Wakkanai - Rebun Island
There are two small islands just near to Wakkanai, called Rishiri and Rebun. Rishiri is the one most tourists go to, but I had been looking up where to find Spotted Seals around Wakkanai and Rebun had come up several times. Apparently Kaneda Point at the top of the island is where they congregate.
The ferry to Rebun is quite expensive at 3950 Yen each way. There are two sailings a day (6.35am and 2.10pm, with return times of 9am and 5.05pm) and it takes about 2.5 hours, so if you're going for a day-trip then the only times which work are the 6.35am there and the 5.05pm back.
The tickets can't be booked ahead of time, you just buy them on the morning of sailing. The website says to be at the terminal 35-40 minutes before sailing, which I was, and which was pointless. There were only about ten people on the morning sailing (and four on the way back), because there just aren't very many tourists around these parts in winter and the ones who are will most likely be going to the other island.
I tend towards sea-sickness, although so far on this trip I haven't had any issues when on ferries and boats (fingers crossed that continues!), so I was glad that the day was perfectly calm and clear. I spent the crossing out on deck with my binoculars. It was ridiculously cold out there, but it was worth it in the end.
There weren't many birds seen, and even fewer were identified. Leaving Wakkanai were the usual Slaty-backed Gulls and Pelagic Cormorants, as well as a White-tailed Sea Eagle perched on a breakwater. I was really hoping for alcids on the crossing, and I did see a number of auklet-sized ones, but only two individual birds of those were close enough and stayed long enough within view to identify. By chance they were two different species, the first being a Japanese Auklet (which was a lifer) and the second being an Ancient Murrelet (which I had seen for the first time a few days ago at Cape Nosappu by Nemuro). A third alcid species was seen closer to Rebun, with several small groups of Common Murres flying past.
I spotted a bull Steller's Sealion swimming near to the ship, briefly before it dived - I actually saw it much better than the distant ones at Cape Soya but it was just a short view. More exciting was a beaked whale, also a brief sighting but my first one ever.
There are three bus routes on Rebun. Two of them are in the south of the island and are just short routes to nearby villages (both of them only taking ten minutes from the ferry terminal to their end-points), running three times a day. The third bus route is a long one, taking an hour from the ferry terminal right up the east coast and around the north to Sukoton, running four times a day. This long route goes around Kaneda Point at the top of the island, and was the one I needed to try and see Spotted Seals.
It was a good thing I didn't come over yesterday on the afternoon sailing because there wouldn't have been time to take the long bus route, I definitely wouldn't have seen any seals, and it would have been wasted money.
There is a one-day pass which can be bought from the driver and used on all the buses for 2000 Yen. Just one of the short-route buses is 300 Yen one way, so this day pass is a considerable saving.
The first run for the long-route bus to the top of the island is 7.30am, which is before the ferry arrives, so I had until 10.45am to wait for the second run. There is nothing in town here - everything was closed and there was nowhere to even buy food except a Seicomart way north of the town. Rather than just sit in the terminal for two hours I took rides on both of the short-route buses. There was nothing to see but it was okay for filling in time.
The road to the top of the island hugs the coastline the entire way and I kept my eyes peeled. I had read in some sources online that the seals only gathered at Kaneda Point, but then others said they were found "all along the coast". Maybe it's seasonal, I don't know. But I did actually see some seals from the bus! I was a bit surprised to be honest.
They were a group of seven or so on a rock platform just offshore, and they stood out clearly against the dark rock. It was right by a bus stop, fortuitously, but I kept on going to see if there were any more further along. There were no more seen - and none at Kaneda Point - so on the return ride I just got off there so I could have a proper look at them and get some photos.
Spotted Seals
The next bus heading back to the ferry was an hour away, so instead I got that bus as it was going northwards (so I only had to wait twenty minutes) and just rode it all the way round.
I had a couple of hours to wait for the ferry, so spent the time working out what species of beaked whale I saw. It was brown in colour, and I had got a good look at the dorsal fin as it went down. Based on the animal's size and colour, and the shape of the dorsal fin, I narrowed it down to either a Cuvier's or a Stejneger's Beaked Whale. Cuvier's is apparently the most commonly seen beaked whale (worldwide) but it only occurs off Hokkaido in summer (it used to be hunted by commercial whalers off Japan along with Baird's Beaked Whales, and so there are detailed catch records). Stejneger's Beaked Whale is a North Pacific species which occurs year-round in the Sea of Okhotsk, so that's what I have settled on.