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Encounter with a seal in Sydney Harbour

Mosman
Anybody who has been to Chowder Bay, and the Sydney Institute of Marine Sciences, will see that this is a very unique part of Sydney. It is a very unique part of the world.

We've got everything, from this rich human history. It was one of the first places of European settlement. If you look up at the top of George's Heights, there are heritage listed almost convict era dwellings. Then there is this natural untouched beauty that we see. A remarkable beach that is right in the middle of Sydney, probably less than four kilometres from the CBD. You look around, often there's just one person on the beach, that almost feels like they could be anywhere in the world, as opposed to in the middle of a city that has got five million people in it. I think that makes Chowder bay, just by itself, a very unique part of not only Sydney, of Australia, but globally.

Chowder Bay Foreshore Phill Pullinger
Chowder Bay, natural beauty in the heart of one of the world's busiest harbour cities. Image: Phill Pullinger
I'm so privileged to be able to come here to a location like this every day for work. I have a kayak, and recently I took the kayak out and I paddled around from Chowder Bay, and I was going to head towards Obelisk Point.

It got a bit rough right as I sort of went around, as I turned onto the ocean facing side of the harbour. So I thought I'd turn around, but as I turned around, there was a seal right there. It was just sunbathing, laying on its back, floating in the water, sun-baking.

Here I was in part of a city with five million people, sitting just a metre or two away from this beautiful sea creature, kind of having this moment with it. It was just really nice, and I didn't want to hassle it - I didn't want to be that guy - but I turned around to come back, and it swam and followed me back, pretty much all the way back to Chowder Bay. It is impossible, just as a human, not to be touched, by something so special in what is one of the busiest harbours in the world.

Seal Sydney Harbour SIMS
The seal followed Brett and his kayak pretty much all the way back to Chowder Bay. Image: SIMS Collection
It is impossible, just as a human, not to be touched, by something so special.

Brett Fenton
Brett Fenton
Brett Fenton is the Chief Operations Officer at the Sydney Institute of Marine Science


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