Fire to Ice” is a film conceived by Ross Isaacs and Stan Esecson in 2002. Our journey to produce the film started off the Island of Maui working under a NOAA/NMF permit issued to Dr Dan Salden of the Hawaii Whale Research Foundation. Dr Salden and his team greatly assisted our crews in getting extraordinary high definition footage of some of the most intimate moments in the life of the Humpback whales. We had many expeditions to Hawaii and South East Alaska to record the natural history of these animals.

The HUMPBACKS film crew has worked with a number of high profile scientific research organisations and individuals to successfully film the whales whilst minimizing any stress from these interactions. This has assisted us in capturing natural behaviour with the least amount of modification of thier natural behaviour.

On our many expeditions to sea, state of the art, Sony high definition camera systems have been utilized to capture the extraordinary and intimate lives of these secretive animals. In the air we use helicopter mounted Gyron HD camera systems for ultimate in rock steady imagery. Underwater up close and personal with the whales, we use Sony HD cameras in a specially designed underwater camera housing. Experiencing every season with the whales, we have travelled with them from the frigid waters of Alaska to the sun bathed Islands of Hawaii.

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