friscuba:
How is the pinnacle as a dive? I'm thinking about making are fun run down that way for the pinnacle and the Hive one of these days.
Hey Steve --
Sorry for the long delay in replying; thank {$DEITY} that the Kona Classic is finally over.
I've been keeping track of two photographers all week, and it seems like they were never
closer than 100 yards apart and often deeper than 90 FSW. Sigh.
Anyway. Ule Pinnacle. My favorite dive site here in Kona. The pinnacle itself is in fairly
shallow and surgey water, but there are usually tons of fish around it. The best part IMHO
is the canyon just to the south of the pinnacle. There's a mooring pin in 52 FSW on the
south rim of the canyon. Unless you're a really good freediver you'll need to set it on scuba.
The canyon is the shape of a horse shoe, with the open end of the shoe pointing seaward
and down. This is a deep dive, and by deep I mean DEEP. Au Au? Peh.
I've not been past 165 FSW here, but oh man does it keep going and going. The first time
we made a trimix dive here we limited our depth to 165 (we were making multiple dives that
day and had to limit our O2 exposure); the dive team got down to our target depth and all 3
of us looked at ach other with that "S**t! We brought the wrong gas" look, as we looked
longingly below us ...
The most interesting part of the dive site within recreational limits is the shelf on the south
side of the horse shoe at about 85-90 FSW. There's a bunch of black coral and wire corals
growing under the shelf. I've also had 100% success finding Tinker's here - every single
dive - if you're calm enough they'll hang out with you as shallow as 80 FSW so you can
get some good pictures. I've also had good luck finding Bandit Angels here.
Did a dive there yesterday morning. Two teams - one deepish (150 FSW, 21/35 trimix),
one within recreational limits (EAN32, 30/30 trimix). Loads of Tinkers, a bandit, a Fellow's
Nudibranch (Hoover's, p172) under the mooring pin. Speaking of which (the mooring pin),
we installed a marker (aka bleach bottle) so it's easier to find. Don't tie up to it -- the line
isn't that strong...
The hammerheads seem to hang out shallow (20-30 FSW) here. It's an awesome sight to
look up from the depths in the canyon to see them silhouetted above you ...
Sometimes there can be current outside the edges of the canyon, so it's best to stay in the
lee of the canyon walls. The inshore side of the walls starts at about 40 FSW and drops
quickly to 100 FSW, where it plunges vertically to at least 200 FSW. Someday I'll find out
where it ends (maybe!).