Saturday, November 1, 2014

Day 3 & 4, Similan Islands Log

Dinner on Day 3
By day 3, we were immersed in the routine of the boat. Over the course of 14 dives, my buoyancy control increased tremendously. In diving, buoyancy control means the difference between running into coral, or needing to hold on to something, and just a general feeling of being in control of your body in the water. By day three, I could turn better, avoid obstacles, and also, avoid bumping into other divers much better.

We were in a group of six divers, and when all six want to look at a particular creature in one tiny crack, that can get quite challenging. :) It was great to know that I was getting better at maneuvering in the water - buoyancy control is a mark of an experienced diver.

Dive Plan of Richelieu Rock
Here's where we dove on Day 3-4:
Dive 1: Koh Tachai
Dive 2 - 4: Richelieu Rock
Day 4, dive 1: Koh Tachai
Day 4, dive 2: Koh Bon

An amazing sunrise
Richelieu Rock was one of the great highlights of the trip. It's a lone pinnacle of rock - far from all nearby points of land and reef. As a result, lots of larger schools of fish congregate there as a food stop. We saw huge schools of fish there, streaming over and around the rocks.

All in all, it was an incredible and amazing trip. We are hooked on liveaboard diving trips now! A day after we returned to land, we still felt like we were on the boat, rocking back and forth.

Today, a week-ish after the trip, we are leaving Thailand to head to our next destination, Australia! We will be in Sydney for three days, and then we fly up to Cairns - a jumping off point to the Great Barrier Reef! Wish us luck on our next diving adventure. :)

Sea Life Log:

Fish:
Great Barracuda - the big long fish :)
*Great Barracuda: (dive #1) we saw an entire school of them, about 40-50 fish, quite near to us as we were ending the dive. As we surfaced and began our safety stop, they slowly swam away. I learned after that they will sometimes go after women's earrings, so you have to be careful not to wear anything sparkly that might attract them. (!) They are quite large fish, 190 cm
Trumpetfish: one yellow, one silver, one brown with dark bands on the tail on dive #1. A very clever predator - they tend to stick near big grouper fish, blending in with them and stalking the small fish that think they are safe around the large grouper, which doesn't hunt them.
*Giant Trevally: I think I saw two of them, very large fish, on dive #1
Blacksaddle Grouper (one large one on dive #1, 110 cm)
*Damselfish: (4-5 groups on dive #1: skunk anemonefish on a beige with white shell anemone, Clark's anemonefish found on anemones with bright blue bodies when closed); (dive #2, lots of skunks), (dive #3, Tomato anemonefish - 2 groups!)
*Cornetfish: (dive #2 & 3, schools of them)
*Batfish: (dive #2, schools of Tall-fin and Boer's batfish), (dive #3, Shaded batfish schools)
Bigeye snapper & Bluestriped snapper: (dive #2 and 3, big schools of them)

Eels, Lionfish, Puffers/Boxfish:
Swimming Moray Eel, photo by Patrick
Giant Moray: (becoming quite commonplace! 1 on dive #1, and then on dive #3, a large moray swam up towards us, straight at Mayumi, and then over the lip of a rock and down the other side! They are massive when out of their caves!
Lionfish: (dive #2, saw a group of three, same on dive #3), (dive #4, black colored one)
*Cube Boxfish: (dive #2, Richelieu Rock; little guy about 4" long, bright yellow and black spots, hiding in a crevice)
Masked porcupinefish (dive #3, a large one, they get to 50 cm, hiding deep in a rock crevice)
Common puffers & boxfish: (dives #2-3, many black-spotted pufferfish,
Eels: saw a couple small ones, not sure what species
Cuttlefish

Sea Slugs, Crustaceans, & Shells:
*Zig-Zag Oyster: (lots on dives #2-4, Richeliu Rock)
* Peacock Mantis Shrimp (dive #3, came out from a cave then scuttled away)

Other Creatures:
Sea Stars: sevaral with orange bodies and red speckled tips;
Fan Coral
*Cuttlefish: (dive #2: one at beginning, sandy-colored and about 2' long; then a male & female together at the end of the dive. The male was about 4' long and was holding on to the top of the female territorially. Female was brown-reddish; male was sandy-colored with bright blue spots. Their skirt when moving looks like a lacy white curtain.)
Big red octopus, (dive #3, wedged in a rock and quietly breathing, colored same as the rocks - a sandy beige color)
Barracuda, (dive #3, looked somewhat smaller than yesterday)
Water snake, (dive #4, black and white)

Coral:
Fan Corals: (many lovely big ones on dive #1)
One of the stunning sunsets

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