I forgot that I had met the new captain as well, and vice
versa. We figured it out when we realized that we lived quite close together.
Dan was a great host. It was very interesting talking to him about his years as
a tug operator on Vancouver Island. Christine was the same gracious hostess as
well.
I teamed up with a couple visiting from Oregon, Dave and
Cindy I think. There was a big group down from Kamloops as well, who got
together and ran dive trips down to the Vancouver area. It was a full boat. It
was a good day for diving too, since it was overcast and not too hot.
Our first dive was on the Saskatchewan. Visibility was not
great, maybe 15 feet. There was some current as well, but not bad. Our plan was
to check out the deck guns and stay at an average of 70 feet. On the descent,
things went well. Once we hit the deck, we started forward with me leading. I
made sure to check behind me often, as I was diving with new buddies. I turned
forward for maybe a minute, then looked back and only Cindy was there! I asked
her if she knew where our third member was, and she couldn't see him either. We
did the standard look for a minute, then began to surface. Once we did, sure
enough, Dave had had a problem coughing, and didn't have enough time to get our
attention before he had to head up. Since we verified he was fine, we decided
to continue the dive. It was a good lesson for me to remember to pay even more
attention when diving with new people. It was also a very good reminder for everyone to take a light along on every dive (they didn't bring their lights). Cindy and I had a pretty good dive after descending back down. Nothing
spectacular in terms of life, but the deck guns were interesting, and they had
a large resident tiger rockfish living inside the turret. All in all, a good
dive.
Back on the boat, we had some lovely soup courtesy of
Christine, and some great home made banana bread courtesy of the Kamloops crew.
The second dive, we decided to go to a site I’d not done before called Clark
Rock. This was pretty nice, because almost always if you go out on the Sea
Dragon everyone wants to do both wrecks.
Clark Rock turned out to be awesome. It was near Piper’s
Lagoon, north of Nanaimo. The best part about it was all the wolf eels and the
octopus. Basically there was a rocky reef at about 60 feet that was full of
nooks and crannies. There was an anchor line too, and very close to that was
one of the biggest wolf eels I had ever seen. And next to that, was an octopus
den, and next to that was another wolf eel! It was so easy to find this den, it wasn't funny. All you had to do was drop down the anchor line, and then follow
an existing line along the bottom to a no parking sign (it used to be a stop
sign, and obviously was placed there as a joke). Right beside that was a pile
of rocks, and that’s where the wolf eels were. To the left of that was a big
boulder and under that was the octopus. The head on the male wolf eel was the
biggest I’d ever seen. We saw some nice swimming nudibranchs, and swimming scallops. Visibility was a bit better on this dive, but still only about 20 feet.
I didn't get any video on the dives, because the visibility
was just a little bit too bad. I just enjoyed leaving the camera in my pocket,
and keeping memories.
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