GLENFWB
Contributor
It has been a year and a half since I made my last dive which is the longest diving drought I have ever had. My dive buddy and I decided to make some early morning dives at the DestinEast Jetty. Thought I would post some surface shots and give a condition report in case someone was planning a dive at the jetties. High Tide was scheduled for 8:30 AM. We launched our boat at 7 AM and splashed for our first dive at 7:45 AM.
Surface conditions were great. Flat seas, no wind, and emerald green water.
First dive was 58 minutes with a max depth of 54 feet. We made our way to the metal box, tied off the dive flag, and made our way south heading toward the anchor. Shortly before the anchor the tide was really pushing in hard. When you get out to the end, you lose the protection of the jetty rocks so the current can really swirl. Visibility at about 30 feet was great, in the 50 foot range. When I tied the flag off to the metal box, I could look up and see the flag floating on the surface. When we hit about 55 feet depth the viz dropped to about 15-20 feet....still a decent viz. Temperature for the first dive was 78 degrees.
During our surface Interval, the two large snorkel boats appeared. We geared up and headed in for our second dive. Second dive had lower current so we made it out past the anchor. Second dive was 45 minutes, with 57 foot max depth. The water was a little cooler at depth, around 76 degrees. I am happy to report that the stone crabs are back in large numbers. The fish were abundant. I have never seen so many flounders in one dive. I could have stuck over a dozen flounder if it were allowed....they were everywhere. I was sorry I didn't have my camera because there were great pictures all over the place. Flounder, numerous sting rays, two huge File Fish, Wrasse, Blue Crab, Stone Crab, Many Grouper, Sheep Head, Grunts, Damsels....just to name a few.
Two Great dives to end the drought....summer has begun.
Surface conditions were great. Flat seas, no wind, and emerald green water.
First dive was 58 minutes with a max depth of 54 feet. We made our way to the metal box, tied off the dive flag, and made our way south heading toward the anchor. Shortly before the anchor the tide was really pushing in hard. When you get out to the end, you lose the protection of the jetty rocks so the current can really swirl. Visibility at about 30 feet was great, in the 50 foot range. When I tied the flag off to the metal box, I could look up and see the flag floating on the surface. When we hit about 55 feet depth the viz dropped to about 15-20 feet....still a decent viz. Temperature for the first dive was 78 degrees.
During our surface Interval, the two large snorkel boats appeared. We geared up and headed in for our second dive. Second dive had lower current so we made it out past the anchor. Second dive was 45 minutes, with 57 foot max depth. The water was a little cooler at depth, around 76 degrees. I am happy to report that the stone crabs are back in large numbers. The fish were abundant. I have never seen so many flounders in one dive. I could have stuck over a dozen flounder if it were allowed....they were everywhere. I was sorry I didn't have my camera because there were great pictures all over the place. Flounder, numerous sting rays, two huge File Fish, Wrasse, Blue Crab, Stone Crab, Many Grouper, Sheep Head, Grunts, Damsels....just to name a few.
Two Great dives to end the drought....summer has begun.