After last week's amazing photo of a humpback breaching under the Golden Gate Bridge, more whales were caught on camera today.

An ABC 7 helicopter featured a Facebook live video just after 6:30 a.m. of two whales gliding through the ocean and spewing waters from their spouts just west of the bridge.

More than 30,000 people watched the clip and a few shared anecdotes about seeing whales around the bridge this month.

"Two weeks ago, I walked across the bridge and many of us watched a whale under the bridge...he or they have been there for awhile," wrote Kathy Haven. "I just hope it's because they're feeding and all is well."

Video: You get a nice glimpse of the whales at around 2 minutes.

Gray whales and humpbacks are migrating along the coast on their way from Southern California to their feeding grounds in Alaska, and there have been many reports of new sightings this month.

A whale-watching tour cruising the waters right outside the Golden Gate got a spectacular show last Wednesday when an adult humpback breached right in front of the bridge, as reported previously on SFGATE.

A naturalist onboard the San Francisco Whale Tours' vessel, Ryan Jones, captured the shot above that was timed so perfectly we had trouble believing it was real.

Adam Ratner, who is the guest experience manager at the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, thinks the two whales in this morning's ABC 7 clip are most likely humpbacks based on their coloration, blow hole and movement.

"There's a bit of a wider spray compared to what we'd expect from a gray whale," she said. "With their movement, the body is more curved as they get ready to dive. Gray whales would have a more shallow dive. With these clues mixed with the coloration, we're pretty sure the whales are humpbacks."

Humpback whales also made a splash last May when they swam into San Francisco Bay in unprecedented numbers to feed on anchovies and schooling fish.

"I've been in this game for a lot of decades, and this is the first time I've heard of this many humpbacks coming in this far," Mary Jane Schramm, the spokeswoman for the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, told the San Francisco Chronicle.

Whale watchers say there has been uncommonly high whale and orca activity along the Monterey coast in recent weeks, with video crews documenting attempts to fend off killer whale attacks.