Monday, May 5, 2025

Metridium Mountain, Post Retirement Dive #832 May 3, 2025

I had a very memorable dive with Guy Foster with Beachhopper II on Saturday. Gale force winds were in the forecast for later in the morning and small craft advisories had been up overnight so it was breezy and choppy as we headed out and became rougher as we approached the dive site. Upon descending all was calm with excellent 30 to 50 ft of visibility. Metridium Mountain with its dense population of white Plumrose (Metridium) Sea Anemones at 55-60 ft of depth became visible quickly as we descended. Below:
Below are some photos from the dive, for more, please go to: https://photos.app.goo.gl/8HfPyDYW7zzoMwaXA Below: A pair of Pile Perch
The site also has lots of Tube Anemones in the sand around the site's boulders, below:
As I began a circle of the site a Cabezon suddenly shot over my left shoulder and then did a headstand, not normal behaviour, on the bottom up ahead of me. I realized it was struggling with an octopus. I didn't get a photo of the struggle but after the octopus escaped I got a photo of the octopus with the Cabezon in the background and a couple pretty good photos of the understandably upset octopus. In the first picture below, the octopus has just gotten free of the Cabezon (near bottom, center, of wide angle shot), followed by a zoomed in view of the two of them.
Next, as I got closer to the octopus, an excited Gopher Rockfish briefly considered trying its luck with the octopus, it wisely demurred. Second photo is zoomed in on the beautiful, alarmed, octopus. Below:
I got three more photographs as the octopus quickly retreated to safety, below:
Next, one of the other divers on our trip, not sure who, attempted to get a shot of the octopus back in its hole. Below:
A beautiful, concerned, Copper Rockfish, below:
A large, beautiful Lingcod on its perch, below:
A Sea Lion came past to check us out, below:
Another Lingcod parked in the sand, below:
Another Copper Rockfish, below:
Guy near the anchor line, below:
I got some pictures of a pretty Treefish (a rockfish), which are frequently very shy:
Another Lingcod confidently perched amongs Metridium (Plumrose Sea Anemones), below:
This was a wonderful dive. I started back up with at least 700 pounds pressure for my three minute safety stop at 20 ft and for the tricky boarding of Beachhopper II in rough seas....My fins aren't easy to get off and Laura did a great job of getting them off me while the dive platform rose and plunged. I boarded the boat with only 250 pounds pressure remaining.. Out of an over abundance of caution (I'm leaving on big dive trip to the Philippines in 41 days, not that I'm counting or anything) I decided to sit out the next dive and I missed a great one from everyone's reports...

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