It’s difficult to know how you’d react if you were staring into the wide-open mouth of a creature the size of a bus. I say you, dear reader, because I do know how I’d react, as this was the exact situation that I found myself in on a fairly chilly July afternoon floating somewhere in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Western Australia.
I’d love to tell you that my heart was filled with courage and a steady camera hand was taking an award-winning picture, but the reality is that I was, in fact, struck completely paralysed and, rather than rise to the occasion, I simply floated there, as the giant jaws of the whale shark – over a metre in width – came straight towards me.
My adventure had begun earlier that day when I arrived in the town of Exmouth, access point to the Ningaloo Reef – the world’s largest fringing reef (one that’s growing from the shore so is easily accessed from the beach). Here, defence officials and oil rig workers easily outnumber the tourists and backpackers, the sort found in their hordes on the country’s more-famous reef over in Queensland, especially on a shivery day like this.
But despite July being the Australian winter, I’d chosen the month for a very particular reason. It presented the only few weeks each year when it would be possible for me to go from swimming with whale sharks one day (who hang around until August), to swimming with humpback whales on the next (as their annual migration towards Antarctica begins) and – to cap it all off – swimming with manta rays on a third (there in greatest numbers in winter). This creates an underwater megafauna trifecta unrivalled anywhere in the world. On this first day, I was here to swim with the state’s most famous underwater creature.
AIMING FOR THE TREBLE
Denne historien er fra January 2022 / Issue 218-utgaven av Wanderlust Travel Magazine.
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Denne historien er fra January 2022 / Issue 218-utgaven av Wanderlust Travel Magazine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Vermont, USA
The Wanderlust team relocated to New England for part of this issue, as we explored a lush state filled with outdoor escapes, historic towns... and lashings of maple syrup
Unique North America
See a side to the USA and Canada beyond the big cities and discover incredible stories and special wildlife with our pick of the trips
The call of the Rockies
From historic ski lodges to rustic backcountry cabins and a mock-Scottish castle, we pick the stays in Canada's Rocky Mountains that make the most of their setting
A new dawn for the Garifuna community
When the Garifuna people settled in Belize, they had to carry their traditions and culture with them; now a new trail is inviting visitors to explore this heritage through local communities
On the edge of history
In south-west Colorado lies the largest archaeological preserve in the USA, a series of vast cliff dwellings whose residents 'vanished' overnight. But was the answer to their disappearance in plain sight?
Tigers burning bright
As India celebrates 50 years of its Project Tiger conservation scheme, we visit the reserves of Madhya Pradesh to see how its success has impacted a tiger population that once looked in danger of disappearing
SEASON'S GREETINGS
From fiery fall foliage to art fairs and harvest festivals, opens up a wealth of across the USA and Canada autumn experiences
Waking a sleeping GIANT
A slow drive along the North Wales Way, from the English border to Anglesey, reveals not only a land of incredible local food and castles, but a region that is slowly reimagining itself
The rebirth of old JEDDAH
As efforts to restore Al-Balad, Jeddah's historical district, take hold, we get an exclusive peek at how art and culture are taking centre stage
Star-studded escapes
Wilderness, history and wildlife combine at some of Britain's most iconic stargazing sites, as more and more travellers are looking to the heavens