Posts Tagged ‘luxury liveaboard’

We just jumped in the water and 3 humpback whales were waiting for us — it was something mystic. Guest Blog – 07 February 2010

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

The Canyon and the Boiler dive sites, San Benedicto Island, Socorro, Revillagigedos

Well, just another day in diving paradise! I’ve been on many liveaboard diving adventures all over the world and those who have done likewise will agree that It’s not every day that you can more or less guarantee swimming with a giant Manta ray, hammerhead sharks, humpback whales or a pod of dolphins. Well, that was before I had the privilege of diving on the Nautilus Explorer just off the Socorro Island.
This is a must for serious divers.
Miles Brough

Partis de La Paz mercredi dernier, nous (nous = 10 frenchies amoureux des voyages plongees) avons navigue pendant une journee entiere avant d arriver a San Benedicto. Premier jour de plongee de «readaptation» sous le bateau avec des requins marteau dans le bleu (oui DES requins), des mantas geantes qui nous tournent autour pour jouer avec nos bulles. Deuxieme jour, meme bebetes avec en prime des dauphins qui nous attendent au pallier. Troisieme jour, tout pareil avec des baleines a bosse qui soufflent au loin. Nous sommes actuellement a Roca Partida, un caillou au milieu de nulle part ceinture de bancs de thons, de carangues, de pointes blanches a gogo et de requins marteau. Outre les plongees formidables, le bateau est parfait pour la croisiere, l equipage genial et adorablement attentionne, nous avons meme une guide quebecoise rien que pour nous pour nous traduire les briefings. Ah et n oublions pas le plus important pour les francais : la bouffe et le cafe sont delicieux !

Day 2 of Socorro trip on Nautilus Explorer and I am getting the hang of it. Four San Benedicto dives today – first a very mellow visit to the Canyon, left the camera behind for a little break.  The current was down and the diving easy & beautiful, with a visiting giant manta surrounded by four or five happy scuba divers.  Then first dive on the Boiler with Neal, and a second one with divemaster Jessie – Team Force Fin! Current back up back at the Canyon on the fourth dive, and a flaky scuba regulator sent me up early.  But I am jealous of the Barcelona group, who jumped in on three humpback whales s alongside the boat on our first Boiler dive.  Must go, time for dinner (eat, sleep, dive ya know…)
Sharron Sussman

En dos palabras IM PRESIONANTE, we just jumped in to the water and 3 humpback whales were there waiting for us.  It was something mystic, The humpback whale with its baby playing around and the companion just behind them.  Now how afortunated I was, I just still can  ot believe it. It was the best celebration for my 200 dive.  If you google happy, you would get my picture back …………. oh!!!!!!!! that was in The Boiler.

Esther Salvatierra.

A sea otter having sex with harbor seals????

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Location: Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico.


We will be boarding our first Guadalupe Island great white shark trip of the season in just a couple of hours.   I am totally wired and can’t wait to find out what the diving is going to be like when the Nautilus Explorer arrives on station.  Unfortunately I will be shoreside during the first two charters and won’t be able to jump in with the white sharks myself until September 8th. I can’t wait.  Captain Rob and lead divemaster Sten have promised to keep me in the loop as soon as they see their first shark.   In the meantime, I am grateful to Jim Patterson of Adventure Sports in Santa Cruz for passing the following article along to me.  Earlier this summer I wrote about a sea otter that was allegedly attacking harbour seals, biting them on the head and snout,  and trying to have sex with them.  WELL… it turns out that the rumour appears to be true.    The following story was written by Vicki Haddock and published in the San Francisco Chronicle!!!    Hmmmm. Captain Mike


Murderous Otters Prey on Seal Pups

Serial killers elude marine experts

Authorities were on the verge of apprehending the serial killer who has stalked the waters of  lkhorn Slough, molesting and drowning more than a dozen young victims. Then this marine murder mystery got murkier: Eyewitnesses spotted a second suspect.

Both are adolescent males with similar physical descriptions, right down to their facial whiskers. The original suspect, identified only as Morgan, fits a classic prototype: abandoned by his mother and in and out of rehabilitation before puberty kicked in and caused aberrant proclivities. The second suspect, unnamed, is characterized simply as “wild.”

Both remain at large.

What makes this case an ethical predicament for scientists is that both suspects are sea otters. As such, they enjoy a sort of diplomatic immunity because they are classified as threatened animals under the federal Endangered Species Act.

No such protection is afforded to the victims: harbor seal pups.

But as the death toll mounts, seal researchers are growing impatient for a remedy. At a minimum, they want the otters caught and fixed with radio transmitters so it will be easy to track their moves.

Forensic evidence and eyewitness accounts indicate that the offending otter molests the young seals, attempts rough sex with them and, ultimately, shoves their snouts underwater until they drown or die of shock trauma.

This is by no means normal otter behavior — it fact, it’s so bizarre that it’s almost unprecedented in the annals of science.

The otter called Morgan was a successful graduate of the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Sea Otter Research and Conservation program to rehabilitate abandoned otters and then release them. The second otter remains an enigma, with nothing known about his background.

“Their motive is a mystery. All I know is we suddenly have a couple of otters killing seals at a fairly fast pace,” said Jim Harvey, associate professor at Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, which trains students from the California State University system.

“And if we get five or six of these otters in the slough, we won’t have a seal pup left.”

Already, the number of dead pups in Elkhorn Slough north of Monterey has doubled in recent months.

Necropsies on the slain seals reveal they were largely parasite-free and sported a healthy layer of blubber — in short, they appeared robust except for the bite marks and scratches evident on their snouts and the fact that their lungs filled with water.

Three months ago, aquarium researchers said they intended to capture Morgan,

insert a radio transmitter in his body and transport him to a place where he would have less opportunity for malicious mischief. They proposed placing him where there were fewer vulnerable seals and where he would have to work harder to survive — with less free time to get into trouble.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service gave its requisite approval.

But the plan went awry for two reasons: the difficulty of netting feisty Morgan in the slough and the discovery of a homicidal sea otter from the wild.

The surfacing of a second suspect came as a bit of relief for aquarium researchers, who worried that their heroic rehabilitation efforts would somehow be blamed for contributing to the delinquency of a marine mammal.

“This doesn’t absolve Morgan of anything, but it gave us the feeling everybody was focusing on Morgan when he wasn’t the only culprit — in fact, this other animal seems to engage in the behavior more often,” said Andy Johnson, director of the aquarium’s Sea Otter Research and Conservation program.

It also left scientists — already a bit befuddled by Morgan’s actions — utterly at a loss to explain the phenomenon of not one but two serial killer otters working the same territory.

Could it be a case of mistaken identity, with witnesses pinning these pinniped purges on the wrong otter?

No, experts went out into the slough and observed two different animals, one with a flipper tag and another without any tags or tears where tags could have torn loose.

“I’m positive now there’s a second otter,” said Stori Oates, a graduate student studying juvenile harbor seals at the Moss Landing lab. She already has lost two of her research pups to otter attacks.

One of them, a male seal born in the slough last spring, fell victim to the wild otter, who was then seen carting the seal corpse around for two days, taking it on foraging odysseys and attempting to mate with it.

That matches the report of Dax Berg, a video game designer who read about Morgan in his Sept. 3 Sunday Chronicle and was so incredulous he set off to find him. From his kayak in Elkhorn Slough, he snapped photographs of one of the otters toting another victim.

“It was amazing — as if the dead seal was a trophy. He would not let the thing go,” said Berg.

Could it be that this otter behavior is not so unique after all?

“It would be a huge coincidence. Possible, but my gut tells me not likely,” said Harvey, noting that researchers have been observing otters pretty thoroughly along the Pacific Coast for years.

A few years back, scientists recorded one instance of two otters trying to mate with seals, but the pair, which lived off San Nicolas in the Channel Islands, appear not to have ever killed one.

If there clearly are two otters singling out seals in Elkhorn Slough, and if their aggression is unprecedented, could it be that the wild otter is a Son- of-Morgan copycat?

“Some folks are throwing out accusations against Morgan that he’s training the sea otter population to do this,” said the aquarium’s Johnson, who called the charge unscientific and irresponsible, given the lack of evidence of patterning.

“I have to think this sort of otter behavior has happened before and will happen again . . . when circumstances are conducive to it,” he said.

Whatever the explanation, scientists, ultimately, must decide what to do about both otters.

Aquarium researchers began one expedition in the slough with a team of capture specialists from Alaska, but failed to snare Morgan. Elsewhere, deep sea divers have captured otters with the aid of underwater scooters and a modified soccer net, but Elkhorn Slough might lack the water depth and visibility necessary for that technique.

“Morgan’s going to be very difficult to capture up there,” Johnson said, unless the otter journeys into a back channel or is sleeping at the precise time a crew tries to take him.

The aquarium isn’t prepared to initiate an all-out hunt for Morgan, but is on alert to capture him if he returns to the aquarium’s tide pools and to install a radio transmitter in his abdomen.

It’s unclear now whether Morgan will be relocated, and even more uncertain that he would stay put if he is transported elsewhere.

Oates said she’d prefer the offending otters be radio-tagged and then returned to the slough, where their actions can be closely monitored. “This is an extraordinary research opportunity,” she said.

“I’d rather have the animals removed from the wild,” said Harvey. They could be placed in a museum or aquarium, although he acknowledges it’s harder to argue persuasively for bold human intervention now that one of the identified perpetrators is a wild animal.

“I just would hate for everybody to let this situation slide (until) the spring seal pupping season comes around again,” he said. “Pupping season starts in March — we’re getting closer all the time.”

E-mail Vicki Haddock at vhaddock@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A – 19 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Submersible cage for diving with great white sharks

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Location: Ensenada, Mexico

Excitement is running really high among the crew as we make final preparations for boarding our first great white shark trip to Guadalupe Island tomorrow.  Everyone has been working flat-out to get the Nautilus Explorer turned around at the shipyard.   We yanked and changed out the carpet on the main deck, dorm and crew quarters with Transport Canada rated 100% wool fire-retardant carpet that had to be specially ordered from Greece, prepped the dive deck for glistening new white paint with the help of the top-notch crew from the Gran Peninsula, overhauled the 5 ton hydraulic crane, got all of our shark diving gear and cages out of storage, tested everything and put it all back together for another great white season, cut up 2200 pounds of blue-fin tuna into shark sized bits on an assembly line that started with a gasoline chain saw and Tim and Sam wearing bright yellow slickers and ended with Will wielding an electric drill with a very long bit and an armful of hemp leader  (kudos to Eve, one of our bright, smiling hostesses for diving in and trying out a chainsaw for the first time although it would have been better if she had been wearing a slicker!!) and have done a deep clean of every nook and cranny on the ship as well as freshening  up the interior with new paint, varnish, some new paintings  (my personal favourite  -  the charcoal sketch of a bosun yelling orders is now a thing of the past), new door frames, etc.  Not bad for 4 days work huh!!   Have to say that the Nautilus is looking pretty darn good.  Our new submersible white shark cage is most exciting of all.  Now I know that I am boat guy and somewhat susceptible to getting excited about things like a beautiful TIG weld, but this new cage really is something.  As far as I am concerned, it is  a piece of art made out of 2″ aluminum round bar.  All the corners are beautifully radiused.  The welds are perfect.  It’s beautifully symetrical.  The escape hatch is a marvel of engineering with stainless steel arms that fit perfectly into holes that are actually small diameter pipe that have been fitted into the aluminum bars and then welded and polished to perfection.   I love the clear lexan floor  -   the idea being that divers will feel that they are standing on water with nothing between them and the ocean floor at 250 feet except for the odd great white shark.  And a quarter inch of clear plastic  (which we are told will be more than thick enough to be impervious to a head butting great white shark).    The camera ports are within a millimetre of the maximum size allowed by park regulations with wrap around corner so that photographers can pan on the sharks as they swim past with wide angle lenses and or HD cameras.   Ahhhh,  I can’t wait to take it for a dive when I am on the Nautilus next week.    Captain Mike

Weather: Sunny nice weather with temperatures in the low 80’s, light winds and not a cloud in the sky.

First report of the season – diving with Guadalupe great white sharks.

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Location: Ensenada, Guadalupe Island, Mexico.

Well, the Nautilus Explorer arrived in Ensenada this morning precisely on schedule after a 6 day steam down the coast from Vancouver…  We set aside 4 days for a “mini-refit” in the shipyard and then we are off on our first trip to Guadalupe Island to dive with great white sharks.  I’ve been chatting with a couple of our direct but friendly competitors over the last two days.  They both start their white shark season a little earlier than we do and I was exceptionally curious to find out how the shark sightings have been.  In one word  - EXCELLENT !!!!   Yayyhhhh.   Greg on the Horizon tells me that he had some of the best “sharking” on his last trip that he has seen in his 8 seasons of staging cage diving charters out to Guadalupe Island.  Lots of males with some good unruly behaviour and 16 different great white sharks positively identified over 3 days of cage diving.  It’s always seemed to me that August and September are the best time to see the most sharks and the most energetic behaviour.  All the whiteys we see at this time of year are males and they seem to be quite ummmmm ”rambunctious” when the females aren’t around.  Typical guys huh!!  The females start showing up in the latter part of September and that’s when we see the bigger animals.  The truly enormous great big honking “mama’s”   ie.  18 feet long and enough to make your heart pound and your stomach lurch into your mouth as soon as you spot one  
-   usually show up in mid-October.  We are truly and exceptionally fortunate for the privilege afforded us by the government and people of Mexico to be able to see these magnificent and amazing animals.   Captain Mike

click here to see our Guadalupe Great white shark slideshow:  

Weather: Sunny, 10 knot winds, low swell outside the harbour, temperature in the 80’s along the waterfront, 100 degrees inland…

Shipyard refit Part 1

Friday, May 9th, 2008

Location: Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico

Comments: Captain Mike here. We have been incredibly busy over the last 3 weeks with Part 1 of our 2008 shipyard refit. My apologies for not getting a Captain’s Log report out before this. The Nautilus Explorer was built in a Canadian shipyard to our custom specfications and launched in May 2000. The ship is under rigorous annual inspection requirements by Transport Canada as an ISM SOLAS Home Trade 1 passenger vessel and undergoes an even more detailed quadriennial inspection every 4 years. This year is our second quadriennial and we really went to town!! The Cummins distributor took apart the main engines and gensets. The seachest and all the associated engine room piping as well as the bilge suction lines and fire mains were taken apart with lots of on condition renewal (if it doesn’t look almost new, we replaced it!!) and many fittings replaced. The Nautilus is built to a standard that includes flanged bronze and steel non-return ball valves on all overside discharges including the exhaust system and these were all replaced. The exhaust and muffler systems were taken apart, renewed and pressure tested before refitting. The electrical system was megger tested (we do that every year). The exterior of the ship was sanded down from the keel all the way up to the top deck and then sprayed with 2 coats of epoxy primer and 2 topcoats. I think she looks pretty sharp!! The sewage system was renewed and is sparkly clean with every discharge and vent line having been inspected, roto-routed and blown out. Water tanks were opened up, inspected and touched up (we do that every year).. Props, shafts and rudders were all removed and overhauled. New bearings were installed in the stern tubes. The interior was renewed and freshened up and we made a whole series of little improvements here and there. It’s going to be tight being ready in time for tomorrow’s California Channel Islands charter but we’ll make it. After that it’s off to Vancouver for Part 2 of the refit prior to the start of our British Columbia and Alaska summer season. Who the heck wants to be on charter when it is so much fun in the shipyard!!! (that’s an attempt at humour on my part). Captain’s Log reports on the Channel Islands to follow…

Weather: Mostly sunny. Air temperature mid 70’s. Light winds.

Water: temp and visibility unknown.

Ship refit

Last diving day of our 2007/2008 Socorro Revillagigedos season…

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

Location: Roca Partida, Socorro, Revillagigedos, Mexico

Comments: Once again Roca Partida proved why it is considered the crown jewel of the Socorro y Revillagigedos. There were some wind waves on top of the normal swell when we arrived but by the end of the first day all we had was a long easy swell and on the second day even that subsided significantly. Over the two days all of our divers were able to have closer and more intimate interactions with a couple of giant manta rays than anyone imagined.. Some divers saw a small school of 10 hammerheads and one lucky group of divers had terrific interaction with a dolphin who played for 5 minutes before taking off rapidly and leaping out of the water. The silvertip and galapagos sharks were off the north east end of the rock circling in and out of view. One of the galapago sharks looked like it is recovering from a nasty spear wound to the head. He has a large lump with a hole on the top right side of his head and a hole/scar on the bottom left side by his gills. The good news is that we saw him last trip as well and he seems to be recovering nicely.

Everyone had at least a couple of spectacular dives on Roca Partida and the current changed just enough during the day to keep the charismatic megafauna coming in and changing but not enough to create hazardous diving conditions. Our engineer, Bob, also had the great fortune of seeing a young humpback whale swim past him as he was doing his safety stop.

On the trip north we saw an intriguingly large number of sea lions sunning themselves with flippers in the air. Not sure why they were so far south and offshore, anyone got any answers?

So we say goodbye to Roca Partida, Socorro and the Revillagigedo for this season. Thank you for some wonderful diving, interesting times and raising our awareness of the environmental issues in the area. I, for one, am really looking forward to coming back for another season in the autumn. And thank you to all who came diving with us in this spectacular place. Without you we would not be here. Divemaster Tricia.

Weather: 88 degrees F, sunny, light breeze, low swell

Water: water temp 72 degrees F, visibility 100 feet

New diving site at Socorro Island but lack of charismatic mega fauna

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Location: Punta Tosca, Cabo Pearse, Socorro Island, Revillagigedos, Mexico

Comments: After checking in with the Mexican navy on Socorro Island, we headed over to Cabo Pearse for three dives and night snorkelling with the Silky Sharks. The visibility was 30-50 feet depending on which part of the dive you were at and the current was minimal. Unfortunately, the lack of current meant that there were not many large critters out there. Many guests were able to listen and enjoy hearing the humpback whales singing during the dives. We saw the Clarion Damselfish which is endemic to the Revillagigedo Archipelago but once again there was a sense of disappointment in the diving. That night, however, the Silkys were abundant and all who wished to were able to get in and snorkel with them until the mood changed and the sharks started hunting more earnestly, at which point everyone got out.

Punta Tosca on dive day 4 was also surprisingly quiet and the visibility was low so after 2 dives at the outer point we decided to move the Nautilus up a couple of bays and try a new site. A series of small rocks sticking out of the water with a sheer drop to 120 feet on one side and shallower bays on the other. It proved to be fascinating and several guests saw sea turtles and a “fly by” with a giant manta. Definitely a site that we will repeat but once again the “charismatic megafauna” was elusive. So now it was off to Roca Partida to see what was going on there.

Weather: 83 degrees F, sunny, breezy, swell

Water: 71 degrees F, visibility 30-50 feet

Hammerhead sharks, giant mantas and big waves

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Location: The Canyon, The Boiler, San Benedicto Island, Socorro, Revillagigedos, Mexico

Comments: Divemaster Tricia here. And so we set off on our last trip to Socorro and the Revillagigedos for this season. The seas on the crossing were a bit bigger than normal at 6 – 7 foot with a long wave period but the stabilized ride on a heavy steel boat like the Nautilus Explorer was quite comfortable. Hurricane season at Socorro does not start until mid-June and there is certainly demand for quite a few more trips this season, but Captain Mike wants to get the boat to the shipyard for 3 weeks before the start of our Alaska season and so this is our last charter of the season. Our first dive at the Canyon scuba diving site was the normal check out dive and play with weighting. We saw hammerhead sharks off the cleaning station and the omens seemed to be good. Unfortunately, although there is always a lot of life under the water, it turned out that the giant mantas and sharks or what I like to call “charismatic megafauna” were going to be fairly evasive this trip. We did the Giants Causeway (or Southwest Benedicto for Mike) as the third dive and saw two or possibly 4 mantas but they did not seem to want to interact with us.

Dive day 2 and we went to the Boiler for the first scuba dive. The dive was spectacular, 100+ feet of visibility, a pod of 6 dolphin and almost no current. However, the wind had picked up and the waves were getting large which made the return to the Nautilus Explorer difficult and potentially hazardous. As the wind was showing no signs of subsiding we reluctantly had to leave and headed over to the north east side of San Benedicto Island to a dive site that we had tried a couple of times this year and had fairly good luck with. The area also has a shallow bay which meant that we could do a nice, calm, easy dive for our second dive and recover from the boiling Boiler. Dives 3 and 4 were good, although the current started to pick up and the visibility drop on dive 4. A giant manta was seen by most divers as it circled around but, again, did not seem to want to interact. Such is the nature of diving with big animals – interaction is always their call.

Weather: 80 degrees F, partly cloudy, breezy, swell

Water: 71degrees F, visibility 50 feet

Giant manta rays dance with scuba divers

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Location: The Canyon and The Boiler, Isla San Benedicto, Socorro, Revillagigedos, Mexico

Comments: We arrived in the early morning at the Canyon and had a wonderful dive with a small school of hammerheads at the cleaning station and dolphins on the way back to the boat. This was a first underwater encounter with dolphin for some. Then it was off to the Boiler to look for giant mantas. We had been in the water less than 15 minutes when three giant manta rays showed up to dance with the scuba divers and each other. They soared and swooped and looped around the divers creating a magical encounter and another first for many. We anchored so that we could swim to the dive site and with no current and very little waves we had an open deck for the day so guests were free to dive whenever they felt like. Between dives, a lot of guests chose to accompany Marco, our chief mate, on a tour of the shoreline to see the arches and pinnacles and whale watch. From the Nautilus we watched a young humpback whale leap multiple times out of the water followed by an adult humpback breaching creating some wonderful photographic opportunities.

As the last of the divers came out of the water our lovely hostesses, Emanuelle and Silvia, brought champagne mimosas around for all to enjoy as they sat in the hot tub, cleaned gear and watched the sunset over a calm ocean. What a change from our first day!!

The northbound crossing was smooth sailing allowing for more relaxation in the hot tub and reading on the sun deck. About three quarters of the way home we encountered a large school of common dolphin, over a hundred individuals leaping out of the water and so we took a slight detour to go and see them and watch them ride our bow wave.

This trip started out with a first for us, we have never had to turn return to port. The firsts continued with a first snorkel with humpbacks and a first underwater dolphin encounter and a first giant manta ray dance for some. Hopefully our guests will have many more firsts but next time we will leave the weather out of it! Divemaster Tricia.

Roca Partida – oceanic oasis under a full moon

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

 Location: Roca Partida, Socorro Island, Islas de Revillagigedo, Mexico

Comments: Roca Partida, the little rock in the middle of the big ocean. It is always interesting to be up at dawn as we arrive and guests see Roca Partida for the first time. My two favourite quotes are “I thought you were kidding” and “you have got to be crazy”. Roca Partida is a lava plug from a volcano and the top of the volcano is 250 feet below sea level. Around the volcano is 10,000 feet below sea level. The nearest island is Socorro 70 miles away. This creates an oceanic oasis providing food in what is otherwise a fairly desert-like environment. Which is why we dive there and once again Roca Partida lived up to its reputation. We saw Silvertip sharks, Galapagos sharks, Silky sharks, Hammerheads and White-tipped reef sharks. There was a school of jacks at between 60 and 80 feet that stayed off the north point for both the days that we were there.

The night of the full moon coincided with our night at Roca Partida which always makes for a spectacular evening on the “moon” deck especially when combined with the flat seas that we were experiencing. A good omen for the rest of the trip. Divemaster Tricia.

Weather: air temp 83F, sunny, light breeze, low swell

Water: water temp 71F, visibility 80 feet