"Blows my mind”: when this drone pilot saw a baby whale off the coast of Australia, he wasn’t expecting it to do this

"Blows my mind”: when this drone pilot saw a baby whale off the coast of Australia, he wasn’t expecting it to do this

The photographer was amazed to see the newborn humpback whale launch itself into the air as it learnt to breach – and he caught the whole thing on camera.

Published: June 18, 2025 at 11:38 am

Whale experts have shared adorable footage of a baby humpback whale breaching off the coast of Western Australia.

The short video, taken by wildlife photographer Jason Milligan, shows a newborn humpback whale trying to breach. “Blows my mind that something so new to the world has the ability to launch out the air like that,” Milligan says on Instagram

See the baby whale breaching off the coast of Western Australia. Credit: Jason Milligan - Instagram: millo_hd

Although scientists aren’t exactly sure why whales breach, it could be for communication, to remove parasites, or just because it’s really, really fun. Whatever the reason, this little calf is already getting the hang of hurling itself out of the water and crashing down again with a mega splash. 

Humpback whales typically travel thousands of miles from their polar feeding grounds to warm, sheltered waters to give birth and raise their vulnerable babies. 

But a study published in Frontiers in Marine Science has found some humpback mothers give birth before reaching safe, tropical waters – and keep swimming with their little ones until they get there. 

“Hundreds of humpback calves were born well outside the established breeding grounds,” says the study’s senior author Tracey Rogers of the University of New South Wales. "Giving birth along the ‘humpback highway’ means these vulnerable calves, who are not yet strong swimmers, are required to swim long distances much earlier in life than if they were born in the breeding grounds.” 

Image and video credit: Credit: Jason Milligan - Instagram: millo_hd

More wildlife stories from around the world

This website is owned and published by Our Media Ltd. www.ourmedia.co.uk
© Our Media 2025