Archive for August, 2010


Out to Tuwanek

champion

I'm a Champion!

I’d been hearing a lot of people talking about diving in the Sechelt/Tuwanek area, so we decided to get up early and hop on the 7:35 ferry to the Sunshine coast for some diving yesterday.

As I was about to put the batteries into my strobe in the morning, I inspected the o-ring and discovered a nice cut in it. Not sure how that happened, but that meant no strobe on this trip!

We arrived see the two islets, and decided to try diving the right one first. A brief surface swim took us to the island, where we dropped down to 20 feet to make our way around the island in search of the wall on the west side. Two things stuck out immediatley:

1) There was tonnes of life!
2) The visibility was atrocious (8 feet?)!

coolanemone

Anemone

We eventually made our way to the other side of the island, where we dropped down. After about 30-40 feet, the visibility cleared up to 20+ feet! We spent most of our time exploring these deeper, colder parts before popping back up to navigate around the island in the warmer and shallower waters.

There was a lot to see, including many Nudibranchs, crabs of different types, potential octopus dens (Couldn’t find the Octopus), and MANY different fish and jellies. I immediately wished I’d had the strobe with me to try and get some better photos. Luckily I did manage a few good shots.

During our surface interval, we decided to check out the left islet next, however those plans changed when we spotted a seal in the water near the right island. On our surface swim out, the seal came over to inspect us before disappearing again. Unfortunately We didn’t see the seal under the water during the dive.

All in all another great dive trip. I believe the book “151 dives” describes Tuwanek as a giant aquarium, and I think that description is fitting. I’d like to go back when the viability in the top 30 feet is better, as there’s so much to see in the shallow, but I also want to spend more time exploring the deeper parts of the wall.

Although I didn’t get many good photos on this trip, I did get a few that I like. Click bellow for more pictures..

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Welcome to dive.roko.ca!

I’ve stared putting up dive photos and information on my robotics blog, roko.ca, but somehow it just didn’t see to fit in with quadrupeds and sumo robots. As such, I’ve decided to start up this diving specific blog, where I’ll share photos from my dive experiences, mainly for terrestrial-bound friends and family, to show the wonders of the Emerald Sea, and other dive trips I go on!

I’ll slowly start uploading old photos, and will update whenever I go diving, so stay tuned and subscribe to my RSS Feed!

Point Henderson, August ’10

sailfin-sculpin

Sailfin Sculpin and Hermit

crab-1

A Very Decorated Crab

yellow-crab

Cool Yellow Crab - Can Anyone ID it?

My Parents were in town and wanted to head out to the Island. We haven’t had the chance to go diving on the Island yet, so we figured this would be a great chance to go diving while my Parents relaxed and took a swim in the water in a nice location. I’m not sure why exactly we chose Point Henderson given all the other choices, but it ended up being a nice dive spot. Luckily we went on a Thursday, so there was some parking available in the small loop — I can’t imagine it on a weekend. Special thanks to my Parents for putting up with our diving habit!

We started out the dive by swimming more or less straight out from shore until we hit the 60′ reef, then hooked a left and went exploring. Immediately we were amazed by how much there was to see: shrimp, crabs, starfish, jellyfish, brave rock fish that wouldn’t swim away… The only thing that would have made it better would have been an octopus, wolf-eel or six gill shark! (Itemsstill on my list of local marine life I want to see).

Once again, I started the dive off with the wide-angle lens and ended up taking it off pretty quickly. The Fantasea Bigeye isn’t easy to put back on again when you’re using drygloves, so once it comes off it tends to stay off…

After hitting our turn pressure, and coming back up we found we still had a lot of air left (A lot of time was spent looking into nooks and crannies before we turned) so we kept going until we found the shallow reef and used up the rest of our air there. It was interesting to see the difference in life between the two. The sun was so bright in the water that I didn’t need to use my strobe in the shallow water. (And struggled with over-exposing some of the photos with my manual settings). We saw a lot of interesting yellow crabs which we haven’t been able to identify. If anyone knows what they are, please leave a comment!

I’m sure I missed a lot of small/camouflaged/hidden creatures at this dive site, so I’d definitely like to get back someday.

Click below to see more photos!

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