Posts Tagged ‘nudibranchs’

The best technique to dive with giant sea bass and beautiful diving under the Eureka oil platform in the Channel Islands - divemaster log – 27 July 2010

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

This morning was grey in the California Channel Islands but later in to the day the sun burned through and made it nice and warm in the air. We are getting to one of our highlights on this trip the oil rig Eureka for the third time this season and this time we had good viz already at the surface , but even better  viz 100 – 120 feet down at 100ft 30 m plus.

There are so many photo oppotunities here that you could easily spend a whole day scuba diving , but it is a bit deep if you want the real clear water. It is funny to see the young pups sealions darting down in to the black abyss while we are clumpsy floating around at 100 -120 ft this vivid animals goes up and down like rockets. I still have the feeling to be in outer space on a space shuttle and enjoy watching the divers above and under me. or just dig in my head of one square foot area and watch all the life that is inhabiting the rig, and the colours that comes out using a light.

After two dives we headed for twin peaks and dove with the giant bass or kelp bass or black bass. And there where several!. The way to approach them is face on never from behind , or just stop and often they even come by to see what you are. Some of us even saw a Angel shark. Good dive.

Surface conditions: Grey in the morning and sunny in the afternoon 22 -28 C calm seas.

Underwater: Viz from 87 m to 40 m on the deep in Eureka , and from 16 to 10 C, Average 13-14 C 60 – 48F Light current to none.

Tomorrow we go for Santa Barbara Islands for sealions and angel sharks and nudi branchs of course..

Dive guide Sten

Giants Manta Wings Waving Goodbye – Great White Shark Teeth Grinning Hello! From Socorro to Guadalupe.

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010
Divemaster Dan here.  Writing from Vancouver, British Columbia where I left the warm water and wonderful pelagics behind for “doing time” in the office (it’s actually really easy – I just talk to  people all day about how cool it is to have a staring contest with a Great White Shark from only 4 feet away, or what it feels like to ‘dance’ with a Manta Ray)!
So I haven’t posted in a while and I thought I’d drop by with a little note to update everyone on some of the very exciting things happening on the Nautilus Explorer.
The Socorro season ended well.  The last trip combined diving the Revillagigedo Islands (Socorro) where all our favorite friends came out to say good bye – Dolphins, Hammerhead Sharks, Whale Sharks and of course the Giant Mantas (check out the pictures below) – and the Sea of Cortez, where we were reminded of just how much Baja, Mexico has to offer: Sea Lions were the most welcoming – maybe TOO welcoming (next time you see hostess Ashley, ask her about her new camera being a sea lion’s snack!), octopus, stingrays and the photographer’s favorite macro subjects: Nudibranchs and Seahorses!
So what now? Well as I type this, one of the largest crews we’ve ever had onboard (about 25 people) are all hard at work finishing up a huge overhaul on the boat in Ensenada.  You, our guests, have made your suggestions and comments over the years and we have listened.  The next time you see the Nautilus Explorer you will find a brand new head on the dive deck.  So no more how-fast-can-I-rip-my-wetsuit-off dances to get down to your cabin head in time! We have also done away with our dorms.  Instead we have converted one of our staterooms into a triple occupancy room with full air-conditioning and an en suite bathroom for more privacy and comfort.  If you already have a booking in the old dorm, no worries, you will be upgraded to the triple at no additional cost.
And the big change that is going to have everyone talking:  Two new luxury, high-end suites added to our hot tub deck.  The new Dofleini suite has all the comfort and space of the Nautilus and Rosario suites.  Then there is the brand new Emerald suite, our premium accommodation with “all the fixings”.  A very private bedroom with a queen size Simmons Beauty rest mattress with pocket coils for ultimate comfort.  Two plasma TVs; one in the bedroom and the other in the Emerald suite`s private lounge.  Also in the lounge is a futon providing additional sleeping space.  Sitting on this couch you can look out of the suites window and enjoy spectacular views of the ocean and islands.
We have also dropped our single occupancy rates as we know for some folks, having a little more space and privacy is very important.  Give us a call or send an email and we will be happy to tell you about out different rates.
If you are on our email list, keep an eye out for our latest newsletter, hot of the press.  It will have more details on the new layout and some great photos and diagrams too.  If you are not on the email list and want to be, go to our website www.nautilusexplorer.com and feel free to sign up.  Otherwise, just drop us an email or phone and we will be happy to add you to the list.
Also we are thrilled to announce that our Grand Prize draw for all 50/50 entrants has been made and the winners will all be announced in the upcoming Newsletter.  We have given away over 25 great prizes including a free trip to Guadalupe or Socorro, pay for one and your friend comes free and lots of free upgrades and free rentals and your bar-tab paid for etc…So be sure to check that out!
Thank you for all your support of our conservation efforts in Socorro and Guadalupe.  Together, we have raised over $140,000 dollars!  Find more details on that in the newsletter.
And after the refit is done?  We have a few Channel Islands trips and then it’s all about Guadalupe.  Here we go again! 102 different sharks and counting.  We are all looking forward to seeing some of our favorites like Stumpy, Bruce, Chica and Shredder.  And of course we hope to make a few new friends this season.  We have had a lot of bookings and the season is filling up fast.  However, its not too late to snag the Emerald suite or maybe get a last minute berth in the new triple stateroom.  Please send us an email, call us or check out the website for detailed information on availability and schedules.
Well that is it for me.  I better get back to work here!  Enjoy the photos (my favorite is the one of the crew making the end-of-season, celebratory leap off the back of the boat!)
Dan

Thanks to DM Peter Schalkwijk, Captain Gordon Kipp and Jacqueline Weideli for the photos.

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

Diving at Socorro Island never gets old

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Location: The Canyon and the Boiler, San Benedicto Island, Socorro, Baja California

The intense blue sky ardour of yesterday gave way to a selection of brindled pinks and a lurid orange afterglow. The memory of this builds expectation as I
find myself in the solitude of another pre-dawn bridgewatch at sea.  Again, a fair crossing from Cabo San Lucas to San Benedicto finds us plowing a furrow across a sea the true colour of ‘steel wool’ under a dome of leaden sky. This is the time before dawn where all is in monochrome.  The greyscale World becomes suffused minute by minute with those delicate shell colours. The sky acts like a Polaroid, and I’m waiting for it to develop. Gone the clear skies of yesterday, we are ringed at all points of the compass by a terrific cloudscape of altos and feathery tailed cirrus. And now as the greys warm to yellow, the first tinge of fire is painting the peripheral.   Forget pink candyfloss spindrift of a moment before, think Ironmongers forge: incandescent red glimpsed through darkened cinder.  From the dullest Eastern grey becomes the gaudiest of reds, tones that don t rightly belong on an artist pallet. Only nature could get away with such caprice.  Captain Marco.

Scuba diving never gets old.  It seems there is always something new to discover and learn about in the sub-aquatic world.  The most important prerequisite needed to learn these things: an open mind.  I was reminded of this lesson today.

On the Nautilus Explorer this week, we started our diving at “The Canyon”, a dive site at San Benedicto Island, in the Revillagigedo Archipelago off Baja California.  Eager guests sat through the divemaster’s briefings with smiles growing larger as they were told about some of the marine life they might encounter on this dive: Hammerhead Sharks, Giant Mantas and Silvertip Sharks.  The anchor was dropped and soon after 23 guests also dropped, down through pleasant 79 degree waters with impressive 60 to 80 foot visibility.  Next stop: A cleaning station; a popular hang out for the local Hammerhead population.  Upon arrival at the station, I settled down behind some boulders with only my head visible so as not to scare off the shy sharks.  The guests followed my example and we began to wait.  Unfortunately this time the Hammerhead Sharks did not appear.  We stayed as long as we could before our air supply and deco time demanded we start back to the Nautilus.  As I led the group away from the station I was grateful that we could not audibly converse underwater.  If we could have I was sure the guests would be saying how disappointed they were and what a terrible dive this was.  I felt like I had let them down.  Still I kept an eye out for any late appearing marine company on the way back and spotted a large Green Moray out for a foray, a few clandestine Stonefish and a rare Nudibranch which I was personally thrilled to find but didn’t expect would go far in making up for the lack of action at the cleaning station.  Finally we arrived back at the Nautilus Explorer.

Last out of the water, I braced for the impact of sullen faces on the dive deck.

I was happily disappointed.  ”That was the largest Moray Eel I ever saw” said the first guest to greet me, glowing.  ”I’ve never seen a Stonefish before – that was great” said the second.  And finally, my favorite: “A Nudibranch is as good as a Hammerhead Shark anyday!”

Lesson learned!  No more preconceptions of what a dive should be for me!  As we move up to Socorro Island over the next few days I am going to dive “to see what I can see.“

On the second and third dives of the day, the guests did get to see both Hammerhead Sharks, Giant Manta Rays, Silvertip Sharks and one guest even saw a Tiger Shark.  The second sighting in four days in the Socorro Islands.

I still think the Nudibranch was the best!

Happy Diving!

Divemaster Dan

Manta lovin’

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Location: Isla Socorro, Baja California South, Mexico

After a very sharky two days at Roca Partida we headed the 65 miles east to the largest of the three islands that we dive here, Socorro, in search of some Manta lovin’! It was a very comfortable overnight transit and our first stop was the navy base to check in with the gate-keepers of the islas, the Mexican Navy. After getting reacquainted with Commandante Corona (that’s his real name), we made waves to our first dive site, Cabo Pearce, on the east side of the island. A very high lava finger jutting out into the sea here makes for a nice protected anchorage and the accompanying undersea ridge makes a nice home for all the fishes, big and small. After the adrenaline of all the hammerheads, whale shark, silver-tips and galapagos sharks at Roca Partida we were all very much ready for an intimate dance with our friends the giant mantas. And thanks be to the manta lord above, they were there waiting faithfully for us when we rolled off the zodiacs. On dive 1, 3 individual mantas kept us company, circling us gracefully as only a manta can do, seemingly enjoying our company as much as we theirs. On dive 2 we had only 1 manta to play with, but this one was a real player and thrilled everyone with very up close interaction for the entire dive. Just when you think the manta has decided to leave, you carry on with your dive, head down looking at a nudi or octopus, when suddenly you feel a presence above you and you look up to see nothing but the white underbelly of a manta, only a few feet above you, obviously feeling a little neglected at your lack of attention, letting itself sink so it is almost on top of you. It’s almost as if the manta is wanting contact with you, and will literally sink down until it touches you. Really amazing and special to have this kind of interaction with a wild animal in its natural environment.

On our last day of diving at Socorro we moved to the west side of the island to Punta Tosca, a really beautiful anchorage at the foot of the sprawling green hills of Socorro. My favorite anchorage and hoping for more manta lovin’ today. In 4 dives on this day we would have Mantas on all of them! On our first morning dive it was mostly slow, with a few people seeing some hammerheads and a manta who kept its distance. The following 3 dives however were just awesome manta dives for everyone in the water. As many as 4 individuals circling the divers, all vying for some “people lovin’”. Again some amazing very close up interaction between manta and diver. I know it’s good when one of our divemasters comes up and says it was the best dive he’s ever done! Even on the last dive of the day, when often the mantas will disappear with the light, we had one real player who stuck around and would simply not leave the divers, even as they exited the water to head back to the mother ship. Wow! A very successful first trip back to Socorro, and a very successful combination trip, I can’t believe only a little over a week ago we were in a cage only a few feet away from a 15 ft white shark. White sharks, sea-lions, mantas, hammerheads, dolphins and a whale shark…did we miss anything??

Captain Gordon

Weather: mostly sunny, air temp 80-85f (26-30C), winds light to moderate, a nice gentle swell in the anchorage with 3-4 ft swell at the divesites.

Water: Visibility 50-70 ft (15-20 m), water temp 77-80f (25-27C), current mild to moderate

Guest Blog 2 July 2009

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Saw lots of coral today all over the walls – orange, white, red, pink.  There were also tons of nudibranchs. I got a picture today of a sea otter in the foreground, a whale spouting behind it and beautiful snowy mountains in the background.  Where else can you see that. Robbie

I saw a snail laying eggs in a circular pattern and lots of good sized nudibranch egg masses. Susan’s Hooters were spectacular and well named. Rick

Safety stop in 2 metre surge at “Dog Pile”  was fun…. (named for the stellar sealions who often swim by and frequent this site). Simon

Petit tour en bateau pneumatique pour filmer les aigles. Le soleil brile, les phoques crient au loin postes sur leur rocher.  Nathalie

Super Ausflug mit dem Schlauchboot. Viele neugierige Seeloewen, 9 ueber uns kreisende Adler, Seeotter die uns begutachteten und Natur, Natur, Natur… Ute

The Inian Islands a magical place underwater. Walls festooned with multicolored soft corals, golden stalked compound tunicates, polychromatic red Irish lords, inquisitive Stellar sea lions, monstrous orange peel nudibranchs, a profusion of smooth velvet snails, warbonnets and grunt sculpins lurking in cracks and crevices. To dive Inian wall is to see and experience cold water diving at its best. Above water is resplendent with feeding humpback whales, perched and soaring bald eagles, flocks of Bonaparte’s and glaucous winged gulls, streaming lines of pelagic cormorants, resting sea otters and the occasional tufted puffin. Marc and Michelle

Les iles Inian se situent dans le Icy Strait et sont absolument a faire par tous les amoureux d’eau froide et d’etanche. La nature ainsi que les plongees sont spectaculaires, des couleurs ainsi qu’une vie sous-marine que vous ne verrez nulle par ailleurs. Inge.

Strawberry fields forever – phantasea of strawberry anemones

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Location: Tahsis Narrows, Nootka Sound, west coast Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada

Oh my. I had forgotten how the strawberry anemones of Tahsis Narrows  are more like a wild crazy fantasy and dream than anything in real life.  These beautiful little red anemones don’t even stand half an inch high but they literally blanket and carpet everything at this dive site. They are layered all over rock scallops and wee little swimming scallops to the point that they obstruct the opening of the poor bivalve.  The boulders onsite are so heavily encrusted that they look as if they are covered in a thick pinkish-red carpet. In fact, everywhere we turned and shone our lights looked like it was layered with a beautiful plush red carpet. Absolutely amazing and not a site (pun intended) that I will forget for a while. Finished the dive off  on a sand flat full of tube dwelling anemones and loads of giant swimming nudibranchs. Nudibranchs everywhere I looked as a matter of  fact.    These particular (and very large ie. 10 inches long)  nudibranchs prey on tube dwelling anemones by sneaking up and pouncing on them before the anemone can retract.  And yes, these amazing nudibranchs actually launch themselves off the bottom (when under threat???) and can swim through the water before gracefully dropping back down to the bottom with their external gill structure elegantly streaming  behind them like a parachute. I love scuba diving these waters!!! Finished the day off after 3 dives with a visit to historical Friendly Cove and sat on a log on a beautiful beach watching the sunset and a juvenile grey whale feeding and frolicking  in the surf  a couple of feet from the beach. Captain Mike

Surface Conditions: Beautiful summer day with calm winds, calm seas, temperature mid 60’s.

Underwater Conditions: Water temperature 47 F  (warmer in the shallows),  visibility 15 – 20 feet.

Back in BC with swimming bald eagles

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Location: Browning Pass, Port Hardy, British Columbia

Well, it’s the start of our British Columbia and Alaska season and we are very happy to be back in our home waters.  Scuba diving in Mexico with great white sharks, giant pacific manta rays, dolphins and lots of other sharks is awesome.   But it’s also nice to be home.  First dives of this trip were in the Stubbs Island area and we were rewarded with 40-50 foot visibility and walls loaded with immensely prolific amounts of invertebrate life – anemones, coral, sponges, nudibranchs and all the usual critters.  Moved on to Browning Pass  (Browning Wall, 7 Tree Island, Hussar Point, Snowfall and so on) where the visibility was more disappointing - ranging from 25 feet at best to less than 8 feet at times.  Such is liveaboard diving in B.C.- vis might be terrific in some places and not good at all in others – where we can simply lift the anchor and move on if we don’t like the visibility.

Most memorable event on this trip so far was watching a bald eagle doing the breast stroke across Browning Pass.  Judging from my own personal observations, it is clearly an “old wives tale” that bald eagles are not able to land on the water and then take off again. I’ve seen them do it many times and this morning was no exception. We were watching  a group of 4 bald eagles in the Pass and these guys were swooping down to scoop little fish out of the water.  Sometimes they would actually land, sit on the water for 5 seconds or so and then flap their wings and take-off again. One poor guy was in the water a little too long and wasn’t able to take off.  We became quite concerned about him as he was a good distance from shore and we didn’t want to get too close and cause him any more stress. To my great surprise, he started swimming across the water using a very elegant  and efficient breast stroke - stretching all the way forward with his outstretched wings and sweeping them back. Can’t help but wonder how in the heck bald eagles have the genetic coding to know how to do the breast stroke!! He made amazingly good time and was soon standing on the beach, wiggling his tail feathers and drying out his wings. I love it out here!!   Captain Mike

Surface Conditions: Late spring weather with a mix of overcast and sunny breaks, temperatures from mid 50’s to mid 60’s. Calm winds and flat calm seas.

Underwater Conditions: Water temperature 46 degrees. Visibility variable from 8 feet to 50  feet.

New dive sites on San Benitos Islands

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Location: San Benitos Islands, Baja California, Mexico.

We got up early today to move the Nautilus Explorer to a new place around the corner of San Benitos Island.  We were visited on the way by Mexican fishermen from the local cooperativa who were worried that we would snag their lobster traps or dive for their abalone.  When they saw we were not in that mission, they relaxed and were very friendly and easy.    We found this rock sticking up on the south side of the centre island and anchored right in close in 45 feet on a sand bottom and had rocks and kelp on a very easy but exciting dive site. A big group of young california sealions messed around with us. The kelp was not as thick here as yesterday’s site but very pleasant to jump from one kelp forest to the next with fields of white sand bottom.  On our second dive, we offered to either scuba dive directly off to the back deck of the Nautilus or explore a solitary rock closer towards the east side of the easternmost island.  Half the group elected to jump off the back deck and half went.  On our way, we went looking for a new divesite.  We saw so many potential divesite.  We could stay here for weeks!!   The new rock went down to 80 feet of water and we had great visibility with long kelp walls, a flat bottom, big rocks, lots of sealions as well as nudibranchs, lobster, octopus and a bunch of fish that I am not that familiar with.  This is an area that is very seldom visited and a number of the fish are species that we don’t see further north in the California Channel Islands nor further south in the Sea of Cortez or Socorro Island. It’s really great to be doing something so different and new.   Ended the dive day with big smiles on our faces look for new dive areas at Rocas Aljios.   Divemaster Sten.

Weather: Sunny, hot, flat calm and beautiful.

Water: Visibility 70 – 90 feet.  Water temperature 22 degrees celsius

Fast forward to the end of Alaska 2008

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Location: Steveston, Vancouver, British Columbia

Have to admit that I ended up a little behind with my Captain’s log entries.  Especially once Charlie and Emily, my amazing 5 and 8 year old kids, joined me for a couple of weeks onboard.  Seeing British Columbia and Alaska through their eyes is very refreshing and entertaining.   They loved the orcas and humpbacks, loved climbing up on the bow of the Nautilus Explorer and touching an iceberg, loved hiking through the woods and sitting in 107 degree natural hotsprings.  They came out in the dive skiff with me on every single dive.  They were fascinated by the ever inquisitive stellar sealions and were disappointed that they couldn’t go scuba diving with them.  In fact both kids were making lots of noise about wanting their own  drysuits for next year.   My favourite memory though is taking them kayaking through the Le Conte icefield and around the icebergs  -  I  was exceptionally proud of Emily who “went solo” for the first time in a kayak (and what a place to do it!!) and while Charlie was in a double kayak with me, he was very clearly “the Captain” and in charge and darn near ready to go solo himself.  They both drove a pretty mean  inflatable at Inian Cove as well although their dockings need a bit of  work.   Amazing memories.  And food for thought for me regarding possibly offering an extra “family” trip in Alaska each season.  Well, that’s it for Alaska and British Columbia for this year.   We are back in our seldom visited homeport of Steveston, British Columbia for a 22 hour turnaround before departing southbound for Mexico and the start of  Guadalupe Island great white shark season.  Sad to say goodbye to our northern nudibranchs, giant pacific octopus, wolfeels and all the other critters up north but time to say HELLO to big honking white sharks up to 18 feet long.   More to follow.  Captain Mike

Weather: Sunny, hot, calm and beautiful sunny day.

Water: Water temperatures and visiblity unknown.