DivingDoc
Contributor
I was on a trip once in Key Largo with Captain Slate. There were some divers that surfaced quite far away from the boat. He had do deploy his ADRU (******* diver retrieval unit) to get them. They must have been some of those Sea Rectums you were talking about.
--DivingDoc

--DivingDoc
Back from the south Andaman Sea aboard the Thailand Aggressor.
It was better diving by far than the northern trip but still not world class. The six divers on board enjoyed it. However, the consensus was that there is better diving to be had in places that are less troublesome to travel to. I have not been to Indonesia, but those on board that had been said that the diving was far better there. Same with Palau, and having been there I agreed on that score. PNG, the Solomons, the Maldives, all got better reviews than the south Andaman Sea. There was certainly some macro to see and shoot, sea horses, soft corals, and so on, but just not worth the effort or the price of admission. There were Lots of eels, large and small, but no large fish to be seen anywhere which may be explained by the flotillas of fishing boats that appeared to be everwhere. We did not see one shark on either trip with the exception of a white tip reef shark that one of the divers saw in the distance. The viz was quite limited during several dives as well.
At several sites, hordes of amphibious sea rectums we're encountered. For those not familiar with the species, sea rectums are a species of air breathing, land dwelling, homonids that populate cattle boats in popular dive sites and who generally have little,if any, dive trainIng or experience, descending into and onto dive sites within range of day trips with great abandon and exuberance, utilizing their fins, arms, and hands, as rotary wings, and lacking the skill and motivation to exercise even a modicum of buoyancy control or dive manners. Sea rectum infestation was encountered at 2 or 3 dive sites and did nothing to add to the enjoyment of the diving.
If Phuket is two or three hours away from your home, the south Andaman portion of the Thailand Aggressor destination might be something to consider. If that is not the case, you might want to consider alternative destinations.
The boat itself was fine, the crew on board was attentive and helpful, the food was better than on the north leg, perhaps because there were only 6 divers aboard, but it still was not great, and the dive masters, with two notable exceptions, really need to understand that their role underwater is to help the guests find the little stuff that we like to see and photograph.