Earth Changes
Robbie Ragless, who shared the video on YouTube, said he was on a fishing trip with a group of people Friday when their boat was surrounded by the "dolphin frenzy."
"An incredible experience getting so close to dolphins chasing bait fish just off Robben Island, Cape Town," Ragless said in the video's description.
Ragless told Eyewitness News the dolphins showed up around midday.
"We just saw the frenzy on the horizon and didn't know it was coming straight for us and caught ourselves right in the middle of it, which was quite cool," he said.
He said it was difficult to count the dolphins.
"I didn't even know -- we thought there were maybe a thousand, but there could have been more of them," he said.
The weather advisory went into effect at 6 p.m. Wednesday and was scheduled to last through noon today.
Snow topped the list of concerns precipitating the need for a weather advisory, according to meteorologists at the National Weather Service station in Fairbanks. Meteorologists estimate the park will receive 4 to 8 inches of snow.
The Weather Service estimates the snow will fall about 2,500 feet above sea level, which would leave the visitors center and much of the beginning of the park road clear of snow. A significant portion of the park road lies above 2,500 feet, however, as the road's elevation begins climbing early and rises significantly near Sable Pass.

An extremely rare bird which has only been seen a handful of times in the UK
It is thought to be the only bird of its kind in the UK and only 10 others have been seen in this country since 1950.
The bird is so rare because it is native of North America and is hardly ever seen in Britain.
Tim Webb, communications officer for the RSBP said: "It is definitely confirmed that it is here and is still here.
"On these shores this is about the eleventh one in our recorded history, which goes back to about the 1950s.
"This Hudsonian Whimbrel is the only one in the UK right now to our knowledge.
"It is incredibly unusual and rare for this species to be seen in this country.
Serious birders know better: the white bird that has been quietly wading among the shallows of the Black River along the M3, Cape Town, this week is a snowy egret, native to North and South America, and way off course to end up at the tip of Africa.
Word went out on Monday, and watchers and "twitchers" started converging on the river banks. Five of them flew down from Gauteng on Thursday on the 6am flight to see the bird and to tick it off their lists.
"Twitchers" will go to great lengths to see a rare bird. For many, the snowy egret was a "lifer" - a first-ever sighting of a bird. And it is quite special. This is only the second time a snowy egret (Egretta thula) has been seen in Africa.
Trevor Hardaker, chairperson of Birdlife South Africa's National Rarities Committee, said the only other recorded sighting of a snowy egret in Africa had been in Cape Town in 2002. "Everyone's very excited."
The labourers were engaged in sowing work at a farm in Wadgaon village under Koparna taluka of the district when lightning struck them last evening, Range police said.
There was a heavy downpour accompanied with lightning and high velocity winds. The six labourers took shelter in a nearby hut where lightning struck them.
All of them died on the spot, police said.
The four others who sustained severe burn injuries were rushed to government's Primary Health Centre, they added.
Source: Press Trust of India
One group of young specimens was found in the Rocha area 210 km (125 miles) east of Montevideo, and then another at a beach in the resort town of Punta del Este, said Graciela Fabiano of the National Directorate of Water Resources.
The agency has no penguin monitoring program but at this time of year penguins do tend to show up on the coast, sometimes dead, and the movement is associated with migratory patterns, she said.
There are six large wildfires burning in Alberta and British Columbia, according to the Remote Sensing Applications Center in Salt Lake City. These fires are pumping copious amounts of smoke high into the atmosphere, which is then hitching a ride on the global jet stream to paint our skies pink and orange.
Seven dogs have been put down on suspicion, and samples were sent to the Veterinary Control Institute in eastern Elazığ province, Van Provincial Directorate of Food, Agriculture and Livestock said.
The directorate said that 30 people were treated at various hospitals for dog bites Wednesday.
An additional 25 were attacked later, bringing the total to 55 since Wednesday noon, officials said.
The directorate said that victims were given rabies vaccines and discharged after being kept under observation.
The attacks were reported in Bostaniçi, Esenler, Yenimahalle and Şerefiye streets of the province, which has a center population of less than 500,000.
"It was boom, boom, boom," William Britton, of Chesterfield, said.
"It was consistent, hear a loud boom, a few seconds later, hear another loud boom. A few seconds later another loud boom and it went on for a few minutes," Roland Britton said.Stephanie Groves, of Ettrick, said she first worried she might be experiencing an earthquake.
Those who heard the loud and constant noise have no clue what it was. But one man does not think it was not military activity.
"I'm used to hearing Fort Pickett from time to time, [but] his is nothing like it," said Britton.
May 2015 was the wettest month on record in Oklahoma and Texas, where huge amounts of rain fell across the Southern Plains. Since then the water has made its way downstream, swelling levels of the Red River in Louisiana.
Levels of the Red river at Shreveport have been at major flood stage since last week, and are expected to remain so for at least 3 or 4 more days. Hundreds of homes and businesses have been flooded, as have wide areas of farmland and several roads in Bossier and Caddo parishes. Louisiana National Guard have been dispatched to help shore up flood defences. No deaths or serious injuries have been reported.
The video below shows the Red River swallowing up buildings, trees, and roadways across the Shreveport and Bossier areas.














Comment: See also: Hundreds evacuated from northeastern Alberta as wildfires rage through crude-producing region