August 29, 2017 โ Growing up on his fatherโs boat off the Rockaways in Queens, New York, Tom Paladino was always on the lookout for whales.
โMy father started a fishing business in 1945 when he came back from the service, so I never really had a job. I was just on the boat my whole life,โ Paladino said as he steered his own boat, the American Princess, back to shore.
The giant animals rarely ventured into the cityโs busy, dirty waterways, Paladino told ABC News, and โin the 60s, 70s, and 80s, we used to see one whale a year.โ
But on a recent August Saturday, Paladino and Paul Sieswerda, the founder of the nonprofit Gotham Whale, spotted five humpbacks and more than 100 dolphins during a four-hour tour, just three miles off the Rockaways.
โPeople donโt really connect New York City with whales at all,โ Sieswerda told ABC News. โIโve been involved with wildlife all my life, and I am just so amazed itโs coming back by the ton โ literally by the ton โ with whales.โ
In 2011, when Sieswerda, 75, started leading whale watching tours after retiring from his job at the New York Aquarium, the group logged just three sightings with a total of five whales, he said. More than one whale can be present at any given sighting, he added.
โWe called it a whale watch โadventure,โ because it was an adventure, if we were going to see whales or not,โ said Sieswerda.โThen in 2014, the number of whales we saw was more than the previous three years put together.โ