This video should have cloud sponges, but for some reason it wont play on my Vimeo
McCurdy Point - Website on Vimeo
Nice sponges. The video works on mine.
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This video should have cloud sponges, but for some reason it wont play on my Vimeo
McCurdy Point - Website on Vimeo
Nice sponges. The video works on mine.
I got trained for Indian Springs.This post by Bob inspired me to ask a question that's been lingering for some time. In most locales, life gets scarcer when you go deeper. Yet deep diving has some rewards, biologically speaking. I've heard of the sponge belt in Cayman, and the PNW has its own fun stuff deep. Southern Florida seems to have some interesting wildlife deeper. And, I suppose if you had a hankering to see the big lionfish that'd probably be a reason to too?
What wildlife do you see in technical depths (let's call it >130ft for this discussion) that you can't see anywhere else? Was that the reason you got trained, or is it just a happy side-effect?
You guys should try for Nootka Sound sometime ... that place was amazing for deep diving. Cloud sponges down to about 150 ... then the gorgonians started showing up. And lots of strawberry anemones filling in the gaps ...Thanks. The best sponges we found were around 120 feet. There were some deeper on this spot, but they were awesome at 120