HBDiveGirl
Contributor
- Messages
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Fortunately, I have NO problem re-living fantastic dives that don't have pictures. (You spoil me with your spectacular pictures, Ken, thank you! )Mo2vation:'Chica and I were the ones who passed you on the way up the stairs - we were in doubles, and I was talking with you about the Electric Ray that we saw 104' that followed us around for 10 minutes, the baby GSB at 88', the field of baby Midshipman at 60, the baby (and very clear.. who knew) Giant Kelp Fish at 45', all of the D.Iris and Fakeyssinda between 28' - 24', etc. Glad you had a great dive.
... I've dived Vets a zillion times - and last night was in the top 10. Great viz, calm water, and so much to see. I could go on and on, but re-living the entire dive again with no pix would just make me sad.
Unreal dive last night.
We're planning on going back tonight.
---
Ken
Thursday Dec. 7, 2006: Vet's Park, Redondo Submarine Canyon, after dark.
Buddy: BabyGBSwhisperer, Ken
Max depth: 106fsw. (Avg. about 40)
Run time: 68 minutes
Temp: 58F (RastaAeris; "Whatevah, Mon! I tell you when it freezes... 'til den, go haahv fun!")
Reason for Pasley to come on home: Visiting divers are missing the great experience of diving with you, (and so are all us locals!)
Five (5!) species of nudibranchs: D. iris, H. crassicornis, Cuthona divae, Navanax inermis, Pleurobranchia californiensis, and a mystery dorid oozing over the mud.
...and there was the incredible Party Coconut, with Octo!! The same black coconut shell we found months and months ago.. still with an octopus inside peeking out. Too Cute!
And the resting Pacific Electric Ray, 'bout 2.5-feet across, that held our nitrogenated attention for many lovely minutes. These things look prehistoric... flubbery but strong. Ken, I thought you were to the side, still looking at it, when it rose off the bottom and slowly swam straight towards me. I side-finned up and away, turning to look at you... and you were engrossed in some micro-treasure in the mud... WITH YOUR BACK TO ME AND THE RAY. :scared: I swept your hands with my light beam, slowly...and then Faster!!!!... and you looked up into that lovely electric face. It was good to see you move those doubles with such style, grace, strength... and speed.
Nice move, Escamillo!
Then there was the Suite: Sarcastic! A fat, empty turban shell smack up against a big glass jar with a big Fringehead in it. The dude's got a Two-Room Suite!! Talk about a date that kills! Bet he pulls chicks all night with that :14: .
By the way: 'Chica's in love.
Double hp100's. My perfect doubles. The search is over. (Break it gently to the lp85s . We'll always be friends.) My heart belongs to the double-hundreds.
And THEN there were the Iris Fields!!! OMG.. going and returning over the sandy edge of the canyon, (22-30fsw) we saw dozens of distinct Dendronotus iris egg masses but couldn't find the Dendy's anywhere. Suddenly, you waved a light at me... (approaching small-GWS speed = something exciting!...) ..I rush over...and look at.... FUZZY BROWN ALGAE! Lovely algae, but just 3-inch tall algae. WT*??
You looked at me..... pointed again forcefully... and a beautifully camoflaged D. iris materialized before my eyes. WOW!! It looks like fuzzy brown algae.. with spots and rhinophores!
Now, we saw them everywhere... eating, schmoozing, mating, laying eggs... The Iris Fields! These are the first D. iris I've seen in hundreds of dives at Vets. Wonderful!
The entire dive was one fun experience after another, beneath a starry December sky, in warm 60 degree water, rolling with the perfect doubles and the most fun dive buddy in the world. Thank you, Ken. You bring so much to every dive.
It's worth re-living.
Then, let's do it again
'Dette