Monday, September 9, 2024

Two Very Good Dives with Korosun Dive off Vanua Levu September 9, 2024

After three days of blustery winds with very heavy rain, we finally got a break in the weather today and Donna and I got out for two very enjoyable dives with Colin of Korosun Dive, whom we dived with 10 years on our last visit to Venua Levu (Fiji's second largest island). Despite the days of rain and wind we had decent 80 ft visibility and were thrilled to see thriving coral reefs with lots of fish. Wonderful. These were my 779 and 780 th post retirement dives! Below: All trimmed out, Donna is ready to descend to the first of three pinnacles at this site, called Purple Garden because when the current is flowing there's great purple soft coral (Fiji is the renowned best in the world for soft coral), but we didn't have current on this dive, which made for a relaxing dive.
Below: Donna cruising around the first pinnacle
Below: I can never resist photoing Anemone Fish
Below: A large, maybe 18 inches long, Many Spotted Sweetlips on a cleaning station, if you look closely you can see a cleaner wrasse on the end of its tail
Below: More Clowning around
I've seen many Moorish Idols but I don't think I've ever encountered a dense school of them before. Below:
Time to start our safety stop to end this dive. Below:
Our second dive after a slightly over one hour surface interval, was at a site called Sea Turtle Alley and it lived up to its name with a couple Green Sea Turtles plus gorgeous coral reefs. Below:
I realized that a stand of Staghorn Coral (well, the South Pacific version of it) had a cleaner station and I was separate enough from the group to quietly hover until I got one of the best shots I've ever gotten of a Parrotfish (species tbd) getting cleaned. Two pictures below:
I'm really pleased with these shots of a beautiful, shy, Angel Fish, species tbd, below:
A cool bottom dwelling fish in the foreground, species tbd, below:
I was really thrilled to see very healthy coral reefs on today's dives, very relieved because our continued rapacious ruinous consumption of fossil fuels is killing the world's magnificent coral reefs with coral bleaching from marine heatwaves caused by the over 50% increase in heat trapping carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Below are some coral reef seascapes:
Today we're headed out for more scuba dives with Ocean Ventures Fiji, in a new area for us, Natewa Bay. Even the drive to get to them promises to be an adventure on a rough dirt road past the Salt Lake, another cool place to see here on Vanua Levu.

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