Video - underwater CCV, Nov 2008

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robint

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Location
Albuquerque, NM
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Here is the underwater portion of video, recorded Day 1 of our trip. The big "F" happened on dive 1 of the following day. Vis was pretty horrible on the first day, as you can see by the video (maybe 30-60' at best) but it did improve day and by day. By the end of the week I would guess that the vis was 100' out on the walls, 60-70' on the house reefs(Newman's and CCV) and a bit less on the Prince Albert.

Roatan scuba diving, Nov 2008 on Vimeo

I wish I had video to share from the rest of the week because we saw so many seahorses, pipefish, neck crabs, and other cool critters! (see Ron's photos on our website) Vis on the Prince Albert was never great but the dive is nice, especially night diving. Other dives like the Mr. Bud wreck had fantastic vis as you can see from Ron's photos.

robin:D
 
In the first scene, you showed the boats. The dive flags were standing straight out (20 mph wind). Luckily this was from the North and you were shielded, but that's how storms work down Roatan way.

You caught something really interesting and hard to see. In the night dive portion, as the camera shows the camouflaged crab on the ship at 4:59. His motion distracts you from seeing something even more elusive- an almost transparent larval Lobster swims upward through the frame about 1/3 the way from the left. You gotta look fast!

Picture_61.png
At 5:06 another drifts from right to left just over the Purple Tube Sponge.

Fun stuff, too bad your camera flooded on day one. Now you'll have to go back. :rofl:
 
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thanks RoatanMan, I did see that as there were so many of them actually there in the water and I remembered seeing them. :D

yes, I need to go back. As bad as vis was the first day (shown in the video), it was FANTASTIC by the end of the week. :D The night dive on Thursday was back out the the wreck and sooooo good, all I could think of the whole time was I wish I had a camcorder right now to show everyone!!!

I really want to go back to CCV in the near future, this time with a brand new HD camcorder! I guess I gotta win the lottery. :D

robin
 
Here is the underwater portion of video, recorded Day 1 of our trip. The big "F" happened on dive 1 of the following day. Vis was pretty horrible on the first day, as you can see by the video (maybe 30-60' at best) but it did improve day and by day. By the end of the week I would guess that the vis was 100' out on the walls, 60-70' on the house reefs(Newman's and CCV) and a bit less on the Prince Albert.

Roatan scuba diving, Nov 2008 on Vimeo

I wish I had video to share from the rest of the week because we saw so many seahorses, pipefish, neck crabs, and other cool critters! (see Ron's photos on our website) Vis on the Prince Albert was never great but the dive is nice, especially night diving. Other dives like the Mr. Bud wreck had fantastic vis as you can see from Ron's photos.

robin:D

Wow! Great video. Thanks for sharing. I'm headed to Roatan at the end of Jan, staying at FI. This will be my second time back. Hope I see all the life that you saw.

Hey RoatanMan, is there any secret to "catching" all the life Roatan has to offer? I actually bought a magnifying glass after reading your posts. What's the best way to see all the life?
 
Hey RoatanMan, is there any secret to "catching" all the life Roatan has to offer? I actually bought a magnifying glass after reading your posts. What's the best way to see all the life?

Make sure that magnifier is actually glass, have it handy and always carry a small flashlight, even during the day. Skip the camera for the first couple of hundred dives :D Amazing what you can't see with that box blocking your sight.

The best advice is to go slowly. The DM that taught me this would give that advice in halting English and it sounded like "Go Slow, Seymour", which I later figured out he wasn't calling me Seymour, after all. Go slow, See More was his advice.

Most divers feel they have to go deep and move fast to get the most out of their dives, and this is certainly NOT the case on Roatan's South side. Slow and shallow is the key- that's where all of the life is in this protected and sheltered environment. This is where the little stuff lives.

Shore diving the Prince Albert Wreck is a great way to perfect these skills. You can do this from either FIBR or CCV. Just spend your entire tank at 35' or less, move slowly and stop for 3 to 3 minutes (hard I know) and study that square meter of reef in front of you. Try not to get bored and move-on before that Octopus gets comfortable enough to reveal itself by moving.

Most divers won't play the game, but remaining motionless not only saves air, but it also allows your eyes to see details that you had missed. It also allows critters to ignore you- they usually react to movement, not recognizing a motionless diver.

In the example of Roatan again, just hang near the rear of the wreck. Get neutral and motionless when no one else is around thrashing about. You'll likely see Spotted Eagle Rays drift in for a snack. If there's a lot of bubbles and almost any movement, they'll stay in the blue. Relax, get neutral and adjust your vision.

Adjust your vision? This entails the understanding that when we are underwater, we often only see objects at a certain distance. My famous example is when I missed a 45' Whale Shark because I was staring at it's closer nearby 8' long baby. Never saw the momma. Your eyes tend to lock in at one distance and that's it.

For years, those larval Lobster were swimming between my faceplate and what I was gawking at. I couldn't see them because I wasn't looking at them. Then, my eyes relaxed and focused a little closer and I began to see.

At the end of every night dive, stick your flashlight pointing straight up in the sand, then get comfortable and study the column of light and what it attracts. :crafty:

Finding the small stuff is really a matter of looking in the peculiar niche environments they inhabit. Likely you'll need a flashlight- they use contrasting light and shadows as a camouflage. Learn that Juvenile Spotted Drums always patrol back and forth frantically in small overhangs, you'll find them every time. Learn the type of exposed coral faces that Arrow Blennies prefer, you'll have them by the dozens. The exotic Sailfin Blennies prefer tiny holes in rocks, usually in 3' of water when most divers are standing up in "the sand". Crawl out of the water on your belly and get up to exit when you "run out of water".

Here's a task that I give the eager: I tell them I need abandoned Sea Urchin shells that are no bigger than a Quarter. I give them a plastic cup and send them on their way. Upon return, they quickly realize that the point of the exercise is not to collect shells- we throw them back. They are instead quickly amazed at what they began to see as their eyes became trained to look for little, almost invisibly colored objects. (Don't tell them anything more than you want to measure the shells- make up some cockamammy story)

Once you get good at this, enlist new recruits. Point out those little Shrimps that live on the Wire Coral, the Pedersen Cleaner Shrimp that can be found on any Corkscrew Anemone, the peculiar Arrow Blennies, the predictable Secretary Blennies. Use a flashlight to show them, buy a laser pointer when you learn to find really small stuff.

That list above will amaze most anyone, as they have been swimming past these obvious things like Wire Coral, Corkscrew Anemone and specialized niche environments (places these critters like to live) without ever seeing them. You will find that they won't ever go past a Wire Coral again without checking it for the specific Shrimp that inhabit it.

It's a whole macro world out there, a lot more than 12" Lobsters and 2' Parrot Fish.
 
What a great post RoatanMan. I'm coming to AKR the 4th - 11th for my first trip out of the states to dive and I have learned a lot from reading your posts - not just about Roatan specifically, but about diving in general. If I run into you on Roatan, the beer is on me!!!
 

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