Monday, December 6, 2004 (M/V Koragot – Surin Islands -
Thailand)
Good morning, wakey-wakey! As far as the eye
could see. A cold breakfast at sea. The most spectacular dive of the trip with
some truly ancient sea creatures.
Day 273 (83). Day two of the dive was initiated this morning by the dive
coordinator walking down the cabin corridor shouting ‘good morning,
wakey-wakey’ in a high-pitched voice. This repeated call was followed a
few seconds later by the sounds or people moaning and groaning as they fell out
of their bunks and opened their cabin doors. Strangely enough, although
everybody was still very tired from the previous day’s intense diving, we
all mobilised into action and were swiftly up on deck and waiting for the dive
briefing to commence quite quickly. The first dive of the day is always right
before breakfast but most of us partook in a banana or something to help make it
through until then.
The viz for this first dive was just stunning. We could clearly see in all
directions for well over forty metres or more. Good visibility is the very first
thing I hope for when I have the camera underwater. Great all round visibility
means that I can spend more time on one subject and still keep a good eye on
where everyone else is so that I can catch them up without getting lost. At one
point, however, Sandy was seemingly insistent that I rush back over to the rest
of the group and I did so in such a rush that I’m sure I used up a lot of
air in the process. Probably as a result of this, we were back up to the safety
stop again well before the rest of the group and, once again, we were the very
first people back onto the boat. This was particularly annoying as it not only
meant that everybody else was still enjoying themselves beneath the waves, but
it also meant that I had to sit there and watch the already cooked breakfast
getting colder and colder before everybody was back on board and the now stone
cold food was finally served. We are now averaging about forty-minutes of bottom
time with our dives. Some of the dive masters somehow manage to still have well
over a hundred and twenty bar of pressure left in their tanks by the time
we’ve nearly completely exhausted our own supply.
Do they have gills or something?With
everyone finally back on board, I sat and ate my cold breakfast and everybody on
the boat found a place to sit or lay and rest until the mid-day dive. In the
meantime, the captain found a secluded spot between two of the islands where the
surface waves were minimal and the boat was more stable in the water. It was
very peaceful for the next few hours as we whiled away the hours until the dive
coordinator was satisfied that enough of a surface interval had elapsed. After a
while, I pulled out the laptop and showed some of the other divers a selection
of our very best underwater shots. Several other divers on this trip also have
underwater digital cameras and I loaded some of their photos too so that we
could all see what we all saw
underwater.The mid-day dive turned
out to be one of the most spectacular dives of our entire trip so far. Klaus had
apparently asked one of the boat boys to put a little extra pressure into my
tank and I was fortunate enough to start off the dive with two hundred and
twenty bar of air. This gave me probably another five minutes or more of
additional bottom time for which I was very grateful. We saw several things of
interest during this second dive of the day including an octopus and a horseshoe
crab (sometimes known as the king crab) – a descendant of the long since
extinct trilobite, one of the earliest living organisms on earth.
Not even any of the dive masters had ever seen one of these before so this was a
particularly thrilling sighting. As if the octopus and horseshoe crab
weren’t enough, we also saw no less than three separate sharks – two
black-tipped and one white-tipped. They didn’t get particularly close,
probably no closer than about fifteen meters, so I wasn’t able to take a
snap at them but it is rare enough to see sharks for it to always be quite the
thrill.
Posted: Mon - December
6, 2004 at 10:44 PM