Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Fiji Favorites from 2011 & 2014

Fiji Favorites from 2011 and 2014

Well, local California diving conditions have been reliably poor for a while now so, in anticipation of my trip on the Nai'a diving liveaboard that starts one month from today I decided to post some favorite pictures from my last two trips to Fiji.  This trip is special because it will also commemorate, to the day, my getting my NASDS scuba diving certification by Pops Dive Shop in Clearwater, FL, 50 years ago!  Oh, and did I ever marry well!  Donna loves tropical diving but to economize decided to let me take this trip without her.

Our trip (my diving friend and former co worker Guy Foster is also going on the trip) starts from Lautoka, on the west coast of Viti Levu, Fiji and we will first be diving in the "Bligh Waters" named for the region of Fiji Bligh visited shortly after being sent off in the longboat from the Bounty after the infamous mutiny.  Here's a few shots from our shore based diving in the Bligh Water region from the visit Donna and I made to this part of Fiji on our way to the Solomon Islands to dive with the Bilikiki in 2011.

 An example of a mutualistic form of symbiotic relationship, this species of gobie and bulldozer shrimp share a burrow.  The shrimp burrows and provides shelter, the gobie provides the early warning system.
                              Beautiful invertebrate life including Fiji's outstanding soft corals.

                                                      Golden Sea Fan

                      Count the fish!




                                          Sea Snake, the highly venomous Banded Sea Krait


In 2014 Donna and I spent three weeks on Vanua Levu, Fiji's second largest island.  We'll also be diving some of these same general areas on next month's trip on the Nai'a.  http://www.naia.com.fj/

Here's a sampling from this great time snorkeling and scuba diving:

                                          Nemo!

                               Donna with a marine dentist, a cleaner shrimp!

                                       Donna with clownfish

                                         Donna trying sign language with a giant clam!


                                          Ribbon Eel

                                          Scorpionfish

                                          Mating Pacific Bigfin Reef Squid


For more from these trips please go to the link below:

https://goo.gl/photos/WWZvvy4rQVmNgzKBA





Monday, March 13, 2017

Dives at Ball Busters and the Aquarium Intake Pipes with the Silver Prince 3-11-2017

Guy Foster and I dived with the Silver Prince last Saturday.  Seas were a bit rough so, unfortunately, the boat stayed inside Point Pinos (there were small craft advisories for higher winds later in the day).  We unfortunately dove Ball Busters for the first dive but the boat missed the peak, which rises to around 70 ft, so our entire dive was at 93-97 ft, 51 degrees.  It was reasonably clear under the plankton layer that was from the surface to about 50 ft from a week of sunny weather....the winter blue water dive season is over.  Also on the dive was Bruce Watkins, an author of several diving books centered on California.  https://books.google.com/books/about/A_Diver_s_Guide_to_Monterey_County_Calif.html?id=rS_IrQEACAAJ

None the less, the short, deep, Ball Busters dive was enjoyable, we saw several lingcod, a couple of them were guarding their egg masses.





                                         Guy shooting a video of a Copper Rockfish

                                         Bruce Watkins, comfortably taking photos at 93 ft in his DUI dry suit.

                           A striking Vermilion Rockfish

                               Female Kelp Greenling


    A lingcod guards its white egg mass.



                                          San Diego Nudibranch

For more pictures from this dive and the following one off the Monterey Aquarium please go to:
https://goo.gl/photos/2Yuc7194Ee8GEJjo7

Aquarium Intake Pipes
                                                     Guy shoots a video of a beautiful Sand Rose anemone.

                                          Guy shoots some video of a fish eating anemone on the rusted out pipe to an abandoned sardine factory.
                                Guy with Sand Rose Anemone

Behind the tube anemones you can see a lingcod sitting beneath the white egg mass he is guarding.


                       Guy with lingcod guarding white egg mass above it's tail in the crevice.

                                                    White -Plumed Metridium anemones

                                         Blue Lined Sea Perch


    Back to the Silver Prince



Monday, March 6, 2017

Inside Sunset Point, Carmel Bay March 3, 2017

Greg Hoberg and I took his Zodiac RIB out for a dive trip last Friday.  As we headed out a much stiffer wind from the north came up and as we rounded Point Pinos we saw some swells significantly larger than the four foot forecast.  We hoped that the wind would shift to the West before we had to pound our way back North from Carmel Bay after our dive and fortunately, it did so, per the forecast.  We went inside of Sunset Point to dive in order to get out of the significant westerly swell and we didn't want to go further because of the risk of rising winds.  The area behind Sunset Point is normally covered for hundreds of yards by a dense canopy of giant kelp but right now the entire area is entirely devoid of giant kelp due to the hordes of sea urchins that followed after the demise of a top predator, large sea stars.  We've seen signs of recovery of sea stars and giant and bull kelp on some recent dives but we sure didn't see anything like that in this area, unfortunately.  The other thing that was noticeably different than usual on this trip was a complete dearth of sea lions, I don't think we've ever failed to encounter sea lions on any of our many previous outings.

We anchored in about 50 ft of water and we ended up with 35 ft of visibility (vertical was close to 50) and cold 48 degree water.  On our last trip we couldn't get our anchor up when we were ready to start home so Greg (I was out of air..) had to go down and get it free.  When we start a dive the first thing we do is go down the anchor line in order to a) insure ourselves that the anchor should hold so our boat doesn't leave the dive site and b) that the anchor is positioned so that after we've finished our dive and gotten back in the boat we can successfully pull it up.  When we started this dive we clearly had those goals in mind and we found that the anchor line, anchor chain, and anchor were wrapped through large boulders and we wouldn't have been able to retrieve our anchor.  So Greg carefully re-positioned our anchor and we proceeded with a very good dive.  Lots of light thanks to no kelp canopy and a too rare sunny day and very good visibility.  We saw the usual varieties of rockfish plus lingcod and cabezon.  It was a long dive and we had to do a short surface swim back to the boat after our safety stop.   I couldn't get the bloody, bloody, anchor up, in the freezing, chilling wind.  My teeth were chattering when I finished our safety stop and I couldn't believe, and almost couldn't execute, getting my tank, weightbelt, hood, gloves, fins, and mask back on in order to go back down and retrieve the anchor.   When I went back down I couldn't believe how the line went back into another large set of boulders and I had to get under a large overhang, set my feet and push like crazy in order to free the badly wedged anchor.  Memo: back to checking that we can get the anchor free by going back down to the anchor before we get out of the water when we get back to the boat....

But the dive was very good, here are some pictures, for more please go to:  https://goo.gl/photos/5Fc5uMGhomtde16V8

    Male Cabezon guard their mate's fertilized eggs, as this guy is doing here.  The dark mass to his right are the hundreds of eggs.

                                Lingcod love to perch on rocks where they can survey their surroundings as this one is doing.  You can see that we had decent light and visibility.  Note there is no kelp to be seen, not even old kelp holdfasts.  Sea urchins have scoured the bottom of all vegetation.  Note lack of sea stars,normally everywhere you look (like kelp as well...).

                                           Big rocks with urchins.

                                          Big rocks with big anemones

                                                  Hurrah, a leather star, yuck, more sea urchins.

                                          Near the farthest point on our dive we did finally see a few stands of palm kelp.


                       Hurrah, a lone spiny sea star, where you'd normally see many....

As we were nearing the finish of this dive we saw an enormous lingcod swimming past under an overhang into a cave under the rocks where we had no chance at a picture.  He was huge, the second largest I've ever seen.  Then, I was down to 600 lbs of air so we started up for our safety stop but  I spotted a nice sized beautiful lingcod swim over and park on top of this large coralline algae encrusted boulder and I did a double take and then a quick double back because, while I've got many photos of lingcod and many photos of cabezon, it's a rare opportunity to get both in the same shot, as you can see here.  You do see the cabezon as well as the lingcod, right?  He's about half the lingcod's body length to the left of the lingcod, next to a token sprig of dark sea weed.  1/3 from bottom of the frame, 1/3 from the left edge...

                                Here you can actually see the cabezon, pretty well matched to the coralline algae he is parked on top of....you accidentally scare about three cabezon for everyone you spot in time to avoid startling in time to take a picture.

                             Here's another shot of the cabezon, sans flash, so you can appreciate his camouflage with natural (though far far brighter than usual conditions!) lighting conditions.



Sunday, March 5, 2017

A Fun solo shore dive at Otter Cove, Pacific Grove March 2, 2017

I dived at one of my favorite shore dive spots, Otter Cove, on Thursday.  I decided to shoot with my Macro Canon 60 mm lens and was really pleased I did.  I had 15 to 20 ft of visibility and the usual water temperature of 52 degrees.  During the dive I noticed several rocks had large colonies of mature, fist sized, Acorn Barnacles.  This used to be a rare find but Acorn Barnacles have thrived and expanded since the Sea Star wasting disease decimated their primary predator.  While attempting to get a shot of a filter feeding Acorn Barnacle I noted that there was a bright, perky Yellowfin Fringehead (though he was orange, another common color for them) occupying an empty Acorn Barnacle skeleton.  This was the first Yellowfin Fringehead I've photoed and many shots ensued. He/she was comfortably ensconced in the Acorn Barnacle shell so it was easy.  After this entertainment I started back towards shore, on the way I saw motion under a large bolder I was passing and upon closer inspection realized I'd found a Monkeyface Prickleback (frequently called an eel).  I was able to make by far the best shots of a Monkeyface I've ever been able to take.

Below are some select shots from my dive, to see,  more please go to:  https://goo.gl/photos/gGcMo3QmycUMP7aLA

                                Club (aka Strawberry) Anemone, about 1/2 inch across

                                         Orange Cup Coral, a little under a 1/2 inch across

                 My first shot of a Yellowfin Fringehead.  She's sitting in a vacant Acorn Barnacle Shell.


                    In this shot you can clearly see the Acorn Barnacle shell she is confidently occupying.

                                          A quite enjoyed our "conversation", perhaps more than she did!

                                       She's probably about four inches long and has quite a "do".


   My first ever good photo of a Monkeyface Prickleback (frequently called eels rather than Pricklebacks).  He's got the characteristic prominent ridge of mature adult Pricklebacks on his forehead.