

Free Ocean Printable
Whale Dot-to-Dot Printable
Connect 42 easy dots to reveal a magnificent whale swimming through the ocean. This printable puzzle helps preschool and kindergarten children practise number sequencing, pencil control, and concentration.
Difficulty
Free for home and classroom use.
No sign-up needed. Opens as a PDF. Print on any US Letter (8.5 x 11 inch) paper. Free for home and classroom use.
Back to all ocean puzzlesWhale Dot-to-Dot Puzzle Guide
The whale is the largest animal that has ever existed on our planet — bigger than any dinosaur, bigger than anything that has ever lived on land. And yet, for all their enormous size, whales are gentle, intelligent, deeply social creatures that sing to one another across hundreds of miles of open ocean. This 42-dot puzzle captures that peaceful, unhurried quality. Take a deep breath, find dot 1, and dive in!
1–8 — The Head and Mouth
Start at dot 1 and connect through to dot 8 to draw the whale's broad, rounded head and the gentle curve of the mouth. Whales have some of the most peacefully shaped heads in nature — no sharp teeth visible, no fierce expression. Children practise wide, slow curves here, matching the whale's own unhurried character.
A blue whale's heart is about the size of a small car — roughly 400 pounds — and beats only around 8 to 10 times per minute when the whale is diving. When it surfaces, the heart speeds up to 25–37 beats per minute. It is the largest heart of any animal ever known to exist on Earth — truly incredible!
9–18 — The Back and Dorsal Fin
Continue from dot 9 to dot 18 to trace the long, smooth back and the small dorsal fin. Compared to a dolphin's tall fin, a blue whale's dorsal fin is tiny — children often comment on this, which sparks a lovely discussion about why different animals have different features. Long, flowing strokes work best for this gentle curve.
Whale skin carries unique patterns of scars, spots, and markings — so distinctive that scientists can identify individual whales from photographs alone. Some whales in long-running studies have been followed for over 30 years. We know individual whales by name, personality, and family history. That is a remarkable thing.
19–30 — The Belly and Body
Trace dots 19 through 30 to fill out the enormous belly and complete the main body shape. The whale's underside is often a lighter colour than the back — a form of camouflage called countershading, common in ocean animals. Children practise the longest section of the puzzle here, building real concentration stamina.
A blue whale can eat up to four tonnes of krill — tiny shrimp-like creatures — in a single day. It does this by lunging into a swarm with its mouth open, gulping an enormous quantity of water, then pushing the water out through plates of baleen while the krill stays trapped inside. An elegant, ancient technique.
31–36 — The Flippers
Connect dots 31 to 36 to draw the long, paddle-shaped flippers. Whale flippers contain the same bones as a human hand and arm — five finger bones, a wrist, and an upper arm — just reshaped over millions of years for life in the ocean. Children love discovering this when you point it out mid-puzzle.
Inside a whale flipper are the same bones you have in your own hand — thumb, fingers, wrist, and all. Whales' ancestors walked on land around 50 million years ago, and the flipper is what those legs became over time. Evolution is essentially a very slow, very patient sculptor.
37–42 — The Tail Flukes
Finish the puzzle by connecting dots 37 through 42 to draw the broad tail flukes — the most powerful structure in the animal kingdom relative to its purpose. Just six dots to complete this gentle giant. Encourage a confident, sweeping finish: the whale deserves a grand conclusion.
A blue whale's tail flukes can be up to 25 feet wide — wider than many houses. Each downward stroke of those flukes propels the whale forward at up to 20 miles per hour in short bursts. Whale song — produced without any vocal cords — can travel over 1,000 miles through deep ocean water. These animals are extraordinary in almost every imaginable way.
You have just drawn the largest animal on Earth — well done! This puzzle pairs beautifully with a conversation about ocean conservation. Whales were hunted almost to extinction last century and are now slowly recovering. Children who love whales today are exactly the kind of people who will protect them tomorrow.
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