Beach Hut Whale Bones


Whaling was an important aspect
of life in Cape Town between the 18th and 20th centuries. Whales were hunted for their oil, which was used as a source of fuel, their meat, and their bones. Over time, hunting led to a massive decrease in the population of whales in the waters. South Africa banned whaling in 1979, but you can still see remnants of the once-dominant industry in Cape Town.
This house close to the
Boulders Beach Penguin Sanctuary
is decorated with the jaws of a southern right whale, as it has been since 1898. The bones that currently stand at the gate were placed there more recently, and came from a whale corpse that washed ashore in 2015. Fragments of the original jaw bones remain, along with several other whale bones, including a vertebra.
Southern right whales were hunted to near-extinction, but their population has started to recover in recent decades. These massive baleen whales can typically be seen off the coast of South Africa starting in early June, and migrate to their feeding grounds near Antarctica in the fall.