Posts Tagged ‘diving’
Friday, May 18th, 2012

Dear staff at Nautilus (and Mike),
I just want to extend a thank you for the great trip. What a marvelous experience! The boat is great, the crew superb. I particularly appreciated Joel for his help in the dives, I only had 35 dives on my logbook, that making me the least experienced diver on board, and it was my first time dealing with strong currents and oceanic swell. Joel was very nice to always dive with me and make sure I was safe. We had a blast.
The giant mantas were amazing, there are no words to express the emotions that go on in your whole body when you glide underwater with them, it’s a life changing experience.
I also very much enjoyed the shark lectures by Erich Ritter. It was an unexpected, very pleasant, surprise for everybody, you should make that a regular part of the trip if he does have the time. We all learned a lot about “shark psychology” and it was even nicer to recognize and experience these behaviors first hand in the water.
Thanks again,
Manuela.

Tags: diving, liveaboard, Mantas, mexico, scuba, sea, Socorro
Posted in Giant Mantas, Guest Blog, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 16th, 2012
Agonized a bit yesterday about staying for another day and 4 of the 5 of the Russian guests said they would prefer to move on, wanted to see a whale shark. Well, stayed for the day and whale shark has been circling Roca Partida all morning, everyone has seen him multiple times, albeit it is a smaller juvenile about 3 metres long. So have big smiles all around. Wind was up this morning but has started to drop again, now less than 10 from the ne, with a 3-5′ swell mostly from the north. Two more dives this afternoon and will be head back to San Benedicto.
Captain Al
Tags: captain, diving, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Captains Log, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012
On our last stretch home we spent the last 3 days diving Roca Partida and San Benedicto! Some damn good scuba diving! Definitely lives up to its reputation. Too much to describe.
This is the time where I thought accolades for the boat, and her crew, would be appropriate. To start, this boat is awesome! CLEAN, ample room, easy dive access, great skiffs, and a nice layout. But the crew makes the ship, and this was a great team! To start, Juan Carlos put together some of the best meals I’ve ever had on the water! Gordon (our Captain) a real class act, working right along with the crew and definitely not afraid to get his hands dirty. Larry (our ship’s engineer) competent, safe, and a great guy just to shoot the shit with. Carmen and Aldofo (hostess and host) made the whole trip very enjoyable! The two of them worked great together, the level of service was 5 star! Kevin (1st mate) the kind of guy who makes his presence known in actions, not words – fish on! Our dive masters Joel, Tony, and Philipp – were all spot on! Always there to help, but at the same time giving you plenty of room to hang yourself – if you so decided. And last but not least, Lauren (deck hand) never stopped the entire time out to sea! That girl’s a worker!
I’ll definitely be back to have another adventure on this boat! But to all the rest of you, stay away, because I’d prefer to not have to make my reservation 2 years in advance J
TWW
Tags: 2012, dive, diving, liveaboard, mexico, San Benedicto, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Guest Blog | No Comments »
Monday, April 16th, 2012
The scenery and the boat are so amazing it almost seems like the diving is secondary. Like icing on a cake.
Bryen Girling.
—
The accomodations are clean, cozy, and comfortable. And the nice hot showers with plenty of hot water were perfect after a day of diving. The consideration for my gluten free diet is very appreciated.
Lana Taylor.
—
I’m like Arnold. I will be back.
Alan Duguid.
—
My frame of reference for liveaboard boat diving has changed. The bar has been raised – actually, the bar has been set!
Randy Kliewer.
—
The space on both boats is great. We had a full group and we still had more than enough room. So much to do. I skipped a dive today just to let ot all sink in.
Daryl Mcnamara.
—
Beware of the little muffins. They are very addicting.
Adventures in Scuba.
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The food deserves a michelen star. As does the crew.
Randy Kliewer.
—
This is our 9th trip with the Nautilus Fleet. This time we brought the family. As usual, everything is excellent. We can’t wait for the next trip. The diving is so efficient and easy. So much space. Never in a rush – no pressure at all. Lots of new sights and locations. We have seldom seen the same site twice – there are always new sites. Feels like a menu of dives, we can pick and choose from an enourmous variety but we end up diving pretty much all of them! Can we get a frequent flyer card yet?
The Hass Family.
Tags: california, dive with, diving, guest comments, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Giant Mantas, Guest Blog, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Monday, April 9th, 2012
We have just completed our 4th day of diving on this special 11-day expedition to the Socorro with 5 more to go. The weather has been great so far with a long, gentle swell, light winds and enough sun to give my pale gringo skin an interesting reddish-brown tint. For the past two days we’ve been diving Roca Partida, a small rock jutting up about 100 ft above sea level and 65 nautical miles from the next closest island. With the surrounding ocean bottom in the neighbourhood of 10,000ft, the topography here allows for large upwellings of cold, nutrient rich water, which supports an amazing number of fish, large and small. The big stuff is why we come here and that’s what we’ve been getting here the last couple days.
Lots of very big galapagos sharks around this week, a small school of silky sharks, several hammer heads on most dives, loads of white-tipped reef sharks, bottle-nose dolphins and a big school of very large yellow-fin tuna. Not to mention the very impressive schools of various smaller fish which really make this divesite feel so alive.
We finished the day today by watching two humpback whales breaching repeatedly over a period of almost 20 minutes as the sun set behind them. Tomorrow we will complete two more dives here in the morning before setting out for Clarion Island, 155 nautical miles WSW of here, to do some more exploration diving of the rarely visited island.
Captain Al
Tags: dive, diving, Giant Mantas, liveaboard, Mantas, mexico, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Captains Log, Giant Mantas, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Sunday, March 25th, 2012
Hammerheads peeked in to say hello! Then again the same 2 gorgeous mantas came to play then of course a 3rd one had to get into the act. Three of my dives offered the amazing jewel’s of this magic place called Socorro! We are at San Benedicto Island for 2 days. Weather has settled a bit, hopeful to visit the other side of the island the infamous BOILER!! Yeahooooooo cannot wait!
Cindi LaRaia
Andre is back in the game after a lousy day yesterday. Can’t wait to see my videos of sharks (up close and personal) as well as mantas, groupers, and assorted critters. Visibility improved considerably, current was not much of a problem, unfortunately we had to deal with obnoxious two-legged animals from another boat. They will get bad karma..! Hopefully tomorrow we get to have really close encounters with more mantas. Y’all stay tuned!
Andre
Tags: dive, diving, explorer, liveaboard, Mantas, San Benedicto, scuba, shark, Sharks, Socorro
Posted in Animals, Captains Log, Giant Mantas, Guest Blog, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Saturday, March 24th, 2012
Well this is a question, tears in my eyes, the song of the siren calling me to them. Come to me… so loud so beautiful, the high pitched calf, the mommy.. sometimes feeling the vibration off my chest when they are so close! Sadly vis was not good, so we could not see them underwater. Trying to focus on the mantas, one, two, three… the song of the whales, interrupting the vision in front of me. Come to me my baby whales of the sea. So close, yet so far. They breaching at the dive site, breaching between the zodiaks… come closer so I can see your face, your eyes! What a day!!!!!!!! Another 5 star day!!! Mantas mantas, whales, hammerhead. Life is good here!
Cindi LaRaia
Tags: dive, diving, humpback, liveaboard, Mantas, mexico, scuba, Socorro, socorro island, whale, whales
Posted in Giant Mantas, Guest Blog, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Monday, March 19th, 2012
It was thrilling to hear whales‚ music on our first dive. And giant mantas on our second! With graceful wings he hung over me, letting my breath bubble across his belly claspers and all!
Great! Huge schools of yellowfin tuna, wahoo, and jacks. Galapagos and hammerhead sharks. Oh yeah, and the mantas wouldn’t leave us alone. Bummer…
Today at the Canyon at San Benedicto Island we saw what seemed like a herd, rather than a school, of hammerhead sharks! Great big guys, powering along the bottom just below us. What a thrill! We saw the usual cast of other characters as well: whitetips piled up like logs, cruising silvertips, and mantas hovering above, seemingly enjoying the tickle from our bubbles. Great day!!
A giant manta, dressed in Prada jet black with white stripes, flying solo, apart from the two shark suckers above her eyes. She was curious like a cat. Unrolling her cephalic lobes, dipping her wing toward my hand as if she had an itch that needed scratching.
Tags: diving, giant manta, hammerhead, liveaboard, manta, Mantas, mexico, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Giant Mantas, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

1er jour au bout du monde a San Benedicto:
Apres une tres longue navigation de plus d’1 journee apparait a nous l’ombre de l’ile de San Benedicto temps plutot voile qui annonce 1 journee de plongee pleinede surprises et de mysteres.
Que se cache t‚il dans les eaux chargees de plancton de Socorro?
The Canyon is a great place to experience sharks up close, we had several hammerheads on our first and 2nd dive, and on the last dive of the day the hammers weren’t there, but we had 2 massive sharks which I think they are Dusky sharks. Great first day at the Canyon.
DM Joel IHO
February 21st. Isla San Benedicto (Canyon dive). Shark day!
Just finished first day of diving (3 dives) after a rough crossing. First time I have been sea-sick in as long as I can remember. Saw 3 varieties (12 foot hammerheads, 4 to 5 foot white tips, and some 10 foot duskies). Sharks came within about 20 to 25 feet of us except the white tips were within 10 feet. Visibility was so-so my guess was 40 feet or so. Water was in the low 70 degrees. Dove with a 5 mm suit and it was perfect for me.
Saw a couple of Mantas on the first dive, but dove to 90 feet on the last two dives which is too deep for the mantas. Food is quite good now that I am back to eating normally after the crossing. Crew is great. Always there with a helping hand and smiling face and some food or drink that is perfect for the occasion. Tomorrow is the boiler with hopes for better visibility and lots of good big sealife.
Preston, Del Mar
Tags: dive, diving, liveaboard, Mantas, mexico, scuba, Sharks, Socorro
Posted in Giant Mantas, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »
Monday, March 5th, 2012
This is reblogged from
Christopher Spencer. Originally published at http://www.travelinggeologist.com/

Kirk Schleiffarth (fromschlifeisgood) was gracious enough to share he adventures battling volcanos in Mexico. Kirk is a graduate student at Washington State University doing a MSc in volcanology. Kirk is an avid mountaineer, socialite, and troubadour. Thanks Kirk for sharing.
Isla de Socorro, Mexico
Socorro Island is 650 kilometers (~400 miles) due west of Manzanillo, Mexico in the Pacific Ocean. It is a volcanic island, which stands 1050 m above sea level and 4000 m above the ocean floor. The volcano most recently erupted in 1993 in a submarine flank eruption, where large amounts of pumice were found floating off the western shore of the island.
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| Isla de Socorro, Mexico |
The volcanic islands off the coast of Mexico were formed as part of an archipelago located on the northern Mathematicians Ridge. This abandoned mid-ocean ridge was largely abandoned about 3.5 million years ago when ocean spreading shifted to the East Pacific Rise. The Isla de Socorro is the only seamount in the Pacific composed dominantly of silicic peralkaline volcanic rocks. This is in contrast to the majority of volcanic islands which are predominantly ocean island basalts (OIBs).
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| from Google Earth |
The only major establishment on the island is a Mexican navy base, which is manned by approximately 20 soldiers all year around. The only way to access the island is via the Navy and so I found myself in the middle of the ocean floating towards Isla de Socorro on a navy ship. In fact, the navy ship was an American WWII ship sold to Mexico following the war.
After 36 hours of rolling with the waves in the open sea, the island came into view. It was definitely a volcanic island. The island was dotted with red and black cinder cones, lava flows, domes, and a prominent peak almost 4,000 ft above sea level. My team and I were heading to the peak to collect samples, thermal temperature data from the peak and radon data in the hydrothermal system in the area surrounding the peak.
We made our way up to the peak following our GPS coordinates and tracks. The islands ecosystems varied with altitude. We crossed through volcanic desert plains, through dense jungle and alpine terrain. The group dropped off their heavy packs and equipment in a forest a mile from the peak, of course I found myself too curious to stop short of the active volcanic dome.
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| Kirk Schleiffarth |
The view from the peak was incredible. I turned 360 degrees and scanned the whole coastline. Yep, I was on an island. 50 miles in the distance I could see another island, San Benedicto, part of the aborted rift. Its volcanic cone was protruding from the low clouds. I watched the sunset, snapped some pictures and found a nice flat place to set up my tent on the windy, dark summit.
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| San Benedicto |
I got up before sunrise with the thermal camera in hand and scanned the entire dome before the sun rose and could distort the true temperatures of the active dome. With camera in hand in the dark on a quiet island in the middle of the Pacific, I realized that I have a sweet job and a lot to anticipate.
At sunrise, my team and I analyzed and collected Radon measurements and gas measurements from the variety of fumaroles scattered all over the dome. The dome resembled Yellowstone topography with sulfur deposits, boiling mud pits, and steaming fumaroles.
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| Fumarole |
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View over the Pacific Ocean from Isla de Socorro
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Tags: diving, mexico, scuba, Socorro, socorro island
Posted in Destinations | No Comments »
This is our 9th trip with the Nautilus Fleet… Can we get a frequent flyer card yet?! 2012 Guest Comments, Socorro Islands, Mexico.
Monday, April 16th, 2012The scenery and the boat are so amazing it almost seems like the diving is secondary. Like icing on a cake.
Bryen Girling.
—
The accomodations are clean, cozy, and comfortable. And the nice hot showers with plenty of hot water were perfect after a day of diving. The consideration for my gluten free diet is very appreciated.
Lana Taylor.
—
I’m like Arnold. I will be back.
Alan Duguid.
—
My frame of reference for liveaboard boat diving has changed. The bar has been raised – actually, the bar has been set!
Randy Kliewer.
—
The space on both boats is great. We had a full group and we still had more than enough room. So much to do. I skipped a dive today just to let ot all sink in.
Daryl Mcnamara.
—
Beware of the little muffins. They are very addicting.
Adventures in Scuba.
—
The food deserves a michelen star. As does the crew.
Randy Kliewer.
—
This is our 9th trip with the Nautilus Fleet. This time we brought the family. As usual, everything is excellent. We can’t wait for the next trip. The diving is so efficient and easy. So much space. Never in a rush – no pressure at all. Lots of new sights and locations. We have seldom seen the same site twice – there are always new sites. Feels like a menu of dives, we can pick and choose from an enourmous variety but we end up diving pretty much all of them! Can we get a frequent flyer card yet?
The Hass Family.
Tags: california, dive with, diving, guest comments, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, scuba, Socorro
Posted in Giant Mantas, Guest Blog, mexico, Nautilus Explorer, Revillagigedos, shark, Socorro | No Comments »