Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Australia: Day Six

DIVE 1: GREAT BARRIER REEF - STEVE'S BOMMIE
Water temp: 77°F
Max Depth: 81'
Visibility: 25-50'
Bottom time: 55 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

Steve's Bommie is a pinnacle reef in the middle of nothingness. Therefore it attracts dense life of all types. Massive schools of blue-lined snapper and angelfish flank an entire side pinnacle and are thick enough to look like a solid wall.

Anemone fish

Brain Coral

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Australia: Day Five

DIVE 1: GREAT BARRIER REEF - FAN BELT
Water temp: 78°F
Max Depth: 58'
Visibility: 50'
Bottom time: 52 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 2: GREAT BARRIER REEF - LIGHTHOUSE BOMMIE
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 84'
Visibility: 25-50'
Bottom time: 46 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 3: GREAT BARRIER REEF - LIGHTHOUSE BOMMIE
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 92'
Visibility: 25-50'
Bottom time: 34 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 4: GREAT BARRIER REEF - PIXIE WALL
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 50'
Visibility: 25-50'
Bottom time: 46 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 5: GREAT BARRIER REEF - PIXIE WALL (night dive)
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 63'
Visibility: night
Bottom time: 43 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox


Turtles on the Great Barrier Reef from Grant on Vimeo.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Australia: Day Four

DIVE 1: GREAT BARRIER REEF - COD HOLE (drift dive)
Water temp: 77°F
Max Depth: 77'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 45 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 2: GREAT BARRIER REEF - COD HOLE (drift dive)
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 70'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 53 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 3: GREAT BARRIER REEF - COD HOLE
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 70'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 63 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 4: GREAT BARRIER REEF - CHALLENGER BAY
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 55'
Visibility: 50'
Bottom time: 57 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 5: GREAT BARRIER REEF - CHALLENGER BAY (night dive)
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 52'
Visibility: night
Bottom time: 57 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Australia: Day Three

DIVE 1: OSPREY REEF - ROUND THE BEND (drift dive)
Water temp: 79 °F
Max Depth: 105'
Visibility: 75'
Bottom time: 40 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Air

DIVE 2: OSPREY REEF - ROUND THE BEND (drift dive)
Water temp: 80°F
Max Depth: 109'
Visibility: 75'
Bottom time: 33 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Air

DIVE 3: OSPREY REEF - NORTH HORN AMPHITHEATER(shark feed)
Water temp: 80°F
Max Depth: 58'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 47 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Air

DIVE 4: OSPREY REEF - NORTH HORN(drift dive)
Water temp: 80°F
Max Depth: 101'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 50 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Air


Manta Rays on the Great Barrier Reef from Grant on Vimeo.


Shark Feed on the Great Barrier Reef from Grant on Vimeo.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Australia: Day Two

DIVE 1: OSPREY REEF - FALSE ENTRANCE
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 108'
Visibility: 75'
Bottom time: 30 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 2: OSPREY REEF - Admiralty Anchor
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 81'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 43 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 3: OSPREY REEF - ADMIRALTY ANCHOR
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 119'
Visibility: 100'
Bottom time: 44 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

OSPREY REEF - NORTH HORN (drift dive)
Water temp: 79°F
Max Depth: 85'
Visibility: 75'
Bottom time: 60 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

Friday, October 26, 2007

Australia: Day One

DIVE 1: GREAT BARRIER REEF - CHALLENGER BAY
Water temp: 78°F
Max Depth: 54'
Visibility: 75-100'
Bottom time: 44 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 2: GREAT BARRIER REEF - CHALLENGER BAY
Water temp: 77°F
Max Depth: 52'
Visibility: 75-100'
Bottom time: 45 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 3: GREAT BARRIER REEF - PIXIE GARDENS
Water temp: 77°F
Max Depth: 39'
Visibility: 100'+
Bottom time: 53 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox

DIVE 4: GREAT BARRIER REEF - PIXIE GARDENS
Water temp: 77°F
Max Depth: 41'
Visibility: 100'+
Bottom time: 52 min
Tank: Aluminum/ Nitrox


Diving the Great Barrier Reef from Grant on Vimeo.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

San Diego - Point Loma 8/4/2007

I had to head out to San Diego for the jobby job and we decided to leave early on a Friday to try our first West Coast dive. Visions of kelp forests dancing in our heads.

We hooked up with Dive Connections Inc at the West Mission Bay Marina - http://www.gottadive.com/. Mark (el Capitan) and Ryan (Divemaster) took us out to "Three Fingers" off of Point Loma for the first tank. From dock to anchor is was about 40 minutes of calm seas and half throttled engines.

We brought our regs and computers, but for everything else we geared up with DCI's rental equipment. Terrific brand new stuff. Highly recommend renting from them.

After a short briefing about the likelyhood of low vis we descended to about 55'. The first 30 ft was terrible vis. You could hardly see your own fins.

DIVE 1: POINT LOMA -THREE FINGERS
Water temp: 59 °F
Max Depth: 65'
Visibility: 10-15'
Bottom time: 41 min
Tank: Aluminium/ Air

I was a little nervouse on this dive since I was taking a new Canon point and shoot camera down for the first time (i.e. Canon SD800 IS w/ Canon UW case WP-DC9).

So in mind I kept repeating "please be sealed well, please be sealed well." I snagged a sea cucumber with the first underwater shot from this little magic box.

The first thing you will notice about the San Diego coast is the abundance of starfish and cucumbers. The starfish were a whole new lesson in sea life for us. They are plentiful and appear very healthy and fat. There apeared to be 8-10 different species of varying sizes. Apparantley stars, cucumbers and sea urchins play nice together. It was not unusual to see all three within a square foot of each other.

At 10-15 from the bottom the visibilty got a little better and now that I had a little confidence in the watertightness of this camera case.















Giant Sea Star




















Sea lemon nudibranch (Archidoris montereyensis) ???

















DIVE 2: POINT LOMA KELP FOREST
Water temp: 59 °F
Max Depth: 50'
Visibility: 10-15'
Bottom time: 47 min
Tank: Aluminium/ Air

Dive two was a 20 minute ride away. The surface was spotted by kelp leaves. And that is what we dove down into.

Kelp up close

The kelp is a strange experience but we didn't find it diffucult navigate. Although there are think patches there are also many clear areas to hang out in. The color in the photos popped muc more than they did in plain view. These are macro with flash and the leaves and bulbs came out as bright orange/yellow, but in person they were a pale orange.

Kelp up close

We also met a little friend who goes into attack mode even though we came in peace.