by Andrew Bill - Special to The Spokesman Review May 2007
“It’s interesting to note that killers have a short, thick snout, similar to that of the Tyrannosaurus Rex,” explained Terry Prichard, with all the matter of factness one might expect from an ex-geologist. “Then there are the teeth. Fifty-two of them. Exactly the same number as the Dakosaurus Andiniensis, a giant sea crocodile with the head of a dinosaur, so savage, so ferocious, it dominated the seas 135 million years ago.”
Whale watching in Baja California, Mexico
By Josh Roberts
Brought to you by USA Today, September 2006
Grey Whales Baja
"It's the moment of a lifetime," says Terry Prichard, president of Sea Kayaking Adventures. Prichard is referring to the moment when friendly whales swim up and nudge the hulls of his company's motorized skiffs, which happens frequently during the four-day Gray Whales of Magdelana Bay trips that head into the deep waters of Boca de Soledad in Baja California, Mexico.







