It's about diving. And cats.

Me diving

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Anilao 2024: Day 4

Rob decided to shoot wide angle today and asked that we go to some wide angle sites, given how nice the one we went to yesterday was.  We were a bit delayed to leave due to waiting for someone from the coast guard to come and clear us to leave. I’m not sure what the deal is, but for some reason, this was required every morning.  There was no clear explanation for this except that it was something new that must be done everyday. So some dude in military fatigues showed up, looked at some papers and the boats and then we could go.  Once that was finally done, we also went to a very far away site, the furthest we’d been yet, so it was a late start once we got in the water. 


There was some explanation about current and depending on the current, we’d go here or there, which didn’t make a lot of sense, but basically we dropped into an area with what I’d describe as a bunch of coral pinnaclets, and a drop off, and some current that made it not that desirable to go to some areas of the site. There were zillions of anthias in the water clustered around various coral heads, plus lots of other tropical fish. Lots of blue triggerfish. The occasional trumpetfish. And I saw one barracuda swoop through and harass the other fish.  Not a lot happened on the dive, since I was basically just drifting around in the aquarium. Initially tried to pose for some pics,but the anthias seemed super shy, which was frustrating Rob, so I figured the more bubbles, the shyer they’d be, so I wandered off. 

I did make one good find on the dive. Very good, I think. I was drifting along as previously described and I saw a sea snake slithering over the top of a coral ridge!  It was black and white striped. I of course thought this was super exciting.  Rob was not too far, but just out of light sight along range, staring through his camera. So I swam a little towards him, turned my light up to high power, and vigorously signaled him. It was the “either I’m dying or there’s a GPO” signal. And he gave me a “hold” sign without even looking over at me. Eye roll, eye roll, eye roll.  By the time he came over and I swam him back to the spot… no sea snake. I had a fit and yelled at Rob. Then I managed to convey what he had missed. Luckily a couple minutes later I found it a couple coral heads away.  So we watched and followed it for a while. 

We moved over to another pretty close site and anchored there for our surface interval. There was a catastrophic failure of the hot water thermos, so we had to settle for cold water and oreos to snack on.  It was super flat and super nice out today. 

When we first dropped in on this site, I found it pretty unimpressive. It did not seems to have nearly as many fish as the previous site.  There was a slope with corals, but it just wasn’t nearly as pretty.  Before we got moving, Joemar got our attention to show us a sea snake!  We watched it for a while, and it hung out for pictures. Then it headed to the surface. We continued on to a drop off, which was actually pretty nice.  I guess the spot we dropped on just wasn’t the best. There were some big gorgonian things hanging on the side that were worth posing next to. But the best finds of the dive were frogfish. Big frogfish. There were four that we found, and boy were they big. Two of them actually swam around a bit for us which was kind of awkward. I think it’s about what I’d look like trying to swim in my gear without my fins on. 

There was also a neat overhang on the wall, kind of a little cave, which was super colorful inside and had quite a few fish in there, including some kinds of fish that I didn’t see outside. After that, we came up the wall and Rob managed to find a coral head with a bunch of anthias that seemed not that skittish.  He sent me up to 10 feet to pose as a silhouette for a long while. By then it was pretty much time to call the dive. Joemar put a bag up and we waited for the boat to come and pick us up. 

For our afternoon dive, we went to a spot just down from the hotel to the right. It had patches of coral/rubble on the sand.  The highlight of the dive was a flamboyant cuttlefish!  Just before the dive, as we were walking to the boat, Rob was talking about other critters to “request” and I mentioned flamboyant cuttlefish. I didn’t even put in my request and I got one!  Aside from that, Joemar found plenty of nudis, including a lot of the purple aeolids with peach rhinophores. There were so many of those that even I found a few. Joemar also found some of the nudibranchs that look like flesh colored soft corals… which I’ve been looking for every time I see a small patch of the soft coral that could instead be a slug. Oh and last but not least, there was a HUGE sea snake. I guess maybe they aren’t so uncommon after all!

For the night dive we went to twin rocks, where we did our first dive of the trip. It wasn’t super productive but there were some good finds… a mantis shrimp with eggs, which was the first of the trip.  Five cuttlefish, ranging from really small to pretty average sized. Of course the really small one was the first one that we found. They were all quite skittish and not well behaved photo subjects :(. And right before the end of the dive, Joemar pointed out a big crab wearing clothing.  I’m not sure what it was that he had on its back, it was probably a piece of a palm fronds or something, but it was a sheet of something fibrous that kind of looked like a burlap sack. I’m not sure if it was stuck to the crab intentionally (like a decorator crab) or not, but I wasn’t going to try to undress the crab. 

I had a mudslide before dinner. It was on the specials list, and I wanted something creamy. And I’m a sucker for drink specials. It was no mango colada. 


Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Anilao 2024: Day 3

We woke to (finally) sunny conditions and lake flat conditions on the water, phew. For the first dive of the day, we went across the channel to a site called Bethlehem. It started around 20 feet and sloped down to about 65 feet, where there was a side flat rubble field, which was a treasure trove of macro critters! Joemar found so many tiny slugs, probably between 10 and 15 different kinds, mostly presented to us on a silver plate for photography :P. There were also some good crabs and shrimps, including one of the ones that lives on a wire coral, and some popcorn shrimp in one of those bulbous anemones.

Between dives we headed to the next site, called Layag, and hung out on the boat during the surface interval. Eventually we finally got back in. This site was super awesome, with beautiful coral heads covered with anthias and other tropical fish. There were zillions of crinoids in all different colors. It would have made for a great wide angle dive. Rob was shooting macro, though, and there were tons of great subjects. Joemar found a boxer crab right at the start (the ones with pompoms on their paws), plus there was a frogfish, a blue and yellow ribbon eel, a mantis shrimp, lots of nudis, and a dancing sweetlips. Overall a great dive site, one of the nicer patches of reef I’ve seen on this trip or our previous one here.

After lunch and a non-nap, we went back out to a spot very close to the hotel, right at the point. It was around where we did the night dive last night. The site was a slope down to 75 or so feet with patches of coral, but more patches than not patches. Actually the slope continues a bit deeper but it thins out to mostly sand. We spent a lot of time down around 75 feet. The highlight of the dive was a sea fan with not one but two Pygmy seahorses! They were the pinkish purple ones that I think are prettier than the one we’d seen yesterday. And one of the two was pretty big, well as big as I think they come. I could see it pretty well with my eyes. Joemar found these pretty early in the dive and Rob kept going back to the sea fan to get a few more pics.

Other than this, we saw a variety of nudis, and one small one that looked like it had only a single rhinophore. It was actually a non-nudi slug, a head-shielded slug known as a batwing slug. It was tiny with big spots, pretty cool looking for a non-nudibranch :P. One other find on the dive was some tiny eel type thing that was slithering around in a coral. Joemar says it had a bulbous head (I could just see its head was white versus a black or dark red body) but I don’t think Rob managed to get a pic. One other notable thing about this dive was that Rob got very low on gas and I had to share gas with him back to the boat. How embarrassing. When we surfaced the wind had picked up and little waves were breaking over my head. Luckily it was only like 2 minutes back to the hotel.

We hung out at the pool for a while and then headed back out for a night dive. The wind had calmed down. We went to a site around the point and a few minutes past it. It was a sandy slope it wasn’t the most productive dive. There was a lot of swimming around not finding anything but there were a few good finds. Very early on, Joemar found a small but not tiny octopus slithering around on the sand. And much later, after a lot of not seeing much, he found a really cool nudi on a hydroid, which I know we’ve seen before in the Philippines. But while we were looking at that, a tiny translucent squid suddenly appeared out of nowhere. Rob miraculously managed to actually get some shots of it, even though it looked like sea trash drifting in the water. We saw a second one of those tiny translucent squids a bit later, which looked even more like a tiny bit of sea trash. Other than that, there were a few other nudis and the usual assortment of small crabs and shrimp.

Tonight I had a pina colada.

Monday, July 29, 2024

Anilao 2024: Day 2

When we woke up, it was like we were in the middle of a hurricane. It was raining and windy and there were crazy gusts. The rain stopped before we went for breakfast and the wind slowly decreased as we were getting ready to go. We headed across the channel to Kirby’s Rock, which I remembered from our previous trip once the briefing started. I remembered thinking it would be a good place for wide angle but Rob had packed macro. Oh well. Anyway, it was windy but not too crazy by the time we left, and the ride over was okay.

At first the dive site was rubble reef and I couldn’t remember what I thought was so great about the site. But I guess this was just on the way to the main spot. We poked around and found a few critters on the way to the big side pinnacle down the slope. Once we got over to there I noticed both of the guides down in a crack and saw a big coral-colored sea fan, and realized they were looking for a Pygmy seahorse. So I hung nearby in case it worked out. And it did! There was a teeny teeny tiny little Pygmy seahorse in there, which Joemar miraculously managed to find! Once he found it, it seemed like Rob spent like most of the dive trying to get that shot. I guess macro was the right lens for the dive.

Aside from the Pygmy, Joemar found a very pretty little orange and pink and white slug that I’ve seen once before and for some reason I really like, though it’s probably not objectively the most amazing slug. I just like the color combination. Aside from slugs, I saw a couple different scorpionfish on the dive, and a zillion little moral eels, including several free swimming. Oh and when we made it to the main rock, there were a ton of little tropical fish zooming around, and the overhang on the wall was very cool. Plus there was a cute bugger frogfish hanging on the side of the wall. I still think it would be a good site for wide angle though macro was the right lens for today!

After that we went to the next site and anchored and hung out there for a while for our surface interval. The water had turned totally flat during the first dive, which was nice. The site was Olympic point (named for the nearby hotel), and it was a muck dive with a sandy bottom with scattered little coral bits. It was an insanely productive macro dive. There was a cool pair of nudis and their eggs in a coral egg bubble (which kind of blew my mind), a leaf scorpionfish, a black ribbon eel, and that was all within like one 10 foot stretch. We saw tons of cool little crabs and shrimp in anemones, corals, and on the backs of urchins. By the end of the dive, there were some patches of blue sky, finally, though I still wouldn’t call it sunny.

We came back for lunch and rested a bit before heading back out. I had the club sandwich for lunch which was excellent. Rob was less excited by his burger. For the afternoon dive, we did a muck dive about 5 minutes to the right of the resort, at a site called Vivire. It was once again quite productive. Joemar told us that we would likely see the cousin of Shaun the sheep that was green and blue, and oh buy did we see those. Rob spent so much time photographing them. Some of them were big enough to really look at with my eyes, which was nice. The one really good find on this dive was an octopus with a single blue ring (can’t remember what it’s called). We also saw an armina looking slug that was biggish and lots of small nudis that I couldn’t identify with my eyes.

We got back a little before 5 and decided to hang out by the pool until the night dive. Then we headed out just to the point where we tried to dive yesterday (Mainit). We got in just before dark. The reef sloped down to around 60 feet and had patches of reef. It looked like it would be a nice site to dive during the day too. We saw lots of good critters on the dive… plenty of nudis, a huge harlequin shrimp, a squid, a frogfish, lots of cool crabs and shrimps, and the reef was seemingly covered with these huge and very creepy basket stars.

We got back and headed down to dinner a little before 8. Actually we hit the bar first, where I got a mango daiquiri (yum).

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Anilao 2024: Day 1

We got to the hotel around 9am, so we got checked in and did the 11am dive. There were three other divers on our boat (an Italian family) who had just done there checkout dive in the morning. We attempted to go dive just at the point to the left of the hotel, but visibility was apparently not good enough so we went back past the hotel just a couple minutes away and dove a site that was called Twin Rocks, I think. The site was a slope with patchy coral, we were around 50 to 60 feet for most of the dive, but came up shallower on the return.

Our guide found tons of critters, so even though there were some spots with nice little walls or coral heads, we pretty much had our heads buried looking for macro stuff. We saw a bunch of nudibranchs of varying sizes, I think I only found boring dorids, but our guide did a better job. There were also some cool tiny shrimp and crabs. I found several small morays, including one that was free swimming, and there was a yellow ribbon eel! My best find of the dive was a stonefish. Rob was not as impressed as I was (probably because the fish was facing the wrong direction to really get a good pic) but I insisted he take a pic for documentation purposes. We also saw a dancing sweetlips. When we surfaced, conditions had gotten super snotty and wind waves were breaking over our heads as we got out of our gear next to the boat. That was kind of unexpected to me, since it was really flat when we got in.

We went back to the resort and had lunch. Rob had sisig of course and I had some veggie noodles. We went back to our room to rest for a while, and during that time, the weather really deteriorated. It started to rain and was crazy windy. The rain stopped by the time for our next dive, but it was still quite windy. Getting on the boat was interesting.

We headed across the channel to do a dive called Apol Reef, but it turned out to be too much current there, so we went to a muck dive site nearby. This was probably my preference anyway. This dive was great. We saw tons of Shaun the sheep nudis, which Rob is obsessed with, two little frogfish (one orange and one black), some pipefish, a seahorse, a non-flamboyant cuttlefish, and tons of nudis. Some very small aeolids. Woot. I found a neat little fish with a long dangly lure thing sticking out of its head. I think that was my best find of the dive, only because Joemar did all of the good finding on the dive. One notable thing about this dive was that it seemed to be at the junction of two masses of water, one that was definitely colder than the other. You could see a shimmering layer where the two met in a couple of places, but mostly you could just feel it.

We decided to pass on the evening dive, since I was kind of tired. After a bit of relaxing, we went to the bar and had mango coladas. Yummm. Then we headed to dinner, where we had chicken adobo, grilled liempo (pork belly) and veggie chop suey.