Posts Tagged ‘humpback whales’

From Socorro to the Sea of Cortez we saw it all :: from seahorses to mantas, sharks, sea lions and even nudibranchs — dive guide and first mate blog – June 9, 2010

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

From South to North, Big and Small, We saw it all: Sea Horses, Mantas, Sharks, Sea Lions and Nudibranchs.

Let us remember back a few days to those spectacular dives at Socorro where we left you off with our last Dive-Master Log. Our cruise North into the Sea of Cortez, was very smooth until we got close to the southern Baja peninsula where different currents and winds meet. There, for a few hours, the going got rough but once we made it into the Gulf of California it smoothed back down, allowing us a good nights rest before our first dive in our new enviroment. Being only a couple of hundred miles north you would expect similar conditions, but that is absolutely not the case. The Sea of Cortez is colder and this time of year there is a lot of algae and plankton in the water making the visibility somewhat limited. But, with so much food in the water you also have a lot of life.

Our first dive in this area was on the southern tip of Cerralvo island, a site I don’t have the luxury of visiting very often due to it being a little to far to visit from La Paz where I have lived for the past ten years. This site is Spectacular!! It is a long shallow ridge that is covered in very healthy coral that makes a labyrinthine maze ideal habitat for all kinds of animals including a small colony of California Sea Lions and plenty of grunts, goatfish and barber-fish.  In the afternoon we did a couple of dives at La Reina reef, which like always, lived up to its name of Queen of reefs. There were Sea Lions on the Rock and all kinds of beautiful life in the water. Jessie (DM) had told everybody in the briefing that this was a good site to search for sea horses and true enough, a yellow and an orange sea horse were spotted.

The following day we did an early dive at the Salvatierra, an old ferry boat wreck that sunk in 1975 and is now nearly totally destroyed but still makes for an interesting dive. Midday we went on a quest to El Mogote to see if we could find a Whale Shark to snorkel with. Unfortunately after two hours of careful searching we came out empty handed, they just didn’t want to be found!  We Spent the afternoon at Suwani Reef diving with huge schools of spot tail grunts, barracudas, goat fish and scads, but my highlight of the day was a pair of Cortez stingrays that one of the guests spotted. The male stingray held on to the female so hard that when she swam away he just stayed stuck. We did a night dive here too which was calm and beautiful.

Yesterday we began the day diving at Fang Ming Wreck and then spent the rest of the day at Los Islotes, probably the most famous dive site in the area due to the permanent colony of California Sea Lions that lives there. Everybody spent most of the day enjoying the magnificent show that these animals always provide.  This Morning we did our two last dives of this magnificent trip again in La Reina with the Se Lions and the Sea Horses, before motoring back towards Cabo, where tomorrow morning this chapter of the adventures of the Nautilus Explorer will come to a happy end. I believe everybody will leave with a smile on their face and a warm heart because of the beauty and greatness of these waters!

Surface Conditions: Windy and cool in the morning developing into a very hot calm mid-day and cool breezy afternoon. A few small swells less than a foot in the morning with calm waters the rest of the time.

Underwater Conditions: The visibility was somewhat limited at between 60ft in the best dive site, and 25ft in the worst case. Temperature was quite cool between 71F and 73F. There was no current most of the time and when we did encounter one, it was very mild and totally negotiable.

DM Peter

Greetings,  Well here we are, at the end of another successful season of diving at the Revillagigedo (Socorro) islands and the Sea of Cortez. And what a season it has been! I’ve been on board since the middle of February, and it was intriguing to witness the dynamism of the environment evinced in my 10 trips this season.

During the winter months, we were graced with the presence of the seasonal visitors to the islands, the humpback whales. These beautiful animals provided a constant source of fascination from the surface, and an unending hope that maybe we might be one of the lucky ones to see them under water! Ah, but huge and majestic as they may be, they can be frustratingly coy. Still, although the chances may be hit and miss, we were blessed with a few magical encounters.

As the months rolled on, temperature and humidity rose, bringing with it more energy to the above water conditions, characterized by more rapidly changing wind and sea states. It also brought an end to the humpback whale season, but as we bade farewell to the whales, so we gave welcome to the sea lions and fish-filled reefs of the Sea of Cortez!

It’s always nice to shake up the routine a bit, and I very much enjoyed the chance to be onboard for our “combo” trips between Socorro and the calm, beautiful scenery of the waters surrounding La Paz, Mexico.  But amongst all that diversity, all the different experiences that touch our trips in one way or another, there was always one constant to look forward to: the eerie, strangely intelligent, curious, and stunningly beautiful giant manta rays.

Leaving the Socorro islands at the end of a season (and our more seasoned clients may attest to this as well) can feel like saying adieu to old friends, and although I may have been working in these islands for the better part of 4 years, I never fail to be touched by the chance to see the mantas.  I could go on – the scalloped hammerhead, silky, Galapagos, silvertip, white tip, and even whale sharks; the bottle nose dolphins, the false killer whales, and pilot whales; the turtles and moray eels; the schooling yellowfin tuna, wahoo, and jacks; and the abundant populations of reef fish. But to do it all justice would require more space than I have here. Suffice it to say I’ve found there’s something for everyone who is enamoured with the natural world.

Time to go now – there’s always work to be done!  Even on my birthday, which was celebrated in fine style by being serenaded by our recent group of German guests! Our chef Juan Carlos even fattened me up with a delicious birthday cake.  Until next season Socorro, vaya con Dios. Next up, Guadalupe and the great white sharks!

Sandy Curtis,   First Mate,   Nautilus Explorer

50 trips to Socorro Island and I still find new experiences above and below the water to take my breath away – First Mate Log – May 17, 2010

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Good evening! This is first mate Sandy writing, from the beautiful Sea of Cortez near La Paz, Mexico. We have anchored in a small bay on the island of Espiritu Santo for the night, before heading back to the local California sea lion colony, Los Islotes, for some adrenaline-filled diving with some gregarious marine mammals tomorrow morning.  It’s been more than 3 years since I’ve been on a trip to the Sea of Cortez, and there certainly is something magical about it. Some may say that her day is past – that the crowds of pleasure boats and luxury yachts have encroached upon the serenity of the islands, or that the inevitable byproducts of a dramatically increased human presence in Baja California has lead to a negative impact on the local ecosystem – but for anyone whose curiosity may have been piqued by Steinbeck’s classic will still find much to marvel at in the calm, turquoise waters or the stark desert coastline.

It has been my pleasure to work aboard the Nautilus Explorer for more than 4 years now, and although I may be fast approaching 50 completed voyages to the Islas Revillagigedo, Socorro and the Sea of Cortez (in addition to Alaska, the Channel Islands, British Columbia, Clipperton Island, and Isla Guadalupe – phew this boat gets around!), I still find new experiences above and below the water to take my breath away. Diving with giant manta rays, schooling hammerhead sharks, great white sharks, sea lions, dolphins, and humpback whales for many would be more than enough to hold the appeal of a unique job like this for many years, but in addition to all the wonderful natural splendour that we are exposed to in this work, I am also honoured and humbled to have had the opportunity, and the pleasure, of meeting many wonderful and fascinating people, crewmembers and guests alike, from all over the world. To be caught up in a swirl of languages, social backgrounds, political viewpoints (now now, let’s keep it controversy free!!), cultural differences, and unique perspectives, all from the shared common base of a love of the natural world, can be a heady experience and lead to very interesting discoveries about one’s self and the world around us.

Having only recently assumed the role of first mate onboard the Nautilus Explorer, I am enjoying the fresh challenges and learning experiences presented to me in my new capacity, even if I may sometimes complain about having less time in the water! Being involved in the management and planning side to keep an operation like this on an even keel can be quite an interesting adventure. For instance, it wasn’t until recently that I found out that this boat isn’t run on diesel fuel at all. In fact, it’s actually run by a combination of paper, emails, coffee, and checklists. Oh, so many checklists. So many checklists, that we’ve found ourselves having to make checklists for our checklists! Now I wouldn’t go so far as to describe it as Kafka-esque, although sometimes if I’m a little behind, it can certainly feel that way. But hey, that’s why I attended nautical school – to learn how to use a laminator!

The sheer distances and vast differences in cultural regions that we operate in can lead to their own interesting experiences. Around here, just to deal with our day to day work, we all need to speak English, Spanish, Spanglish, Espanglais, Franglish, French, Espancais, Englespanol, and simple pointing and grunting. Hand gestures take on a life of their own. The skill of screaming at people can sometimes be elevated to the status of art.

Boat driving, fixing things that are broken, ordering parts, dealing with bureaucratic paperwork and yelling at contractors can certainly take up a large slice of the workday pie, but whenever we can we all like to find the time to remind ourselves why we do all this in the first place. For me, I usually encounter at least one hour of every trip that brings it home to me why I do what I do. It may be underwater, eye to eye with a giant, beautiful, eerie manta ray. Or it may be on the top deck, on a quiet moonlit night in a secluded anchorage, gazing up at a limitless panoply of stars. Or perhaps it’s that moment of tranquility that occurs just as the last of 24 divers have just jumped off my skiff and dove beneath the surface, leaving only their bubbles breaking the still, dappled surface of a calm day at Cabo Pearce.

It is everyone’s right to complain about their jobs. And I believe that human nature is such that no matter how perfect things can be, someone will find something to complain about, even if they have to make it up. But the moments of magic that occur above and below the surface on every single trip I’ve ever been on are what keep me here, and keep me proud to be involved in such a unique operation such as this. It’s an experience that I wouldn’t trade for anything, and one that will stay with me for the rest of my life. If you don’t believe me, come on board and see for yourself. You won’t regret it.

Sandy Curtis, First Mate, Nautilus Explorer

Mantas, mantas, manta and loads of in-water time working with a film-crew at San Benedicto Island. Divemaster log. May 3, 2010.

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

We have had our last two days shooting at the Boiler at San Benedicto Island  and it has been a lot of time in the water.  Our normal day is to start to get a few divers in the water at around 09:00 and wait for the mantas getting in to the Boiler to get cleaned by mainly Clarion Angel fish and Cortez chubs.

When the light and the giant mantas arrive and have been getting more and more interessted in the scuba divers we take out the freedivers and put the film team in the water. It is hectic. The camera just takes 1,5 min and then need to get changed. It is a 35 mm film so very high quality. While the film camera is getting loaded we work with two still cameras and one HD camera. The film team holding the cameras under water are 3 and then two models and one of us from the crew of nautilus as a snorkeler and free  diver. On the surface there are two skiffs. One serving the divers and one serving the cameras and two extra camera crew loading the film for the 35 mm film camera. All this might sounds ok, but with 6 ft and current and wind as the 1 of may. It can get quiet of a hassle and hard work. We never come back to the Nautilus Explorer to eat lunch. Our hostesses Ashley and Silvia and Chef Enrique serves us with food packages that we take aboard the skiffs.

We work just with ambient light so we try to squeeze out of it as much as we can. It is also not all the mantas that are so cooperative, so of what I counted about 6 days in the water an average of 8 hrs non stop a day and a lot of swimming!! I got around 20- 25 individuals of them. there where 3 that where extremly curious . One small female chevron manta visited us 5 days of 6 and a big black female Obama visitided us 3 days in a row. An other 5 that approaches us repetedly and the rest stayed circuling us on a bit of a distance.

Other things that you see while sittiing 7-10 hr in the water around the boiler was many big Wahoos, and Yellow fin Tunas. Two mobulas that I cant say wich kind. While diving. 1 Tiger shark, a few galapagos sharks and silky sharks and white tip sharks. A big group of big eyed jack is always somewhere close to the rock. And I think we heared the last humpback songs for this year! They have almost all gone now.

It has been a fun week, the filmteam are happy of the images that they got and it was a brake in the routine for us as crew. Also to spend so much time at one site is interessting. I named a cortes chub with one yellow dot on its head for smudgy, as it was seen every day all the time…

A few of us actually even a bit exhausted went for a last dive before dinner at the canyon and we got a beautiful dive with a few hammerhead sharks getting in close on the cleaning station. Good way to finish the week.

Dive guide Sten
Surface conditions: 1 may windy and very choppy and lot of clouds and current on top of that. 2 may much calmer, sunny temp 26-27 C

Underwater conditions: May 1 current and some big breakers on the boiler. may 2 sunny weak current ok surge both days 25-26 C ca 76 F Viz good ca 100ft

Photos by Sten Johansson

According to the size of the uterus, these sharks are ready to give birth + unbelievable humpback whale behavior around divers. April 24, 2010. Guest log.

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

My God!! Easily one of the best whale encounters of my life. A mother and calf humpback playing and relaxing around our ship, approaching snorklers for over an hour. At one point, the calf approached me to within a meter or two to look me directly in the eye. An amazing experience!!!!     Scott Davis

Today we started the shark tagging program in Mexican waters! One receiver was set on the west side of Roca Partida at 127 ft. The location is excellent and a shark cleaning station is very near from it. After we set it we saw three scalloped hammerheads 50 ft north of it. The sharks species seen during these dives were: scalloped hammerhead (Sphyrna lewini), Silver tip (Carcharhinus albimarginatus), Silky (C. falciformis), Galapagos (C. galapaguensis) and White tip reef (Triaenodon obesus). All the different individuals from these species were adults and in the case of the white tips two pregnant females were seen on the middle of the island at 50 ft. According to the size of the uterus and the behavior of the females (occasional movements out of their caves) they were ready to give birth. By 11:15 am we saw a humpback whale with her calf. They spend more than two hours very close to the Nautilus Explorer making the day unbelievable. The calf made several excursion to the surface in front of the divers and a few full body breaches were seen by free divers just in front of them. Several jacks (big eye trevally) were seen close to the surface traveling in pairs (female silvery and male dark) because they are on the reproductive period. A very nice day for science at the rock! Dr. Mauricio Hoyos

Another busy day. It started with last minute preparations for the deep dive at Roca Partida. Camera batteries and chip, programming the Sonde, Final prepping of the rebreather, readjusting my weighting for an additional layer of wetsuit for the colder water here at Roca Partida.  I am always ambivalent about deep diving here. The bottom is beautiful, and lush. It is mixed sand and rock topography, fairly flat at 255 feet deep. It has many animals absent from Clipperton, and uncommon in the rest of the Revillagigedo Islands, like gorgonian coral and basket stars. I enjoy the fauna and vista. The downside is it is colder, always very rough with up and down motions that make it impossible to hold a steady depth, and usually has a strong current running. All of this makes decompression not only difficult, but more dangerous than calmer water.

My goal for this dive was to shoot photographs to document the bottom for a paper being worked on by Gordon Handler at the LA Natural History Museum. I also carried the Sonde to collect water chemistry data.  The descent was uneventful, except I could not get the strobe tied to the anchor. It is a bright flashing light that I was going to use to help me find the anchor at the end of the dive so I could go back up the anchor line. The problem was that even at 250 feet deep the chain was moving up and down so much I could not thread a tie wrap (zip tie) to secure the strobe. After a few minutes of trying I gave up and continued the dive without the safety strobe.

While attempting to affix the strobe, my camera dome port hit the moving anchor chain, and was severely scuffed. This put a blurry place in all of my photographs, where it obscured the lens. That is about a $700 fix. Ouch!

I was somewhat narced on the dive, as I did not have enough helium in my supply cylinder. (“Narced” refers to narcosis, the feeling of being drunk from the nitrogen in the breathing mix at depth.) This made it more difficult to focus on my objectives and to make observations. In fact, when I looked at my photographs after the dive, I saw star fish in almost every picture that I did not see during the actual dive.

The ascent and decompression were as awful as I anticipated. I tried to stay at least ten feet below where I was supposed to be so as not to violate my decompression ceiling (that’s REALLY bad), but even with that the waves would occasionally kick me too shallow. It required a lot of focus and effort to maintain proper depth.

During one of the few lulls of relatively calm water, while I was 45 feet deep and minding my own business, I looked away from my depth gauge and my oxygen display and glanced about. I turned around, and noticed that someone had put a big mural of two humpback whales behind me. “That’s odd,” I thought. “WAIT!!! THERE ARE TWO HUMPBACK WHALES STARING AT ME!” They were less than ten feet from me, a momma and a calf, just hanging right in front of me, not moving at all. I started fumbling for my camera, which was hanging on a line from my rebreather harness. I quickly turned it on and took a few pictures.

Just so you know, this is NOT a common event. I have seen humpback whales out here before, once, but to get pictures of them I had to snorkel for nearly five hours, and I only got to glimpse them for maybe two minutes of that time. These two were just hanging there, staring at me! I hurriedly snapped off about 40 pictures before they swam off.

Needless to say, from this point of the decompression on, I was more attentive to my surroundings. Usually I just kind of zone out, letting my subconscious attend to depth, time and air. Not today. The humpback whales returned two more times, and I actually managed to grab a few decent pictures. It certainly helped make an activity that is usually as boring as watching paint dry far more entertaining! The crowd on the boat was also entertained. They had all been snorkeling and watching the whales from the surface. They said that the whales had been sitting right behind me for several minutes before I noticed them. They could tell the instant I saw them, because I gave a violent start. A moment or two later I started grabbing for my camera. They all thought it was very funny!

This dive was a little over four hours long. I sat out for an hour, and put new carbon dioxide absorbent in my rebreather. I then went back down with the group. The whales had gone, so we dove along the sides of the rock. I took pictures of white tip sharks, Clarion angelfish, and a pair of mating octopi. I surfaced after an hour and was ferried back to the boat.

We packed up, and left for San Benedicto Island. A night crossing to shorten the trip back to Cabo San Lucas.

April 23-24, 2010:  From Nicole

I did 4 dives today at San Benedicto; a place called the Canyons.  It was fantastic.  The wind was up a bit, and as the gusts blew across the water, they would sweep across the stark volcanic island and clouds of volcanic ash (from the 1954 eruption) would spill out in a plume and land on the water – and on the boat, in our eyes, in our teeth, and on our dive gear.  It was surreal, and sometimes dropped the visibility in the water.  It would go from being a deep clear blue to looking like someone had spilled flour in it.

I saw a few big hammerhead sharks.  They were a bit deeper than I was willing to go (I did not have a rebreather or mixed gas), so I descended to about 110 feet for a very short time and saw them just below me.  It was pretty cool.  They are such strange creatures with their giant hammer head shaped head with eyes way out on the ends.  These are scalloped hammerheads.

Then I turned my focus to all the amazing fish and the invertebrates.  Apparently, only about 50 feet away, 5 huge manta rays visited the other divers and came very close.  The mantas here are known for that behavior.  I had to settle for catching a glimpse of them from the surface.  But for me, coming here is way more than seeing mantas, so I was thrilled with my dives!

I am tired, pleased, and exhilarated.     Jeff B.

Photos courtesy of Jeff Bozanic, Scott Davis and Captain Gordon Kipp

Diveguide Sten speaks candidly about diving Socorro + guest logs in spanish and english – April 10, 2010

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

After my time diving and guiding here on the Island of Socorro and the Revillagigedos. It is now my 5th season and my trip number 54 down here. I skipped my work in palau to come back to Socorro. It is not easy diving and getting in to big animals are not easy. It takes patience. As a guide it gets sometimes a bit frustrating. Big animals are often careful, and you have to read current, water temperature, fishlife and look around and UP! I see often scuba divers being far to much speeding around , going deep for no use wasting their bottom time and air for no reason, and with jerky fast movements making big animals move on or not approach. Chasing animals does not work either. I use to compare it if you want to see a deer in the forest it does not help if you are running like a crazy breaking branches and scream at the same time… The same in big animal diving. Go slow, look around, if it is sharks and especially hammerheads ..hide , giant mantas let them come to you, stay as shallow as you can. Over and over again I see divers swimming fast away from me when I got a animal just in front of my nose and then divers comes up and say they did not see anything. I wished sometimes that people used us guides a bit more and followed us instead of running away from us. My time as a shephard is over with following divers My work is to go go where I beleive I find the animals and hope that our divers will trust me and look where I am looking;)

So yes we have schools of 100 hammerhead sharks here at Socorro, we just have to find the hot spot!

So we are back with two nice days with calm seas finishing up at Roca Partida. We got a few repeaters who has been come to be Roca Partida Junkies. I am admitting I am one..

Each dive each dive is different. And learn to searching of this special spot where current, temperature and fish life makes a certain spot hot. And when it is hot….WOW!! This time we managed to get on the spot a few times and in a time we got in just in a massive wall of hammerhead sharks, 100 and more, just turning up from nowhere and as well we have been taken by surprise they are gone again. We have some massive Galapagos and not afraid at all, i whispered them in and a few time s it got enough excitments and stopped when they got to close. Interesting to see yellow fin tunas following Galapagos sharks and strike them self against the shark. Why do they do that? Is it a defense or to scratch parasites of them. Seen them do the same against the great White shark when we operate in Guadalupe Island.

The beautiful silver tip shark was there as well. Great two days diving at the rock. We could see a few humpbacks and hear a few, but not that many as last trip. We had one pass by a manta, it did not want to stay and play.

After last dive we started to go up north back to Cabo San Lucas. We are having a calm trip going up north, charing pictures and sleeping , reading books amd a few films and talking before we get back to Cabo San Lucas. No wish to go there..after days like this at sea. Diveguide Sten

Surface conditions: Long medium swell, did not bother much our loading of divers. 30C and mostly sunny

Underwater condition: almost no current at all, almost to calm under water. 24-25 C 75-77F Viz between 50 and 60 feet and up to 100 foot on the best dives.

Guest logs….

Perfect day of diving at Roca Partida! Four dives each one as exciting as the others. More sea life than one can comprehend at one time. Delicious yellowfin tuna, hammerheads, Galapagos, whitetip sharks and a supporting cast of thousands. The boat is wonderful and they give us cookies after every dive, what a perfect slice of life!!

Wow! What a day at Roca Partida. The Hammers were out in force today. We also had a few encounters with Wahoo. jodi

Excellent day, super visibility, and several cool shark encounters with Hammers, Galapagos, and the white-tips stacked on top of each other on their balconys. Huge schools and highways of massive fish – Wahoo, Tuna, Jacks, etc. Wasn’t totally over the top for us, but Sven and the Italians claim to have seen a wall of 100 maybe 200 hammerheads at the end of the 3rd dive (when unfortunately we had to surface due to empty tanks)… Too much fun!!

Un dia lleno de tiburones, emociones, profundidad y mucho buceo no paramos de asombrarnos de ser invitados por Galapagos, Silkies, Hammer a una fiesta de excitacion y excelentes fotografias.
Susana B.

Landing on top of giant manta rays on our first dive -Divemaster and guest log – english & spanish – April 4 – 5, 2010.

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

We came up at Cabo Pearce after our traditional navy inspection. Setting the anchor with a decending line for making it it easy for divers out on the lava finger that have been poured out from Socorro Islands Mount Everman. We dive it down for our scuba divers and move it to the place close the cleaning stations so we can maximize our bottom time and air as it is fairly deep. A bit of effort especially a day like today when it was what we say here a little bit “windy” underwater, but then the line makes it as well safe to hand by hand working your self slowly  and safe and not getting swept away from the dive site.

I like Cabo Pearce cause if you don’t like current dive we can dive by the same lava flow that has a nice cheer wall and no current at all. It does not have as much pelagic life like the sharks and Tunas, but often mantas and I have seen diving humpback whales passing by the wall with a few ocations. Today we got the best result for us who dived the easy one. We dropped straigt on a manta at 60 ft she liked us direct and stayed with us and cirkeled us over and over again left and 5 minutes came back and in the end of the dive a second manta cirkeled us. During the whole dive we have moved a distance of 40 m no more. You can chase all over , but often it works best to take a good spot and sit and wait and see what comes. The rest of the day was a bit harder on the big animals. A few hammerheads sharks and passing mantas nice humpback whale songs. A few dolphins came in and had a look at us but not the once that we play with her, wonder where she is this dolpins that have been giving me a hug with her pectoral fins pulling me backward holding my fins… A Tiger shark passed over our heads in a quick pass, nice to see they are here and a few silvertips came in when we wispered them in.

On our  Humpback whale trip we had both in water sighting some with beautiful film shots from some of our guests and above water close sights. But some times you need patience, but here some times it can be so many that you dont know wich whale group you will try to approach.

We had two good days at Punta Tosca and now looking forward to Roca Partida Diveguide Sten.

Surface conditions: 30 C calm seas cloudy with some sun.
Underwater conditions: viz was down to 40 ft temp 24-25 c 76 F Strong current out on the outside lava finger.

La danza de las mantas fue el dia de hoy acompanada por el dulce canto de las ballenas, Punta Tosca nos trajo un sonido de esperanza y dulzura de la naturaleza, un atardecer acompanado de fotos y experiencias compartidas, que mas se puede pedir….
Susana B.

Hoy en Punta Tosca, trabajamos haciendo los censos de peces en invetebrados acompanados de tres mantas, que transmitieron su tranquilidad e hicieron de nuestro trabajo un dia de relajacion, que convinado con el azul del oceano, nos dan mas ganas de seguir explorarando las bellezas del oceano, aunado a esto, tuvimos musica de fondo, el canto de las ballenas que te hacian sentir la vibracion circundante, haciendo mas placentero el dia…. trabajando en el oceano, disfrutando de las bellezas arrecifales, mantas, y cantos de ballenas, es un trabajo que muchos me han de estar envidiando, me encanta mi trabajo jejeje…
Arturo Bocos.

Today in our dive in Punta Tosca we had a very beautiful sunlight dance with a big manta playing with us for several minutes. We had then the opportunity to face humpback whales and dolphins, both mom and baby that came near us during our morning zodiac trip …

Well, today was the day we all came here for. All of the divers had multiple manta sightings, a few hammerhead shark sightings, whale songs all day and for the icing on the cake, in-water humpback whale encounters! We still have the night-time silky shark snorkel ahead of us. We’ll remain anchored in the same protected bay overnight and will hopefully do it all again tomorrow. In-between all of this diving we have been pampered by the crew of the Nautilus Explorer, non-stop. Fantastic meals and snacks after every dive. Every crew member onboard does their best to accomodate every guest’s wish. It’s going to be real hard to go back home after this!
John D.

First dive this morning was awesome. At the bottom of the line was our first manta waiting. As we made our way up the ridge we encountered a large male green turtle, before coming across two more mantas hovering above the ridge. Back near the ascent line a curious bottlenose dolphin cruised by taking a good look at us. Only a few minutes after that I looked up to see a big hammerhead slightly above us, weaving slowly back and forth at around 40ft, and only 30 feet in front of the hammerhead another manta was cruising along. On our safety stop two mantas hovered nearby, eyeing us up curiously. Lots of humpbacks around today too giving us some great topside views.
G-diddy

Back to the land of giant manta rays – Socorro Island – Captain Log and diver report – April 2, 2010

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Well back again to the land of the giant manta rays after 36 hours alongside in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, to replenish, restock and refuel. For the second straight week, the 220 mile transit south from Cabo to the Socorro Islands was perfect, with a nice long swell on our quarter making for a very comfortable ride. The sky stayed clear after a great sunset to give us a spectacular view of the night sky, a view that can only be fully appreciated far from the lights of the city. As we approached our first stop at Isla San Benedicto, our regular welcoming party of Booby birds and bottlenose dolphins joined us on the bow to escort us in and provide the morning entertainment. On arrival at San Benedicto we dropped the anchor in the sheltered bay at “the Canyon”, our usual spot for the checkout dive, and started gearing up.

A very strong current this morning however made this checkout dive a little more challenging than we wanted, but we came to dive so that’s what we did. Hand over hand down the line to the anchor chain we went, followed by what we like to call vertical rock climbing along the bottom, making our way to the volcanic ridge that is one of the best places at these islands to see hammerhead sharks. After a short wait hanging on to the edge of the ridge, the sharks showed up, 3 or 4 hammerheads coming in real close to us, with several more further out in the background. A few divers also got to enjoy a Giant Manta Ray hovering nearby as they waited for the hammerheads. A challenging but rewarding checkout dive!

We did two more dives here at the Canyon today and despite the persistent current both were great with hammerhead shars and one or two Giant Manta rays on each. Heading to Socorro Island tonight in search of more friendly manta rays and hopefully some underwater humpback whale encounters! I’ll even break out my humpback whale dance if I have too. Hopefully it won’t come to that.
Captain Gordon Kipp

Surface conditions: Mostly sunny, air temp 75F (24C), calm seas in anchorage.

Diving conditions: Strong current, visibility 30ft – 70ft (9m – 22m), water temp 75F (24C)

We just started our trip with a truly international group. Countries represented include the US, Mexico, France, Germany, Belgium and Italy. Diving is our universal language so communication doesn’t seem to be a problem. All of the scuba divers are enjoying the first class service and ammenities of the Nautilus Explorer and its hard working staff. A few giant mantas and hammerhead sharks were spotted on our first day as we listened to the haunting songs of the nearby humpback whales. We are all eagerly anticipating more big animal sightings in the days to come.
John D.

Un dia impresionante buceando con dos maravillosas mantas que nos deleitaron con su baile y nos permitieron acariciarlas con nuestras burbujas, en una sensual danza de majestuosidad. Susana B.

Very candid guest report and video from a recent trip to Socorro during which the scuba diving didn’t quite measure up.. — April 1, 2010

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Ken Kurtis trip video March 13/10

THE REVILLAGIGEDO ISLANDS (SOCORRO) MARCH 13-21, 2010

click here to see photos from this trip

It may not have been the trip we’d hoped for but we still had a memorable experience diving the Revillagigedo Islands of Mexico, better known as Socorro.

The trip started off on a semi-ominous note as we ran into the group that preceded us while we were checking out of our hotel and on our way down to the boat. They told us of a rather difficult crossing back to Cabo San Lucas at the end of their trip, with 10-foot seas most of the way. But we knew from having checked out swell reports prior to leaving L.A. that the swell was calming down so we hoped for a fairly smooth crossing and that’s pretty much what we got. So we started out on a promising note.

Our group this year consisted of 11 divers: Bruce & Christy Bonnett, Laurie Kasper, Ric Aceves, Steve Rosenfeld, Ron Roth, Lloyd Austin, Bob Willson, Joe Towers, Ted Wright, and me (Ken Kurtis). Everyone was fairly experienced and everyone (except me) would be making their first trip to Socorro.

Getting there is half the fun. The Revillagigedo Islands are comprised of four islands: San Benedicto, Socorro, Roca Partida, and Clarion. San Benedicto’s the closest and is about 230 miles away. Clarion’s way too far away to be on the regular itinerary so you just dive the first three. And Socorro Island been off limits for a few months because the Mexican navy, which has a small base on Socorro, has been doing “live fire” exercises. Luckily for us, Socorro opened back up during our trip so we were actually the first divers to dive the island in calendar year 2010.

But no matter which of the three islands you head for, it’s a long haul. You leave from Cabo San Lucas (we flew down the day before) and then it’s anywhere from a 22-26 hour run. So you spend at least one full day at sea. But that gives you time to go through briefings, check out your gear, assemble cameras and housings, get your sea legs, and just get your mind into the idea that you’ll soon be diving a place that’s off the generally-beaten path.

There are now three boats running trips to the area and we dove (as we did in 2008) with the Nautilus Explorer. We can’t say enough good things about the boat and especially the crew.

Simply put, the crew goes out of their way to do their best to maximize your enjoyment of the trip. They certainly can’t control the weather, the vis, or the animal life, but they can do their best to maximize the conditions you’re presented with and that’s exactly what the nautilus crew does, from the captain on down.

Of special note was the lead divemaster on our trip, Sten Johansson, who was also with us in 2008. Sten is simply hands-down one of the best DMs we’ve ever had the pleasure dealing with and really seems to take it personally when the animals that should be there aren’t or conditions aren’t what they’re meant to be. He’ll do whatever he can to point (or lead) people in the right direction or change the dive site or itinerary in search of better conditions if what you’re faced with aren’t ideal. On top of that, he’s a gentle soul AND speaks English, Swedish, Spanish, German, and a smattering of Italian.

We also want to single out old friend Enrique Aguilar, originally from the Don Jose in La Paz, who’s now the chef on the Nautilus. Aside from enjoying spending time with him, Enrique’s simply a wonderful chef, preparing tasty delights for all the meals every day. Breakfast was always eggs-to-order, sausage or ham, fruits, cereal, toast, oatmeal, and other choices. Lunches had a soup to start and usually three selections of entrée, one of which was always veggie. (And there were fresh-made cookies every day after lunch.) Dinners started with a salad and then there were combinations of chicken, beef, pork, or veggie for the main dish. It’s one of those trips where it was hard to lose weight, no matter how much you dive.

The boat itself is well laid out and in pretty decent shape (although I’m pushing them to update their 10-year-old TV in the salon to a nice, new LCD HDTV). Most of the staterooms (double-occupancy) are on the lower deck, including the “dorm room” single berths which are more like California-boat bunks and which will be eliminated during an upcoming renovation. The main deck has the dive deck (with camera station), salon, and galley. The second deck contains two “executive” suites, the hot tub and some hanging-out areas, and the third deck is the sundeck (or moon deck at night).

It varies by dive location, but diving is done off the main boat or from one of three skiffs: two rubber Zodiacs (each holding 6-8 divers), or the “tinny”, a large aluminum skiff that can easily handle up to 16 divers. It’s a giant stride when diving off the Nautilus or a back-roll when diving the others. Both the Nautilus and the tinny have ladders for fairly easy exit from the water. But the Zodiacs have a very small ladder so the best way up is to remove weights, remove tank/BC, and then either kick up and over the side (they’ve got lines to grab on to for assistance) or remove your fins and try to climb up the ladder.

Given the currents that can come up in the area, Socorro’s also a place when you want to have a safety sausage with you and a Dive Alert or some sort of air horn. If you don’t have them, the boat will lend them to you. But the safety sausage especially makes it a bit easier for you to be spotted if you surface away from the pick-up boat, or if the seas are up a bit. The horns are for emergency use only.

The actual diving in Socorro can range anywhere from mild to monstrous. We did dives where there was absolutely no current, but we also had the experience of pulling ourselves down a line hand-over-hand. And the currents can ebb and flow, so just because there’s no current at the beginning of your dive doesn’t mean there will be no current at the end of your dive.

In fact, I did one dive (at Cabo Pearce) where I followed the line down to about 60 feet, got out my reef hook, hooked in, and then just stayed tethered there for the entire 50-minute dive. I had one manta make two passes but he was fairly high up so I couldn’t get off a good shot. But it was very interesting over that period of time to experience the ebb and flow of the current, and to observe how the fish behaviors changed with the flow. When it was running, many of the animals stayed tucked close to the reef. As it slacked, they would spread out a bit, only to tuck back in as it picked back up. A reef hook might be a useful tool for you in you’re going down there, but not essential. I used mine occasionally, but not on every dive.

You will want a wetsuit with you. As this appears to be an El Nino year, the water’s a few degrees warmer than normal down in the Revillagigedos. I was generally reading 78-80°on my computer although others were reading as low as 75° . I wore a 3mm jumpsuit with a lycra hood and that was perfect for me. Others wore anything from a 3mm to a 5mm to a 7mm to even a drysuit. Whatever floats your boat.

The general daily routine was coffee anytime day or night, continental breakfast starting around 7AM, dive 1 at 7:45-ish, full breakfast at 9:30, dive 2 at 10:45, lunch around 12:30PM, dive 3 at 2:15PM, snack at 4PM, dive 4 at 4:45PM, cocktails at 6:30PM dinner around 7:30PM. There’s no night diving except for one night (at Socorro) where you can night snorkel with Silky Sharks if the conditions and sharks permit. In 2008, we had a dozen sharks behind the boat. This year, there were only two so I passed on this one.

Diving can be done on air or nitrox (32% – $20/day extra for the nitrox – worth it for the bottom time advantage) and you can choose between aluminum 80s or steel 100s ($32/trip extra for the steel). I chose to dive with the steel partly for the extra volume and partly for the weight advantage. In the water when the steel tanks are full, they’re 15 pounds negative (about 8 pounds negative at 500psi) which meant for me in a 3mm, I didn’t need weights at all. The negative buoyancy of the tank was more than ample. So if you go dive with Nautilus and choose a steel 100cf tank, bear in mind the weight of the tank. (In fact, that’s just a good idea in general.)

It’s hard to know what to say about the diving. On the one hand, how can you complain about a trip where you saw (1) Hammerheads, (2) Manta Rays, (3) Galapagos Sharks, (4) Whitetip Sharks, (5) Diamond Rays, (6) a Green Turtle, and even (7) mother & calf Humpback Whales (not to mention dozens and dozens of whales seen from the boat and heard underwater).

But it certainly wasn’t the Socorro that Socorro is promoted as being. A good example of that were our dives at The Boiler on San Benedicto. This is one of the signature dives of the Revillagigedos and the one where it’s billed as being the place where Manta Rays will essentially hover over your head and demand to be petted on the belly. In fact, I was just reading a post the other day on Wetpizel.com where a guy was talking about his Socorro trip a month before ours and was rhapsodizing about a Manta Ray at The Boiler who stayed with him for 40 minutes and continually interacted with him.

Our experience over the course of two dives at The Boiler was a little different. We saw exactly zero Mantas. The vis was really good, probably approaching 100’ but there was nary a manta in sight. In fact, I think on two dives at The Boiler (a combined 90 minutes underwater) we saw a grand total of three Whitetips and a Galapagos.

But the lack of big animals doesn’t mean lack of a good dive. In fact on our second dive at The Boiler, I had one of my favorite animal encounters and squeezed off my best shot of the whole trip.

We were on the second dive and had circled about halfway around The Boiler (which is a fairly vertical rock but which you can circumnavigate rather easily on a dive) when a female Mexican Hogfish came over to me. She must have seen her reflection in my dome port because she just kept staring at me. And even as I backed up a bit, she continued to approach me and literally stuck her nose almost on the port of the lens. You can see the results in the photos with this report under “Other Good Stuff” in the fourth row, first picture.

And just that one experience underscores something I learned a long time ago about diving: There’s plenty to see. But if you fixate on just one thing to the exclusion of everything else, you can turn what could be a wondrous dive into a crappy one.

In fact, on this trip I left my computer in the salon and had the screen saver set so that it would continuously display the stuff I’d already shot. I happened to walk by the computer one morning and saw two of the other guests (not from our group) watching my screen and one of them said, “Where was he diving? I didn’t see any of this stuff.” Well . . . yeah . . . because you probably weren’t looking. And especially in a place like Socorro, if you concentrate on looking up and out, where you’d expect to find the pelagics, but ignore down and in front of you, you might miss a lot of really cool stuff. You have to develop a 360° awareness. Otherwise . . ..

You might miss the octopus that was just sitting on a rock biding it’s time. There was a Leather Bass and two Bluefin Trevallies in the vicinity circling. In fact, that’s how I spotted the octo. And I thought it was interesting that none of these fish, who would probably appreciate a little taste of calamari, were making any attempt to strike at the octo.

But it turns out that what they do is simply follow the octo around as the octo hunts. And what they hope for is that when the octo sticks a tentacle into a crack or crevice to probe for a meal, the small fish that the octo forces out in to the open make for an easy meal and that’s when they strike Very clever hunting strategy. But you don’t observe any of that if you’d only got eyes for big things.

A similar thing happened on one of our final dives of the trip at Cabo Pearce. Most of the group went to the right and headed out to the point to hang in the current and keep an eye out for mantas. They got skunked. I, on the other hand, was content to drop at the same spot but headed left and was treated to a number of Clarion Damselfish. Now this fish in and of itself is no big deal and you probably wouldn’t travel all the way out here just to see them but I like them and I appreciate that fact that they’re endemic to the region, which means this is the only place in the world where they’re found. So I was quite content to give up the chance not to see a Manta to be able to find a fish that excites me. Plus we had a nice Diamond Ray, another pair of octos in love, and the whale singing was really loud.

And that, to me, is one of the great things about diving. You can sort of choose what it is that’s going to make your dive seem fulfilling. You can limit yourself to only one or two things but if you don’t see those, then you’ve stacked the deck against yourself. Or you can resolve to take whatever it is that Mother Nature gives you, and make the best of it.

So we didn’t come back from this trip saying, “Wow!! You won’t believe what I saw!!!” But that doesn’t mean we didn’t have a good time nor that the trip was memorable. It just wasn’t, as I said at the beginning, the trip we’d expected and hoped for.

That all being said . . .

There’s a lot to be said for the non-pelagic diving at the Revillagigedos. We saw octopuses all over the place. One thing that amazed me was that there were a lot of times I saw TWO octopuses either occupying the same hole or side by side. In fact, there was one time when there were two octos sitting together and one had a tentacle draped over the other one like a schoolboy at the movies with his arm around his girl’s shoulder.

I always like seeing the Clarion Angels and the Redtailed Triggers. They’re both brightly-colored, are great photo subjects, and are just pleasant to look at. They also both tend to congregate in large groups which makes for a good picture. I didn’t see it this time, but DM Sten carries with him an empty plastic soda bottle and when he’s underwater he crinkles it and when the Clarions and the Redtails hear that sound, they come running to Sten like their lives depended on it. Really fun to watch and something I’ve got to remember to try in SoCal waters to see how the Garibaldi react.

And let’s not forget the whales. Humpback Whales are at all the islands in profusion and you constantly see them blowing on the surface, tail-slapping, and even breaching. There are numerous mother/calf pairs, usually with a larger male escort, but the best part about this is being underwater. You don’t see the whales, but you hear them. They are constantly singing, sometimes with the low tones of the males, and sometimes with the higher-pitched tones of the females answering them. And you hear it on just about every dive, especially if you take the time to stop and pause breathing for a moment. It’s really quite a magical thing to experience.

Nautilus also tried something new with us which was an in-water whale experience. We divided into four groups of 6 each and, over the course of four attempts in two days, went out to try to do a whale snorkel. (This replaced one of the day dives for each group.) Sten had actually spent time at the Silverbanks in the Dominican Republic to study the techniques used there and adapt them for Socorro. We were his quite-willing guinea pigs.

The plan was to find a mother/calf pair at the surface, get within a reasonable distance, quietly enter the water, kick over to where they were, and see if they’d hang around. Although we didn’t get any long interactions, just about everybody got at least a glimpse of a whale underwater and everyone said it was definitely a worthwhile thing to attempt. It seems like Nautilus will keep doing this and we enjoyed giving it a shot.

We had one really memorable turtle encounter at Roca Partida (where we could only spend one day due to a predicted building swell) when a bunch of us ran into a Green Turtle who was very curious about each individual diver and was especially curious about the flashing things at each end of my camera, and came over to investigate. Like I‘ve said many times before, the animals are as curious at times about us as we are about them.

Roca Partida is a really great dive but you’ve got to be careful there as well. First of all, don’t lose sight of the fact that it’s about 80 miles away from the nearest land mass (Socorro Island) so you don’t want to be out there if the weather turns. Secondly, it’s not very big, maybe 150 feet long and 50 feet wide. And all around the rock, it’s pretty much a vertical drop into water that far exceeds recreational dive depths, let alone the MOD of nitrox32. But it’s a fantastic dive.

Even if you see nothing else, there’s a 100% chance you’ll see dozens of Whitetip Sharks all nestled together, seemingly resting, along the eastern side of Roca in what are known as “The Shark Balconies” which are small ledges and flat areas on the wall. And you can pretty much go nose-to-nose with these guys without spooking them as long as you move slowly and stealthily. That area’s always fascinated me and this trip was no exception.

Roca’s also a place for good vis (we had anywhere from 60-100 feet) and you never know what you’re going to find. But if you venture off the rock, you’ve really got to keep checking behind you to make sure you can still see something lest you “go blue” which is the phrase Nautilus uses to mean you’re out of sight of the topography and any reference point. It’s a big no-no and calls for an immediate end to the dive so that you can be on the surface before you drift too far away.

But at Roca, you probably need to swim out at least a little to find the shark activity. We noticed some hammers off in the blue on our first dive and on my fourth dive, I ran into five Galapagos and one Silvertip just at the edge of our visibility. So you’ve got to take some chances but you’ve got to be careful.

You’ve also really got to watch your depth at Roca, especially when making multiple dives. Not only can you get yourself into deco trouble (no matter what you’re diving), but with nitrox, you have the added risk of oxygen toxicity if you violate depth limits. So you’ve got to keep an eye on that as well, and don’t get so excited about shark or other animal sightings that you start following them down and “suddenly” find yourself at 200 feet. (Given that the bottom at Roca’s around 250‘, that’s not an impossible scenario.) So it’s great diving out there but just use your head.

Unfortunately for us on this trip, we could only spend one day at Roca. (The normal sked calls for two days at Roca.) In fact, the whole story of this trip was “You should have been here last week.” The folks at Nautilus say this has been one of their most productive years ever in terms of the number and quality of the big-animal encounters. At least it was right up until our trip. And during our time there, it as almost like the animals were all State of California employees who had been furloughed for the week. I don’t know where they went (nor did the crew) but they were few and far between. Despite the best efforts of the crew, it simply wasn’t to be the week we’d hoped for. And we know that happens sometimes. It’s Mother Nature and you take the hand you’re dealt. (The parting shot were the 6-8’ seas all the way back which meant it took us a little over 30 hours to get back to Cabo.)

But the mark of a great organization is not how you deal with triumph but how you dealt with less-than-ideal outcomes. So we were all very surprised and pleased to find this note from Nautilus owner Mike Lever in our e-mail boxes a week after we got back:

“Mother Ocean gives us an enormous amount but she also takes away. Our 2009/2010 season on the Nautilus Explorer had been our most outstanding Socorro diving ever including more sharks than before and rapidly evolving amazing interaction with bottlenose dolphins as well as the regular cast of characters.

“We’ve logged the experiences online. Our guests have written blog entries about it. Our fan base on Facebook is fantastic. And then we had your trip of last week with much lower visibility than normal, less animals than normal and some pretty tough weather. For the first time in a long time, we are only able to offer 1 day of diving at Roca Partida. Yes it’s Mother Ocean but we still feel really badly for everyone onboard. Accordingly, we would like to extend to those who were onboard our March 13 trip, a $750 credit towards any future Nautilus booking of your choice. That’s our way of saying that it’s not fair that you were on the only ‘less than excellent diving’ Socorro trip this season and we hope this will help make up for that.”

Pretty classy move and just one more reason why I like dealing with Nautilus. (In fact, one of our divers has already cashed in his credit for a Guadalupe trip with Nautilus for this October.) This wasn’t something we’d asked for or even something we’d contemplated asking for. But to know that they feel a need to make amends for conditions totally out of their control speaks volumes about the ethics and values of the organization. Like I said earlier, they seem to take it personally and that’s a good thing.

Was it a good trip? Absolutely. Was it the trip we wanted? No. Will we go back again? Definitely. I’ve already sent an e-mail to our group suggesting maybe we use the credit towards a trip in March, 2011, and give the Revillagigedos another shot.

My mother always used to tell me, “Nothing ventured, nothing gained.” We may still not get that magical trip by trying again. But I can pretty much guarantee that no Mantas or Hammerheads are going to come swimming up to my place in Westwood. So you can rest assured that we’ll be going back south to the Revillagigedo Islands again and you can bet you bottom dollar that we’ll be doing it with our good friends on the Nautilus Explorer.

© 2010 Reef Seekers Dive Co. All Rights Reserved.

A picture perfect transit across Lake Pacific

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Location: San Benedicto, Socorro Island, Baja California Mexico

Every once in awhile, we are lucky enough to get conditions so perfect for the 218 mile crossing to the Socorro Islands that it is like cruising across a lake. Of course for an open ocean voyage it is pretty rare, and when it does occur my first instinctive thought is, “I wish it could be like this everyday out here”. Then I think, no, if it was like this everyday everyone would want my job. We left Cabo San Lucas, at the southern end of Baja California Sur, Mexico with virtually no wind blowing and the sea as calm as a sea can be. To our delight these conditions persisted throughout the 24 hour voyage, and we arrived at San Benedicto under a blue sky and ready to start our week of diving in search of Giant Manta Rays, hammerhead sharks, dolphins, humpback whales and more.

We spent our first day in the sheltered bay at the south end of San Benedicto at a divesite called ‘The Canyon’, in the shadow of an impressive volcanic cone last erupted in the 1950’s. The first dive of the trip, or the checkout dive as it’s called, served it’s purpose as the dive to work out any gear issues, fine tuning buoyancy, and shaking off any cobwebs that accumulated since the last dive trip. Current was slack but visibility was a little below average, the result of a southerly swell washing ashore and stirring up the ash along the beach near our divesite. Nonetheless many scuba divers surfaced with stories of several hammerhead sharks passing nearby, not bad for a checkout dive.

Conditions for dives 2 and 3 didn’t change much, but once again most of our guests had some good encounters with 8-10 big scalloped hammerheads, and a few divers had a black Giant Manta Ray cruise slowly by, apparently not quite ready to play yet. No worries, we’ve got another 5 days of diving and we’ll be ready for some of that good Manta Lovin’ when they’re ready. A beer in the hot tub while enjoying another gorgeous sunset was a great way to end day 1. Talk again soon,
Captain Gordon

Weather: Seas calm, winds light, skies clear, air temp 78F

Diving conditions: Visibility 20 ft, current mild to moderate, water temp 75F

Skipping a morning of diving to watch humpback whales at Socorro Island – divemaster and guest log – 20 March, 2010

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

So we sarted our pilot project to skip a scuba dive and go out in small groups in the morning to watch the humpback whales. It was an Success!! We managed to see whale in the water twice the first try and our training that we have got is giving results it made me excited! Something new to do at  Socorro Island. All the guests I talked to said it was defenitely worth skipping a scuba dive for this. So we will go on.
We had so much whale at Punta Tosca (Socorro)  that you did not know where to look. and the singing was so strong, That just laying in the water closing your eyes hold your breath and listening is a beautiful time of meditation and contemplation.

Punta Tosca was not giving easy on the other animals, we got manta both dive but viz was low all over. We tried to go up to Roca Oneil, but rthe swell was to big so in to Aquarium and a exploratary dive close by was not that bad guest named it for Area 51 after the place where aliens fly over Nevada , cause of its strange vulcanic topography.

At cabo pearce last day we had a beautiful day flat water and sunny, down under again,, hard to get the animals, we did get hammerhead sharks and a very curiouse silvertip shark in fullsize again coming in on a sharkwispering. And a giant manta ray, but not for long.

Interessting was to find barnacles from humpback whales laying on the bottom of Cabo Pierce, wonder if a whale either has scraped him self on the rock or maybe more possible lost them under a fight over a pretty girl humpback whale. The barnaclesare good 2 inches big and very heavy and are just like spikes on their pectoralfins that they use to fight with sometimes.

This trip was hard to get the big animals, vizibility was low, but the animals are there.

Dive guide Sten

Surface conditions: very little wind sunny and warm =30 C

Underwater conditions: A bit turbid water , but cleared up now and then 35-40 ft on the west side of Socorro. And 30-60 ft on the east side. Temp down to 74F 24 C

————— Guest Log ————–
Christy – The dive started with DM Pedro doing his patented manta dance at the bottom of the line. 15 minutes later, two giant mantas, one of which decided to hang around and visit. Very cool! Go Pedro! Now if he would just stop scaring the crap out of the snorkelers on the night snorkel with the silky sharks.

In general, I had expected to see more mantas, and have more pelagic interaction, and the visibility was not as good as expected. However, I did have some good dolphin dives and had my first dives with galapagos sharks. Of course this is not a zoo, it’s the wild, so I would love to come back to give it another shot. Lori

Ron – The most unique experience for me this trip was snorkeling with a humpback calf and the mother. That was an experience worth giving up a dive for, amazing.

Joe –  My giant manta coincided with my first camera dive… stand still while I turn it on and set the profile!!!  too close… back up a little…  the second pass I was able to get some sweet shots.

Engineer Dusan – I was cleaning barnacles along the side of the ship with my snorkel gear, and Joe was with me watching. Suddenly Joe said to me, in a very calm voice, Dusan, do you know there is a shark underneath us? I looked down, saw the shark, and start to squeeze the screwdriver in my hand. I said, work’s over! I was glad to make it back to the boat, and all night for some reason I was dreaming about lions. Now everytime I go anywhere with Joe I will feel safe.