Dead of Winter

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MaxBottomtime

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Location
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Diving in Southern California in January can be tough. The snow was piled deep as we made our way through the slush that we call the Pacific Ocean.


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View of Winter from Redondo Beach


I even had to soak up what little warmth I could from the Sun. It was bitterly cold today, about 72°. Fortunately there was no wind to create much of a chill factor.


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We stopped to check out the Humpback whale that has been hanging out just off Vet's the past week. It is probably stuck in the ice flows.


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The swells were nearly four inches high with less than an hour interval. We pushed on toward Haggerty's to test our thermal tolerance. The water was 51°, so we had to get out after only an hour and fifteen minutes. There wasn't anything to see anyway.


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Sheepcrab with two starry hitch hikers

After scraping the ice from our toes, we made our way to the Landing Craft. It's a good place to find one of my favorite nudibranchs, Cuthona divae.
I didn't see one, but I found some eggs and clusters of their favorite food, hedgehog hydroids. When I uploaded my images I noticed a Cuthona hiding behind the hydroids. My eyelids must have been frozen shut to miss that one.


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This tiny tunicate was growing from the side of a tube anemone


By the time we surfaced, the air temperature had lowered to a bone-chilling 70°. I may have to think about wearing long pants if it gets any colder.
After a day on the water like today, someone needs a hug.

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Having gotten home from a day in 45 degree water with air temps in the low 30's, and in which I got almost no good pictures at all, I hate you . . . :)
 
That is so not fair. We went out Friday in Mendocino, and the whole drive there was beautiful white. Once we launched we had to be careful not to slip and slide down the icy dock, carrying our gear to the boat. The sun was out though. We did our first dive at an awesome dive site, and surfaced to fog. Headed back in watching the GPS carefully to not run into rocks. Ate lunch in the sun, and headed back out to see if the fog was light enough to dive in. We ran line so there was no chance of missing the anchor, and descended under the fog, and surfaced to fog again.

Yesterday and today were almost 70 degrees though.
 
Below freezing here, and whewre there's no ice (St. Lawrence & New Rochelle) the water temps are about 35°F. Thanks for the beautiful pictures.
 
You and all your whale sightings from gray whale to humpback. I only spotted blue whale and grey whale in 2012. Nothing in 2013 yet.

I've made it out to Santa Cruz and Anacapa last weekend to play with the seal lions. The weekend before that I made it out to Catalina. While I see my Facebook feed flowing from friends complaining how cold it is in Southern California. HAHAHA. So to counter that I posted my diving photos where they said I'm crazy for diving in such "cold" weather.

I've been wearing shorts and t-shirt the past couple days since it warmed up to the mid to high 70s in Los Angeles. It was weird walking through the grocery store seeing everyone, except for a handful of employees, all bundled up as if they were ready for a snow storm while I was in shorts and t-shirt.
 
The Blue whales are back. Several were spotted five miles off Pt. Vicente this weekend.

Interesting... seems late in the season for the blues, but maybe the unseasonably warm water (at least here off Catalina, 57-58 F at depths of 100-120 fsw) has kept them hanging around. We usually see them off the island in summer and fall, and up in the northern islands (San Miguel) then as well. Do you normally see them off the mainland this time of year, Phil?
 

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