Travel advisory:
Adverse Weather - Tuesday, November 12
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Issued on: Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Due to forecasted high winds for the Strait of Georgia, service on multiple routes in this region may be affected today, Tuesday, November 12, 2024.
Service Notices have been posted for several routes. Please check back or subscribe for updates.
The safety of our passengers and crew is of primary importance to us, and we will continue to monitor this weather system and share information as it becomes available. For further information regarding the weather warnings in place, please visit Environment Canada.
For the most up-to-date sailing and departure information, customers can follow our @BCFerries X Account, check Current Conditions or visit bcferries.com.
For Immediate Release
20-047
September 2, 2020
The Whale Trail is a non-profit organization based in Seattle, Washington, with a mission to inspire appreciation and stewardship of orcas, other marine mammals and the marine environment. In British Columbia, BC Cetacean Sightings Network manages the citizen science program that encourages reporting sightings of cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises) to gain valuable information about species distribution patterns. BC Ferries vessels have been regularly reporting sightings to the BC Cetacean Sightings Network since 1975.
“We work with scientists and whale researchers on a variety of initiatives and joining the Whale Trail is another way our customers can learn about cetaceans in our waters and BC Ferries’ ongoing support for research and conservation,” said Corrine Storey, BC Ferries’ Vice President & Chief Operating Officer. “We are committed to helping advance awareness and to sharing the ocean space with whales, dolphins and porpoises.”
BC Ferries has been working with the Port of Vancouver Enhancing Cetacean Habitat and Observation (ECHO) program since 2014. BC Ferries also partnered with Port of Vancouver and Ocean Wise to develop a “Whales in our Waters” tutorial for mariners in 2019 and contributed to the “Mariners Guide to Whales, Porpoises and Dolphins of Western Canada” with the Coastal Ocean Research Institute and Port of Vancouver in 2016. Joining the Whale Trail is one more way BC Ferries is helping to build awareness of local whale species to contribute to their conservation for generations to come.
While viewing the new terminal signage, customers are reminded of the requirement for customers to wear non-medical masks or face coverings at terminals and while on board ferries.
Photos attached.
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Media Contact:
BC Ferries, Communications
Victoria: (250) 978-1267
Customer Contact:
Victoria: (250) 386-3431
Toll-free: 1-888-BCFERRY (1-888-223-3779)
Note to newsrooms: For urgent media inquiries off-hours, call our off-hours line at (250) 516-7211.
{media1}
Nicole Green, Terminal Attendant at Langdale Terminal, showcasing the Whale Trail location.
{media2}
Whale Trail signage at Little River Terminal.
20-047
September 2, 2020
BC Ferries joins the Whale Trail
VICTORIA – BC Ferries is proud to join the Whale Trail, a series of shore-based locations to view marine mammals along the Pacific Coast. In partnership with the Whale Trail and the BC Cetacean Sightings Network, with funding support from Fisheries and Oceans Canada, BC Ferries installed interpretive signs at three of its terminals where whales may be seen. Signs are now in place at Tsawwassen terminal in Metro Vancouver, Little River terminal in Comox and Langdale terminal on the Sunshine Coast.The Whale Trail is a non-profit organization based in Seattle, Washington, with a mission to inspire appreciation and stewardship of orcas, other marine mammals and the marine environment. In British Columbia, BC Cetacean Sightings Network manages the citizen science program that encourages reporting sightings of cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises) to gain valuable information about species distribution patterns. BC Ferries vessels have been regularly reporting sightings to the BC Cetacean Sightings Network since 1975.
“We work with scientists and whale researchers on a variety of initiatives and joining the Whale Trail is another way our customers can learn about cetaceans in our waters and BC Ferries’ ongoing support for research and conservation,” said Corrine Storey, BC Ferries’ Vice President & Chief Operating Officer. “We are committed to helping advance awareness and to sharing the ocean space with whales, dolphins and porpoises.”
BC Ferries has been working with the Port of Vancouver Enhancing Cetacean Habitat and Observation (ECHO) program since 2014. BC Ferries also partnered with Port of Vancouver and Ocean Wise to develop a “Whales in our Waters” tutorial for mariners in 2019 and contributed to the “Mariners Guide to Whales, Porpoises and Dolphins of Western Canada” with the Coastal Ocean Research Institute and Port of Vancouver in 2016. Joining the Whale Trail is one more way BC Ferries is helping to build awareness of local whale species to contribute to their conservation for generations to come.
While viewing the new terminal signage, customers are reminded of the requirement for customers to wear non-medical masks or face coverings at terminals and while on board ferries.
Photos attached.
- 30 -
BC Ferries, Communications
Victoria: (250) 978-1267
Customer Contact:
Victoria: (250) 386-3431
Toll-free: 1-888-BCFERRY (1-888-223-3779)
Note to newsrooms: For urgent media inquiries off-hours, call our off-hours line at (250) 516-7211.
{media1}
Nicole Green, Terminal Attendant at Langdale Terminal, showcasing the Whale Trail location.
{media2}
Whale Trail signage at Little River Terminal.