Garden Eels sprinkled Along the Bottom of the Sea at the Corsair Wreck

Today was a great way to end a good month of diving with a wonderful morning charter. We headed out to the Corsair for the first dive and had no current and great viz as we dropped down the line.  There were fish swimming all about the wreck with moorish idols, yellow stripe goatfish, and pennant butterflyfish in the area and damsel fish inside.  There were garden eels all around the plane in the sand and a large yellow margin morey hiding behind the engine.

For the second dive we drifted Sea Cave and had an amazing dive.  The viz was great and a nice current as we got in the water.  There were a couple white tip reef sharks found in the back of the cave.  Outside the cave we had damsel fish and butterflyfish all along the wall.  There were also a few eels along the reef and the whole dive we had whale song. It was a great end to a good month of diving.

IMG_7065

IMG_7071

IMG_7074

IMG_7090

Porcupine Fish Along with Rare Nudibranch only in Oahu

Today was a beautiful day out on the water. Even though the forecast called for rain the weather held off for us. We had plenty of sun and fun out there this afternoon. This afternoon we had a mixed bag of Open Water Students, certified divers and some discover scuba divers trying out diving for the first time! The first dive site we went to was called Koko Craters. We were greeted by an abundance of turtles, some swimming around the crater and a couple napping under the ledge.  We swam over to our Buddha friend where we found a nice big green moray! After a pleasant 35 minute dive we headed back to the boat.

DSC03128

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

After a relaxing surface interval we headed over to our second dive site, Turtle Canyons. During our dive at Turtle Canyons we were able to find a couple more moray eels. We also saw one of my favorites the porcupine fish. With a keen eye we were also able to locate what is called a Blue Dragon Nudibranch. These are tiny little sea slugs that crawl across the bottom of the ocean and look super awesome! Our local spotted eagle ray even stopped by to say hello! And we all made sure to listen closely because the whales were singing today! Overall we had two awesome dives and eight awesome divers on the boat with us today.

puffer_fish_2

 

20090905  013_edited-1

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Dive Profiles: Koko Craters max depth 38 feet  time 35 minutes, Turtle Canyons max depth 36 feet  time 34 minutes

Staff: Captain Kellan, Instructor Sarah, Instructor Larry

Visibility: 85+ feet  Water Temperature: 75 degrees Fahrenheit

Humpback Whale Sighting While Diving with Sharks in Oahu

It was another typically beautiful morning today in Hawaii Kai, 70 degrees with party cloudy skies and variable winds. The surface conditions were also prime for diving since the swell was minimal. This morning on the Enzo, we were joined by several fun divers and divemaster candidates who are currently enrolled in Hawaii SCUBA University. Today’s adventure would start at the Kahala Barge.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

KAHALA BARGE
93ft – 33min

With a dead current, divers were able to free descend onto wreck amid 100 ft. visibility. Once at the bottom a few intrepid adventurers penetrated and examined the guts of the old barge. The top of the wreck was host to many budding corals and typical juvenile reef fish. There were also several Crown of Thorns starfish creeping about devouring unlucky coral heads. Upon surfacing and returning to the boat, several mother humpback whales and their calves swam around the boat. They put on quite a show with some breaches, pectoral and tail fin slapping, and air spouts.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

FANTASY REEF (drift)
53ft – 40min

With whales fresh in their minds, the divers entered negatively into more 100 ft visibility and a mild Diamond Head current. Although whales weren’t spotted, almost everything else was! A white tip reef shark napping under a coral shelf started this dive on the right foot. Shortly after an octopus was found and a couple of huge turtles and green moray eels kept divers company as they went through an archway swim through. Honorable mentions were a banded shrimp, slipper lobster, and reef crab.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

A special thanks goes out to the crew of the Enzo. For without, today’s adventure would not be possible. Thank you Captain Kellan, Liz, and Bradree.

20150227_120950

 

Finding Eels in the Engine Compartment of the Corsair Wreck

Today was a fun day for Advanced Divers on the AM two tank charter. This morning our return customers took on our deepest wreck in Hawaii Kai, The Corsair, at a max depth of 107ft. The wind and waves were both calm and the current was a bit fast, but our divers were anxious to get in the water and make the descent down the the WWII fighter jet. Once we followed the mooring line down to the sandy bottom, divers glided passed a sea of garden eels towards the wreck. At the plane we spotted lots of wrasse and damsel fish hiding in under the wings of the plane. We also had two very large green moray eels resting in the engine compartment. The wreck was fun and the bottom time came too quick. We were back on the line, making a slow descent towards the surface.

Our next dive was a drift across Spitting Caves. After a 50 minute surface interval we were ready to jump back in! Once we made our descent towards the reef we began the search! Divers began poking their heads into lave tubes, searching for sharks and monk seals. Using our torches we spotted a few spinney  lobsters and a big collector crab! Drifting down the wall more eels and nocturnal fish were found in the shadows between the cracks. This drift was definitely not quite, for the whale were singing in harmony. After a 53 minute dive we made our safety stop as a group listening to the whales before hoping back on the boat.

Great fun diving with return customers today, lets do it again!

Cheers!

DSC03036

 

W: Bradley (instructor) John (captain)

CONDITIONS: Sunny, mid 70’s*F Air, 75*F water, visibility 80+ft

DIVE PROFILES: The Corsair: 107ft max depth, dive time 25 minutes. Spitting Caves: Max depth 56ft, dive time 48 minutes.

MARINE LIFE: Collector Crab, Parrot Fish, Garden Eels, Pennant Fish, Moray Eel, Lobsters!

The Islands of Hawaii are the Sea Turtles’ Kingdom 24 feb

well we did see lots of turtles today, but each head had its own body!  But we saw so many today!  and they are so funny!  some of them are kind of like cute,  near-sighted old men, peeking over at you as you swim by, and then going back to napping.  i can say this because i am a near-sighted old man.  i think near-sighted is right, i always mix it up with far-sighted?  i any case, i can’t read without glasses, which ever one that is.  First dive at Baby barge had an usually large number of the old boys floating around today and our Florida divers remarked that they had thought Florida was the kingdom of the turtle, but after today they are naming hawaii the new turtle kingdom. and that was after the first dive!  just to really blow their minds, we took them to Fantasy Reef, home of the Whopper Turtles!  they could barely speak after seeing our monster turtles (even with only one head each!).  lots of other cool stuff today -sharks, big eels, octopus, lobster, slipper lobster, tons of fish!  thanks to all for safe diving,  larry, capt sheila

baby barge 80 ft  40 min  150 viz

fantasy reef 52 ft  50 min   150 viz

 

IMG_0026 IMG_0029 IMG_0049-imp

Octopi that Come Out of Their Homes Find Friendly Divers with Cameras

one

Funny thing about diving, when the weather isn’t that great it seems that visibility underwater is! Clouds overhead, a slight chop on the surface, and 80+ visibility under the sea. Joining us today on the Sea Hound were Valerie (OW1/2), Daniel, Steven, Heidi, and Soon. A small group with big enthusiasm… and thirst for adventure. We began our day at Koko Craters where Valerie started out by acing her skills, then it was off to tour the area…

Koko turtle

And of course our favorite resident of Koko made an appearance under the ledge. Also many reef fish were out and about, including the super aggressive Sgt. Major who took a nip at my hand. Not a very nice fish!

Soon it was time to ascend and head off to our next site: Anglers Reef…

eel2

Eels, Puffers, Reef Fish, and after a little nudging…

octopus

A very large very cool Octopus bounced out of his hole and scurried across the reef…

All to soon it was time to surface and head back to the dock…

Thank you to all our divers for a safe and fun day of diving! ALOHA!

Koko Craters/ 32Ft/ 35 min/ 74*

Anglers Reef/ 42Ft/ 30 min/ 74*

Dave- Lead

Neal/ Capt

The YO 257 with Excellent Visibility on the Southside of Oahu

yo257YO257

Aaah Sunday… a day of rest for most, a day of increased excitement for Island Divers! The diving increases 3 fold to 3 tanks, 3 sites, and 3 times the awesomeness of diving off of the south side of Oahu. A hearty crew of divers consisting of James, Joe, Katrina, Paul, Laura, Scott, Eleanor, Chris D, Chris S, and John joined Island Diver Pros Larry, Bradley, Sarah and I (Dave) for a day of calm seas, great visibility, and ocean creatures of all shapes and sizes. Whales and Dolphins made their presence known as we motored around Maunaloa Bay on our way to our first site: Baby Barge…

Baby BargeBaby Barge

Down to the right side of the ship and entering the cave underneath, while a turtle decided he wanted to exit… MAKE WAY!

turtle outTurtle X-ing!

Back to the top of the wreck and looking for interesting sea life… none more so than this guy…

rock lobsterRock Lobster! (B52’s)

Soon it was time to surface and head around Diamond Head for one of my favorite sites…YO-257. This is such a great dive because not only do you have 2 ships in close proximity (YO-257 and the San Pedro), you also have the Atlantis Submarine cruising around the site making things a little more exciting as you play Dodge The Sub during your tour…

pedroOn the Pedro

pedro sharkIn the Pedro

turtle yoDanger! Turtle With Attitude!

Too soon it was time to once again surface… and eat lunch! Captain Kendal pointed the Hound East as we headed back around Diamond Head for a surface interval as we decided to drift our last site… Fantasy Reef. Larry lead the group in and around an area that he knows like the back of his hand, and the site did not disappoint… Turtles, Eels, Octopus, Reef fish and swim throughs!

turtle fantasyBaby Turtle on Board!

sarahDay is done…

Thank you to all our divers for a safe and fun Sunday of diving! And thank you to all the support of the great people I have the honor of working with… YOU GUYS ROCK!

Baby Barge/ 75 Ft/ 74*/ 30 min

YO257/ 90 Ft/ 74*/ 20 min

Fantasy Reef/ 52 Ft/ 74*/ 35 min

Dave- Lead

Larry/ Bradley/ Sarah- Support

Kendal- Capt

Lauren- Crew

 

Sandy Beach Dives Always Prove to Impress with Swim Throughs and Underwater Canyons

unless, of course, they are tears of joy! or you drop a tank on your foot (Maxine)!  well, no crying today, but some great diving as we headed north out of Maunalua Bay and over to Sandy’s beach (home of the neck breaker shore break!) and to the excellent, and rarely dove, Skimmins Reef!  we had a blast dropping in for a drift on this topographic marvel, loaded with swim throughs, canyons, and topped with tons of hard corals.  beautiful spot!   2nd jump was another drift on the wall – this time Sea Cave, which just blows diver’s minds.  the large lava tube houses big animals – turtles, sharks, monk seal, plus some large schools of fish.  truly an awesome dive.  after exiting the cave, we drifted the wall, spotting more turtles, eels, very large  schools of idols, tangs, and butterfly fish. thanks to all for safe diving.  larry and sara

hDSC05179 DSC05209 DSC05200

Wreck Diving with the Pufferfish of Hawaii … 2/21/2015

The wind and rain finally passed as typical Hawaii Kai conditions resumed this morning. Party cloudy skies accompanied by light and variable winds and a small swell were a vast improvement over the weather the past few days. This morning on the boat, we had a plethora of students (wreck, deep, nitrox, & advanced open water) along side certified divers.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

KAHALA BARGE
92FT – 34MIN
73 Degrees

With a very mild Diamond Head current, the divers entered into 90 foot visibility. The wreck was easily discernible from the surface. The wreck diver laid line and penetrated the wreck, the rest of the divers frolicked among an assortment of juvenile fish. Hawaiian Damsel fish, box fish, trigger fish, and file fish hovered over the top of the wreck and its young budding coral. If you paid attention, you may have also seen a couple spiny stars and crabs hiding in the cracks and crevasses.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA  OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

FANTASY REEF (DRIFT)
54FT – 42MIN
73 Degrees

This time the current shifted towards Koko Head and began to increase in strength. Entering negatively into more 90 foot visibility, the reef unfurled below the divers. Huge turtles cruised and posed with divers and a couple of massive crown of thorns starfish cruised along the bottom. A viper eel was also thrown into the mix along with more trigger fish.

20150221_122246

A special thanks to the crew! Captain Brian, Hayley, and Whitey

Frogfish Sit on the Anchor Lines and Spinner Dolphins Show Their Agility in the Pacific Ocean

Today was fun in the sun at Island Divers HI! On the 2 tank afternoon charter  we had Discover Scuba Divers, Open Water students in training and Certified divers.

Our first dive site of choice was Koko Crater. With a maximum depth of 39 feet, we had Larry guided our group of certified’s while I lead our  OW students and intro divers. Visibility was awesome today! Right under the boat we could see turtles resting in the sand next to their underwater  statue buddies. We made our way around the crater spotting eels and schools of wrasse. Current was very light today, which made an easy swim and exploration for everyone.

The second dive site we picked was a fun reef named Turtle Canyons. Not long after being at depth an Octopus was spotted by Larry! Sitting on the mooring line not far away as also a frogfish! After exploring the reef and playing with compass skills in the sand our divers where soon back on the boat, and just in time to watch the spinner dolphin show.

Great dives with awesome people today at IDH!

W: Bradley (instructor) Larry (instructor) Brian (captain)

CONDITIONS: Sunny, mid 70’s*F Air, 75*F water, visibility 80+ft

DIVE PROFILES: Koko Crater: 39ft max depth, dive time 34 minutes. Turtle Canyons: Max depth 40ft, dive time 36 minutes.

MARINE LIFE: Octopus, Parrot Fish, Pennant Fish, Nudibranch, Moray Eel, Frogfish & Green Sea Turtles!