Story highlights Viviana Guzmán likes to play the flute while paddle boarding

She drew a whale of an audience while on a recent outing

(CNN) A flute-playing paddle boarder isn't something beachgoers see every day, and clearly it isn't something humpback whales see every day either. One of them decided to get up close to Viviana Guzmán, a professional flutist with a penchant for paddle boarding.

Guzmán, who lives in California, but travels the world playing the flute, said she noticed the whales swimming close to the shore near her home in Half Moon Bay in early July. With a friend, a flute, and two GoPro cameras, Guzmán had just hit the water last week and, after she briefly played the flute, she began to adjust her camera. When she did, one of the massive mammals swam right between her and her friend.

"In the 20 years I've lived on the coast they've never been this close," Guzmán said of the whales, "I love going out on my paddle board and I have started taking my flute with me and they seem to like it."

Soloist with the Hanoi Philharmonic Clyde Mitchell, conductor pic.twitter.com/TZFSBPwcab — Viviana Guzman (@FluteQueen) March 8, 2016

Speaking to CNN from Villarrica, Chile, on Tuesday, where she was due to perform, the artist said she and her paddle board partner were startled when the whale surfaced so close.

This wasn't the first time one of the whales approached the flutist

Later in the video, she is seen playing her flute on a different day, and the whale approaches her board. "She came to you," Guzmán's friend excitingly exclaims.