Merry
Contributor
Diving offshore last weekend went pretty much like this: Jump out of bed at dawn, look at the beach cameras, judge the swell, look at the wind report, calculate our chances of beating the white-caps, race to the boat, race to the dive site, and hit the water ASAP. Periodically and unexpectedly, we'd have a few minutes of spooky calm as either the wind shifted and/or swell abated. Such a lull wouldn't last long and we'd be back to bucking in the chop. Vis is improving.
With Kevin in tow, we managed to hit the Barge, Golf Ball Reef, and the Crane at Haggerty's.
Yellowfin fringeheads are back!
Triopha catalinae juvenile
Felimare porterae
Polycera tricolor
Felimida macfarlandi juvenile
Ancula gibbosa laying eggs on the west side of the Barge
Doriopsilla eggs
One of 2 yellowfin fringeheads that I saw on the west side of the Barge.
Christmas tree worm, Spirobranchus spinosus, and Pycnoclavella stanleyi tunicates
Pycnoclavella stanleyi is a tiny, abundant, marvelously yellow social tunicate. Hundreds of them clustered together don't appear to be much more than a vague, yellow film on the tops of rocks, so you have to get very close to see them with the naked eye.
A gorgeous red tunicate from the Crane
The Crane is loaded with different species of tunicate
Hedgehog hydroid from the Crane
Amphipods congregate on a hydroid
With Kevin in tow, we managed to hit the Barge, Golf Ball Reef, and the Crane at Haggerty's.
Yellowfin fringeheads are back!
Triopha catalinae juvenile
Felimare porterae
Polycera tricolor
Felimida macfarlandi juvenile
Ancula gibbosa laying eggs on the west side of the Barge
Doriopsilla eggs
One of 2 yellowfin fringeheads that I saw on the west side of the Barge.
Christmas tree worm, Spirobranchus spinosus, and Pycnoclavella stanleyi tunicates
Pycnoclavella stanleyi is a tiny, abundant, marvelously yellow social tunicate. Hundreds of them clustered together don't appear to be much more than a vague, yellow film on the tops of rocks, so you have to get very close to see them with the naked eye.
A gorgeous red tunicate from the Crane
The Crane is loaded with different species of tunicate
Hedgehog hydroid from the Crane
Amphipods congregate on a hydroid
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