View from the Marine Mammal Center entrance on a foggy day.
Every year hundreds of sick and injured seals, sea lions, elephant seals, and sea otters wash up on northern California’s beaches. If they are lucky, they are found and taken to the Marine Mammal Center on the Marin Headlands where they receive food, medical care, and when they are well enough to be on their own, are returned to the wild. Located on a hillside above the lagoon, the center is open to the public. On a recent foggy Sunday afternoon I stopped by for a visit.Life-size Elephant Seal Statue
The entrance to the Marine Mammal Center features life-size statues of a sea lion, elephant seal and sea otter who greet visitors, allowing one to gain an appreciation of how big these animals are and to see them up close--an opportunity one would never have with a live animal.
California sea lion resting next to the pool in its enclosure
Inside the facility a stairway (or elevator) leads to a second floor viewing platform which looks out over the outdoor enclosures where the animals are kept. Signs caution visitors to be quiet so as not to disturb the animals. During our visit, in mid-August, not all the enclosures were occupied, but during the pupping season in spring, when young animals get lost and separated from their mothers, the enclosures are full. A volunteer told us that during the peak period last spring they had hundreds of animals, requiring round the clock feeding.Whale baleen
The Marine Mammal Center is both a treatment center and an educational center. Exhibits explain how animals are rescued,what kind of medical treatments they get, the process of reintroducing them to the wild, and the importance of keeping the ocean clean--and the danger to animals of trash, nets, and water pollution. There are also numerous hands-on exhibits--feeling the softness of sealskin, for instance--as well as displays of animal skeletons, giant whale vertebrae and an example of whale baleen.The Marin Headlands is located north of San Francisco, just on the other side of the Golden Gate Bridge. On the road to the Marine Mammal Center one has a dramatic view of the city and of the bridge.
The Marine Mammal Center is open to the public daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day. Admission is free and no reservation is required unless you have a group of 10 or more people. A well-stocked gift shop, which supports the Center, has books and ocean themed toys, shirts, and decorative objects. The Center relies on donations for its funding. For more information about the Marine Mammal Center click here.