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Utila Aggressor II Captains Report July 21 28, 2012
Saturday 21.07.2012
This Saturday is a special day, as Utila is hosting an annual carnival and there is a big procession going on in town. The owner of the boat shows up on horseback with about 15 other riders on show horses for the carnival. Everybody is enjoying the unusual scene of dancing horses just a few yards from the boat. The rest of the guests have missed their international flight and will arrive until the next morning. The guests get a boat orientation by Captain Nestor and we get to know our new guests during our first excellent dinner on the boat.
Sunday 22.07.2012
We get up around seven and get the boat ready for departure. After the delayed guests arrive we immediately leave port to get to our first dive site.
At Teds Point we conclude our first dives of the trip and do check out dives. Some of the divers have just been certified and it is their first real dive on a beautiful reef. An Eagle Ray cruising past gently can be seen on both dives and we also find a huge Toadfish sitting in a channel crevice. Throughout our second dive we can hear Dolphins at all times and at the end of the dive we get accompanied by Spinner Dolphins back to the boat.
The Jack Neils Reef on the southwest side of the island is our second and last dive site for today. We do afternoon dives and night dives on this amazing site, offering shallow sand with Seahorses swimming around Pinecone-Algae-Trees and Decorator Shrimp hanging in Black Coral on a 70 ft wall. Besides the Yellow and Fuzzy Seahorses we get to see an instigated territorial fight between two male Sailfin Blennies.
Upon night dive time surface conditions have become challenging due to winds, but we manage to get our first night dive done. We encounter squids that draw nearer to the light as we swim along a wall riddled with the small critters of the night. Squid being inquisitive and ever hungry get closer when confidence subsides fear. One ends up swimming into my dive light, gets spooked and splits with a squirt of ink.
After diving we move the boat into the Utila harbor for a sheltered mooring for the night, because the winds have picked up.
Monday 23.07.2012
This morning the winds have died down and we head out to the north side of Utila. The Pinnacle at Turtle Harbor is our first dive site of the day. Four of our guests take a challenge this week and take PADI Specialty-classes for Deep and Wreck diving. The first deep dive is my task for the first morning dive and we go Underwater Skydiving off the edge of the impressive north side wall. Along the wall we find an Eagle Ray flying past and a very playful turtle that swims with us for about 20 minutes of the dive.
On the second dive we go deep again and explore a most fantastic swim-through right at the pinnacle. Then we spend time in the shallows and explore the channels and overhangs of the reef-fringe. Lucky again we find three tiny juvenile Spotted Drums in one spot and enjoy their infinite-dance swimming style.
After a light lunch of various salads, including my favorite shrimp salad, we head on to do a drop-off dive at the wall in front of Turtle Bay. Spotted Morays peek out of crevices along the wall and we get o see a rare Red Coral Crab.
Afternoon and night dives are taking place at Spotted Bay and as if on cue we find Spotted Eagle Rays, Spotted Morays and Spotted Drums. An especially not-scared Squid actually makes our afternoon dive memorable as we can watch it up-close laying eggs inside little reef crevices. A small school of huge Tarpons passes by on the night dive.
Tuesday 24.07.2012
Early morning dives before breakfast are a divers delight any day. Diving a wreck makes it even better. The wreck of the Halliburton is where the wreck diving specialty takes its course. The very accessible, purposely sunk wreck of a cargo ship is a picturesque home for reef fish and their predators. We can see some huge Cubera Snappers on top of the wheelhouse of the Halliburton surrounded by a large school of juvenile bar jacks.
During breakfast the Utila Aggressor II is making her way to Roatan. We dive on the west end of the island at Fosters Reef. This dive is all about turtles and again Eagle Rays. I am teaching another part of the deep diving specialty. Learning about compressible and incompressible items at depth we hover on top of a bright sandy bottom. We can enjoy a free-swimming seahorse amidst a forest of little pine cone tree algae growing amongst the countless Brown Garden Eels.
The afternoon and night dives take place at the Lighthouse Reef. During the daylight dive a group of four big Rainbow Parrotfish swim past and later we see a very large school of Creole Wrasse swimming away from the lighthouse point. This procession of dark blue wrasse seems to be endless. We get tired of watching after 20 minutes. On the night dive three different Octopuses are found and seem very playful as they stick around for quite some time.
Wednesday 25.07.2012
Early in the morning we steam out to a group of islands called Cayos Cochinos and dive in a marine park site called Cocos Seamount. Big schools of fish and a beautiful underwater mountain make this site a great dive. Also a great number of lionfish can be found and a few newbies to the lionfish slaying can carve their first notches in their spears.
On our way back to Roatan we do the shark dive at Cara A Cara and meet around seven Grey Reef Sharks face to face. We attract the sharks with a freshly speared Lionfish and they home in around us posing for great videos and pictures. As one shark finally grabs the fish he takes the spear that is attached to it with him. We have to laugh hard about this and one dive master has to swim hard to get it back from Davie Jones Locker.
In the afternoon we continue teaching wreck diving at a little wreck called Mr. Bud. This old shrimp boat was beautifully sunk next to a shallow reef at 60 ft and makes for great fun dives and training dives. There are always a lot of Crabs and Lobsters in and around the wreck and on the sandy bottom Jewfish can be seen looking out of their holes in the ground. On the night dive the divers get very lucky again and find two free-swimming octopus.
Thursday 26.07.2012
In the morning we anchor just next to our morning dive site Pirates Point. Here we tie the boat up to an old military tank and go for a relaxing first dive of the day. Interesting creatures cross our path on this dive. A Spanish Lobster or Slipper Lobster sits under a rock, just next to it a Bur fish, which looks like a small, fuzzy Porcupine fish. Later a Stargazer is the lucky find of the dive.
Marys Place is where we continue diving this morning. This guided-only dive takes the group in single file on a tour of fantastic swim throughs beneath deep coral channels and walls. Green Morays are found some even swimming around hunting.
On the surface interval and already moored up to our next dive site Taviana Wall we find Hawksbill Sea Turtles coming up for air. On the dive we find some of them too and we get long interludes of picture-time with the turtles.
For afternoon and night dives we move to the west end of Roatan to the Eel Garden. Here we find sandy patches and shallow reefs and then sandy channels on deeper coral reefs. We swim over the fields of Brown Garden Eels and watch them duck in their holes as we get too close and slowly creep out after we swim along. Deep Diving is getting finished here with the fourth and last dive needed for certification. The night dive offers huge Channel Crabs and also large Spiny Lobsters in big numbers. Everybody lights up the stage with their dive lights as we get to feed a previously speared Lionfish to a Spotted Moray Eel.
Friday 27.07.2012
Another wreck dive is required for the wreck divers to conclude their course. We dive the El Aguila before breakfast for our first plunge of the day. Many Groupers and big Snappers can be found here and they all expect to be fed by anything blowing bubbles. So as we go down a parade of fish is headed our way hanging out real close until they get what they want. Tuna cuts are gabbed up by the nearest fish in a split of a second after they get out of the container. After a short while a huge Green Moray Eel named Juanita comes out to play and sticks her nose in the container eating up the rest of the chum. Loads of digital memory is created in a short time.
The Wreck divers pan out on the wreck looking for entry and exit points, and then penetrate the stern hold with reel deployment and retrieval in their buddy teams. All divers are certified wreck divers upon ascent.
We make our way back to Utila and our last dive of the trip takes place at East Harbor Reef, just next to the in-water lighthouse. We all enjoy that last dive and get to take pictures with two Sea Turtles. We also take a load of group-shots with all the divers and make it a fun time to remember.
After lunch every diver takes care of their equipment and gets it cleaned up and dried, ready for travel. That evening the crew shows all the pictures and a video of the trip to the guests over wine and cheese. After that we enjoy our last day on the boat together and celebrate new friendships and make plans to catch up later to go diving again on the Utila Aggressor II, so come see us soon and have a great time with us.
Chris Achberger
Instructor
Saturday 21.07.2012
This Saturday is a special day, as Utila is hosting an annual carnival and there is a big procession going on in town. The owner of the boat shows up on horseback with about 15 other riders on show horses for the carnival. Everybody is enjoying the unusual scene of dancing horses just a few yards from the boat. The rest of the guests have missed their international flight and will arrive until the next morning. The guests get a boat orientation by Captain Nestor and we get to know our new guests during our first excellent dinner on the boat.
Sunday 22.07.2012
We get up around seven and get the boat ready for departure. After the delayed guests arrive we immediately leave port to get to our first dive site.
At Teds Point we conclude our first dives of the trip and do check out dives. Some of the divers have just been certified and it is their first real dive on a beautiful reef. An Eagle Ray cruising past gently can be seen on both dives and we also find a huge Toadfish sitting in a channel crevice. Throughout our second dive we can hear Dolphins at all times and at the end of the dive we get accompanied by Spinner Dolphins back to the boat.
The Jack Neils Reef on the southwest side of the island is our second and last dive site for today. We do afternoon dives and night dives on this amazing site, offering shallow sand with Seahorses swimming around Pinecone-Algae-Trees and Decorator Shrimp hanging in Black Coral on a 70 ft wall. Besides the Yellow and Fuzzy Seahorses we get to see an instigated territorial fight between two male Sailfin Blennies.
Upon night dive time surface conditions have become challenging due to winds, but we manage to get our first night dive done. We encounter squids that draw nearer to the light as we swim along a wall riddled with the small critters of the night. Squid being inquisitive and ever hungry get closer when confidence subsides fear. One ends up swimming into my dive light, gets spooked and splits with a squirt of ink.
After diving we move the boat into the Utila harbor for a sheltered mooring for the night, because the winds have picked up.
Monday 23.07.2012
This morning the winds have died down and we head out to the north side of Utila. The Pinnacle at Turtle Harbor is our first dive site of the day. Four of our guests take a challenge this week and take PADI Specialty-classes for Deep and Wreck diving. The first deep dive is my task for the first morning dive and we go Underwater Skydiving off the edge of the impressive north side wall. Along the wall we find an Eagle Ray flying past and a very playful turtle that swims with us for about 20 minutes of the dive.
On the second dive we go deep again and explore a most fantastic swim-through right at the pinnacle. Then we spend time in the shallows and explore the channels and overhangs of the reef-fringe. Lucky again we find three tiny juvenile Spotted Drums in one spot and enjoy their infinite-dance swimming style.
After a light lunch of various salads, including my favorite shrimp salad, we head on to do a drop-off dive at the wall in front of Turtle Bay. Spotted Morays peek out of crevices along the wall and we get o see a rare Red Coral Crab.
Afternoon and night dives are taking place at Spotted Bay and as if on cue we find Spotted Eagle Rays, Spotted Morays and Spotted Drums. An especially not-scared Squid actually makes our afternoon dive memorable as we can watch it up-close laying eggs inside little reef crevices. A small school of huge Tarpons passes by on the night dive.
Tuesday 24.07.2012
Early morning dives before breakfast are a divers delight any day. Diving a wreck makes it even better. The wreck of the Halliburton is where the wreck diving specialty takes its course. The very accessible, purposely sunk wreck of a cargo ship is a picturesque home for reef fish and their predators. We can see some huge Cubera Snappers on top of the wheelhouse of the Halliburton surrounded by a large school of juvenile bar jacks.
During breakfast the Utila Aggressor II is making her way to Roatan. We dive on the west end of the island at Fosters Reef. This dive is all about turtles and again Eagle Rays. I am teaching another part of the deep diving specialty. Learning about compressible and incompressible items at depth we hover on top of a bright sandy bottom. We can enjoy a free-swimming seahorse amidst a forest of little pine cone tree algae growing amongst the countless Brown Garden Eels.
The afternoon and night dives take place at the Lighthouse Reef. During the daylight dive a group of four big Rainbow Parrotfish swim past and later we see a very large school of Creole Wrasse swimming away from the lighthouse point. This procession of dark blue wrasse seems to be endless. We get tired of watching after 20 minutes. On the night dive three different Octopuses are found and seem very playful as they stick around for quite some time.
Wednesday 25.07.2012
Early in the morning we steam out to a group of islands called Cayos Cochinos and dive in a marine park site called Cocos Seamount. Big schools of fish and a beautiful underwater mountain make this site a great dive. Also a great number of lionfish can be found and a few newbies to the lionfish slaying can carve their first notches in their spears.
On our way back to Roatan we do the shark dive at Cara A Cara and meet around seven Grey Reef Sharks face to face. We attract the sharks with a freshly speared Lionfish and they home in around us posing for great videos and pictures. As one shark finally grabs the fish he takes the spear that is attached to it with him. We have to laugh hard about this and one dive master has to swim hard to get it back from Davie Jones Locker.
In the afternoon we continue teaching wreck diving at a little wreck called Mr. Bud. This old shrimp boat was beautifully sunk next to a shallow reef at 60 ft and makes for great fun dives and training dives. There are always a lot of Crabs and Lobsters in and around the wreck and on the sandy bottom Jewfish can be seen looking out of their holes in the ground. On the night dive the divers get very lucky again and find two free-swimming octopus.
Thursday 26.07.2012
In the morning we anchor just next to our morning dive site Pirates Point. Here we tie the boat up to an old military tank and go for a relaxing first dive of the day. Interesting creatures cross our path on this dive. A Spanish Lobster or Slipper Lobster sits under a rock, just next to it a Bur fish, which looks like a small, fuzzy Porcupine fish. Later a Stargazer is the lucky find of the dive.
Marys Place is where we continue diving this morning. This guided-only dive takes the group in single file on a tour of fantastic swim throughs beneath deep coral channels and walls. Green Morays are found some even swimming around hunting.
On the surface interval and already moored up to our next dive site Taviana Wall we find Hawksbill Sea Turtles coming up for air. On the dive we find some of them too and we get long interludes of picture-time with the turtles.
For afternoon and night dives we move to the west end of Roatan to the Eel Garden. Here we find sandy patches and shallow reefs and then sandy channels on deeper coral reefs. We swim over the fields of Brown Garden Eels and watch them duck in their holes as we get too close and slowly creep out after we swim along. Deep Diving is getting finished here with the fourth and last dive needed for certification. The night dive offers huge Channel Crabs and also large Spiny Lobsters in big numbers. Everybody lights up the stage with their dive lights as we get to feed a previously speared Lionfish to a Spotted Moray Eel.
Friday 27.07.2012
Another wreck dive is required for the wreck divers to conclude their course. We dive the El Aguila before breakfast for our first plunge of the day. Many Groupers and big Snappers can be found here and they all expect to be fed by anything blowing bubbles. So as we go down a parade of fish is headed our way hanging out real close until they get what they want. Tuna cuts are gabbed up by the nearest fish in a split of a second after they get out of the container. After a short while a huge Green Moray Eel named Juanita comes out to play and sticks her nose in the container eating up the rest of the chum. Loads of digital memory is created in a short time.
The Wreck divers pan out on the wreck looking for entry and exit points, and then penetrate the stern hold with reel deployment and retrieval in their buddy teams. All divers are certified wreck divers upon ascent.
We make our way back to Utila and our last dive of the trip takes place at East Harbor Reef, just next to the in-water lighthouse. We all enjoy that last dive and get to take pictures with two Sea Turtles. We also take a load of group-shots with all the divers and make it a fun time to remember.
After lunch every diver takes care of their equipment and gets it cleaned up and dried, ready for travel. That evening the crew shows all the pictures and a video of the trip to the guests over wine and cheese. After that we enjoy our last day on the boat together and celebrate new friendships and make plans to catch up later to go diving again on the Utila Aggressor II, so come see us soon and have a great time with us.
Chris Achberger
Instructor