RickI
Contributor
Feel very lucky to have fallen into this video footage. Clear water, good light, shallow water, white sand reflective bottom ... oh, and a few dozen willing spinner dolphins on the move. Usually, a boat would drop the divers on the pod and they would just swim off into the distance out of visibility in short order. For whatever reason, curiosity they let me tag along for a while, likely related to the dive scooter I was free diving on. Martin Stepanek suggested swimming on your back fast beneath the surface might bring them in. He said to try to impress or otherwise stimulate their curiosity. Martin said to avoid trying to impress them with normal free diving skills, breathholding as they will see what lame pollywogs we really are and dash off. So, I would motor along inverted and generally they allowed me to keep up or actually waited for me several times. They even circled back a couple of times. Accommodating cetaceans! They even had several young, calves with them but the moms and dads were ok with me swimming with and through the school. I understand they forage in the pelagic reaches around Sha'ab Sataya, then rest and play over the sands encompassed by the reef. More about the Long-Nosed Spinner Dolphin (Stenella longirostris), below.* Fun stuff, checkout the video and you can see what I mean ...
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Dolphin Reef or Sha'ab Sataya about eight miles off the SE coast of Egypt
p.s. - Special thanks to Peter Satitpunwaycha for the excellent sharp still photo that is the opening shot for the video.
* CMS: Stenella longirostris, Spinner dolphin
Stenella longirostris — Long-snouted Spinner Dolphin
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Dolphin Reef or Sha'ab Sataya about eight miles off the SE coast of Egypt
p.s. - Special thanks to Peter Satitpunwaycha for the excellent sharp still photo that is the opening shot for the video.
* CMS: Stenella longirostris, Spinner dolphin
Stenella longirostris — Long-snouted Spinner Dolphin