huskychemist
Contributor
I finally got around to posting some more pictures here. I have learned a bunch with your feedback/comments, and a few have said I should keep posting...so what the heck. I know I enjoy looking at other folks' pictures...so I keep posting my own, hoping others will keep posting theirs. I have quite a few pictures here...so if you don't like seeing pictures, this may not be the post for you. Thanks!
My dive buddy and I made a trip from Puget Sound down to California a few weeks ago.
Six dives:
La Jolla Shores - 1 dive
Catalina Shark Dive with Dive Aquatica (No pics yet...only video, and I haven't edited it yet)
Point Lobos - 2 dives
Monterey Breakwater - 2 dives, one of them a night dive
Overall, this was a fantastic trip. I love Puget Sound, but each dive in Cali offered things I don't usually experience locally. La Jolla offered some bat rays. (Too elusive for pics, though.) The shark dive offered blues and makos. Unfortunately, we had to stay in the cage due to too many makos. Point Lobos. Wow. What a fantastic place. Our first dive was to the Cannery Point Wall. Our second dive was to the middle reef, and some playing around in the kelp. At the breakwater in Monterey, we did a day-time dive, swam out a ways then dropped, and swam along the sandy bottom to our turn-around pressure, then went up to 30 fsw and followed the rocks of the breakwater back. Quite a cool dive profile. (Three habitats on one dive... sandy bottom, rocky shores, and kelp forest.) Then we came back in the evening for a night dive. Cool to see the differences.
So here are some pictures...
This crab was at La Jolla shores. It had two appendages in the back that seemed adapted for swimming. Very cool to watch. We also spotted a blue-banded goby, but my picture for that wasn't all that great. Only a few of my pictures turned out on this dive, though...
This is one of my favorite pictures. I had no clue if it would turn out...but it comes close to the cool feeling of diving in the kelp. I thought I'd be freaked out by it...but I wasn't. (Although I'm sure there are some areas that have much thicker kelp, which might have been worse for me...)
Large anemones everywhere on the Cannery Point Wall. Very beautiful. I could have posted 10 pictures of various anemones, but chose one of my better pics...
A rockfish tucked in a crack between some rocks. The profusion of life at Point Lobos was astonishing. If you haven't ever dove there...you need to. I don't proclaim to have a lot of dive experience (certified in September, 85 dives), but I have been to the caribbean for a handful of dives... Point Lobos is right up there in terms of a diversity and quantity of life. And the visibility, once we got out of the cove, was great...50 feet or so. Far beyond what I'm used to in Puget Sound.
Now for the breakwater pictures...
A nudibranch and some eggs. Not one of my best pictures, but I love nudies as a critter to spot and photograph.
These were all over...very cool.
Another nudibranch.
This was the first time I'd spotted an orange sea cucumber with more than just it's feeding tentacles out...I could actually see the body as well.
The tube-dwelling anemones were all over the sandy bottom next to the breakwater.
And a small octo in the sandy bottom. We saw quite a few of these on our night dive...
Thanks. If you want to see more pictures from this trip, I have these and other pictures posted on my webpage. Here's a link to my galleries.
Have a great day.
Lowell
My dive buddy and I made a trip from Puget Sound down to California a few weeks ago.
Six dives:
La Jolla Shores - 1 dive
Catalina Shark Dive with Dive Aquatica (No pics yet...only video, and I haven't edited it yet)
Point Lobos - 2 dives
Monterey Breakwater - 2 dives, one of them a night dive
Overall, this was a fantastic trip. I love Puget Sound, but each dive in Cali offered things I don't usually experience locally. La Jolla offered some bat rays. (Too elusive for pics, though.) The shark dive offered blues and makos. Unfortunately, we had to stay in the cage due to too many makos. Point Lobos. Wow. What a fantastic place. Our first dive was to the Cannery Point Wall. Our second dive was to the middle reef, and some playing around in the kelp. At the breakwater in Monterey, we did a day-time dive, swam out a ways then dropped, and swam along the sandy bottom to our turn-around pressure, then went up to 30 fsw and followed the rocks of the breakwater back. Quite a cool dive profile. (Three habitats on one dive... sandy bottom, rocky shores, and kelp forest.) Then we came back in the evening for a night dive. Cool to see the differences.
So here are some pictures...
This crab was at La Jolla shores. It had two appendages in the back that seemed adapted for swimming. Very cool to watch. We also spotted a blue-banded goby, but my picture for that wasn't all that great. Only a few of my pictures turned out on this dive, though...
This is one of my favorite pictures. I had no clue if it would turn out...but it comes close to the cool feeling of diving in the kelp. I thought I'd be freaked out by it...but I wasn't. (Although I'm sure there are some areas that have much thicker kelp, which might have been worse for me...)
Large anemones everywhere on the Cannery Point Wall. Very beautiful. I could have posted 10 pictures of various anemones, but chose one of my better pics...
A rockfish tucked in a crack between some rocks. The profusion of life at Point Lobos was astonishing. If you haven't ever dove there...you need to. I don't proclaim to have a lot of dive experience (certified in September, 85 dives), but I have been to the caribbean for a handful of dives... Point Lobos is right up there in terms of a diversity and quantity of life. And the visibility, once we got out of the cove, was great...50 feet or so. Far beyond what I'm used to in Puget Sound.
Now for the breakwater pictures...
A nudibranch and some eggs. Not one of my best pictures, but I love nudies as a critter to spot and photograph.
These were all over...very cool.
Another nudibranch.
This was the first time I'd spotted an orange sea cucumber with more than just it's feeding tentacles out...I could actually see the body as well.
The tube-dwelling anemones were all over the sandy bottom next to the breakwater.
And a small octo in the sandy bottom. We saw quite a few of these on our night dive...
Thanks. If you want to see more pictures from this trip, I have these and other pictures posted on my webpage. Here's a link to my galleries.
Have a great day.
Lowell