Sunday, December 20, 2020

Copy Paste Male

So begins week 2 of the Maldives Aggressor II.  The two dive guides we have are brothers: Suju and Shaf.  They both look so similar, the crew calls them Copy-Paste.  They are the two all the way on the left.


Ha!  That's what I'm doing with week 2: copy-paste.

This week we have ten divers: Four young people from Switzerland: Daniela and Daniel who own a dive shop TSK, Jens who will hit 500 dives on this trip and another guy named Daniel (who is also an American citizen).  Then we have Steph (German), Gemma (English) and David and Nicole a couple from Austin Texas who will hit 50 dives on this trip and finally Tim from Alaska.

We figured out a couple of big coincidences in the first few days.  David and Nicole go to Yard Bar in Austin with their dog!  I told them that I know the owners, Jen Ervin and Mike Noth.

Later I was chatting with Tim and we figured out we were in Palau at the same time.  He said that he had his dive log from there and started reading the entries.  In black and white on December 1st, 2005 he wrote that Pam took pictures of the divers in a Santa hat for the holidays.  What!?!?!?


I then went back in Lightroom to 2005 and found the pictures themselves and put them into a slideshow that played before one of the dive briefings.  So wild.  Here are the two Santa hat ones:


Monday's third dive on the Kuda Giri Wreck was the best dive so far.  I found SEVEN distinct species nudibranchs on one dive, which is pretty good for the Maldives.  I was so excited.  After the first day I am already half way to my overall species count from last week.  Woot!

On Tuesday we had five dives.  Not really on purpose.  On the second dive, Suju misjudged the current and we were caught in a downcurrent.  It was pretty strong and was challenging for many of the newer divers.  Suju eventually called the dive and we went up after about 10 minutes, so the crew filled our tanks and we went again.  On this channel dive, we hooked in and really did see “shark soup” in the blue!  

Another funny thing happened when Shaf tried to show the guests a nudibranch.  He gave the nudibranch signal, but they all mistook it for the "It's time to hook in" signal and they all got out their reef hooks and hooked in on this weird spot where there was no current at all.  I found it hilarious.  Afterward, we had to review with them the difference between nudibranch and hook in hand signals.

At night we did the nurse shark dive where it seemed there were many more above us this time, not just below.  Both Shaf and Daniel said that they used my bright Kraken light to make cool images with the shadow of the nurse sharks.  Here is Daniel's:


I on the other hand, mostly was looking for small stuff.  At one point I just gave up and looked to my right and saw this:


Yup.  That is what you think it is.  Claspers of a nurse shark.  Pretty impressive, right?

On Wednesday we spent about two hours looking for a whale shark so we could snorkel with it.  We never found one.  However, during the second dive we did see one underwater.  It was just a dark shadow cruising by.  None of us got great footage of it.

The crew serves snacks on the dhoni while we search and they slice up some fresh coconut.  That is my favorite!  I was hoarding all the leftovers for later because it was so darn good.  

On Thursday we had three good macro dives.  The seas were so flat that over lunch when we looked out the window, we couldn’t tell where the water ended and the sky began.  It was a little creepy to lose the horizon.

I figured out this technique where I take the Go Pro Max down strapped on my head and record a time lapse.  The works pretty good for wrecks so I did it on Kudimaa Wreck and I found the Goniobranchus gleniei!  This one is unique to Maldives.

At night, we have the BBQ.  I wanted to night snorkel, so I took my gear.  Before dinner, I took a stroll around the island with Captain Hussain and we looked for crabs.  After dinner, Chilly (the Dhoni Captain) and I went night snorkeling.  It was fun until WHAM!  Something hit me really hard in the strap of my mask.  It was crazy hard!!!  I kept looking around to try to figure out what it was.  I think it was a garfish (needle-nose).  They were darting toward the light but MAN, they really packed a punch!  Chilly kept telling me "light down"!  That way the flashlight doesn't attract them.  However, before we could exit the water he got hit in the forehead too!  Maybe not the best idea.

Today was Tim's 65th birthday which means that when we met 15 years ago, he was the age I am now.  I want to still be diving when I am 65.  Heck, I want to still be diving when I am 85!

We were supposed to do the manta night dive tonight, but they didn't show up.  I was THRILLED!  That meant we got to do a regular night dive.  It was incredible.  Here is my dive log entry:

We dropped in on a turtle and a free swimming eel and it just picked up from there!!!  There were baby white tip sharks swimming around so I starting singing "baby shark doot doot da doo da doo" thru my regulator.  Then two HUGE marble rays showed up; they got a little too close for comfort.  They really liked our lights.  I saw two crown of thorns and they were bright blue with red thorns... I've never seen them that color!  Two Coriocella hibyae.  My favorite part was that I found a Glossodoris pallida.  It was near sexy shrimp so I also shot those.  Then this eel really liked my light and got right up under me.  It was a little too close for comfort so I felt like I really needed to move but I wanted more shots of that nudi.  It appeared to be on a rock, so I was going to grab it and move it when the eel wasn't watching.  When I did, I figured out this was a hermit crab, not a rock.  Whatever I took it anyway and set it out to take more photos.  Isn't that crazy?  The nudi was on a hermit crab shell.  Phyllidia marindica.  Phyllidia varicosa.  The bloodworms were EVERYWHERE!!!  At the end, there were two enormous stonefish out and freely swimming around.  Whoa!  I've never seen them wiggle like that.  One was bigger than a football and the other was a little smaller. 

On the dhoni ride back, we noted that we were going to have dinner really late tonight.  I suggested we just all wear our Aggressor terry cloth robes to dinner.  I kinda though people were just humoring me but when I climbed the stairs wearing mine, everyone was already at the table wearing theirs!  So fun!





We also celebrated Tim's birthday and Jens' 500th dive.








There was lots of cake eating to be done.  So stressful.

On Saturday, we had just one dive and I found one last new nudi named for Gemma!!!  The Phyllidiopsis gemmata.  She was super excited about it and I shared the picture with her.

Around 4pm, we had a champagne toast to the week and Audrey handed out awards.  I got the Iron Diver again – only 3 of us did all the dives this week.  I also got an Aggressor Addict Certificate.  Ha ha!




Gemma organized a silly game where we tied a coke bottle to our waist and tried to knock apples through a goal.  It was The Americans vs. Everyone Else.  Tim was really good at it and Team USA won!  Even the Chef had a go at it.  We were all giggling.

We chilled out and watched Love Actually since it was a Christmas movie.I swore I’ve seen this movie before, but as we got into it I realized I had never seen it!  We paused for a light dinner (since we can't go out in Male due to COVID).  I gave out the rest of the rubber chicken flingers I brought.  This week we didn’t have an all out war like last week but there were still a few being flung about.

So, another great week.  I was really grateful to the crew as they were more open to my macro dive style this week, arranged an extra night dive and took me night snorkeling on the BBQ island.  I was also really grateful to the mantas for not showing up and giving me another "regular" night dive.  

Here is a cool shrimp picture I was particularly proud of:

Check out the green eggs.

So, drumroll pleeeeeeeeze.... This week I believe I have 25 distinct species.  Although I know I was stretching things a bit, so as always.. I would appreciate and feedback and debate.  Let's take it to Nudi Council!

1 - Phyllidiopsis krempfi

2 - Phyllidiella zeylanica



3 - Glossodoris acosti


4 - Phyllidia sp. 1

5 - Phyllidia varicosa

6 - Berthella martensi

7 - Coriocella hibyae

8 - Mexichromis pusilla

9 - Moridilla brockii

10 - Phyllidia alyta

11 - Pteraeolidia semperi

12 - Phyllidia sp. 5


13 - Phyllidiella pustulosa


14 - Phyllidia exquisita


15 - Hypselodoris decorata


16 - Phyllidiella sp. 1


17 - Phyllidiella lizae

18 - Goniobranchus gleniei


19 - Phyllidiella rosans


20 - Phyllidiopsis xishaensis


21 - Phyllidiella sp. 3

22 - Phyllidiopsis shireenae



23 - Glossodoris pallida


24 - Phyllidia marindica


25 - Phyllidiopsis gemmata


So this brings me to 2084 lifetime dives and 193 in 2020.  That's not too bad... I wonder if there is any way I can sneak in seven more.  :)

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Maldives Escape

As the US went into a COVID Relapse, I slid out of the country to one of the other diving places open and running:  Maldives.  I've been here before and I know it is mostly about the big stuff, but I knew that there were many critters and nudis to be found as well.

Here is my itinerary:

Thursday, December 3

6:20pm Etihad Airlines flight 150 Departs Chicago 

Friday, December 4

5:45pm Etihad Airlines flight 150 Arrives Abu Dhabi

Hang out in airport for 8 hours 45 minutes

Saturday, December 5

2:30am Etihad Airlines flight 278 Departs Abu Dhabi

7:55am Etihad Airlines flight 278 Arrives Male

        Transfer from Airport to Samann Host Hotel

Sunday, December 6

3:00pm Transfer from Samann Host Hotel to Aggressor

12/6/2020 to 12/13/2020

Maldives Aggressor II

Sunday December 13

8:00 am Leave Aggressor II

ALL DAY Day Room at Samann Host Hotel

12/13/2020 to 12/20/2020

Maldives Aggressor II

Sunday December 20

8:00am Leave Aggressor II

ALL DAY Day Room at Samann Host Hotel

10:00pm Check in at Airport

11:45pm Etihad Airlines flight 279 leaves Male

Monday December 21

3:05am Etihad Airlines flight 279 arrives Abu Dhabi

Hang out in airport for 5 hours, 50 minutes

8:55am Etihad Airlines flight 151 leaves Abu Dhabi

2:00pm Etihad Airlines flight 151 arrives Chicago

I debated long and hard whether I was going to come but in the end I had the time and the money.  I got a COVID Test scheduled and it came back negative.  I was glad to have come diving but it really is such a strange time and everyone has to make the right choice for themselves whether or not to travel.

It turns out that there were ten other guests who were thinking just like me: Ron, Dennis, Wendy and Mark (from Chicago!), Liz, James, Anthony, David, Frans and Andreas.

We dive from a good sized dhoni (not a skiff) and it is quite a comfortable place to get suited up for the dives.  I got buddied up with Anthony from France who was a newer diver at the beginning of the week but he was a trooper diving with me always looking for small stuff and going slow.  He did really great on his air consumption and lasted with me until the dive time limit of 60 minutes was up.  He was not only a great diver but also developed a bit of an eye for spotting slugs and critters!

Knowing that not every dive was going to be ideal for small things, I also bought a new Go Pro Max that takes 360 degree videos.  They are quite stunning and take amazing interactive clips, but sometimes it makes me a little dizzy viewing them.  Here is a surface shot of Anthony and me after a dive:


The first day of diving was Monday.  Audrey was our cruise director but she had pneumonia recently and her lungs were seriously hurting her.  She was in pain just giving the dive briefings.  She did not dive with us at all.  Two local Maldivian brothers: Suju and Shaf will be our dive guides.  They are both so skinny!

On the very first dive, we encountered a Tiger Shark.  That was really cool!  Unfortunately, I didn't get any footage of it as I was still getting my act together.  It was massive and just slowly swam by.  I didn't stick around very long at all.

In the afternoon, I was able to take the new Go Pro Max down on a wreck and take some really cool footage. 
<post Go Pro Max wreck footage from 12/7>

We all sat on the sundeck before dinner and enjoyed the sunset.

On Tuesday we did a night dive on a town pier which sounds right up my alley, but it was all about the nurse sharks.  There were at least 30 of them and many of them were really good sized.  They even rubbed right up against our bellies so that was breathtaking, but I really wanted to find some macro stuff.  I did find a jeweled anemone hermit crab but that was about it.

We snorkeled with a Whale Shark on Wednesday and I found LOTS of nudis!  
Here's a 360 still.  Note my matching whale shark dive skin.

Dennis’ birthday so there was a delicious cake in the shape of a whale shark and we sang Happy Birthday to him.


After dinner I gave a short Nudis 101 presentation before we watched a BBC video about sharks.  I was lobbying for a regular night dive instead, but the crew insisted that there was nothing to see in this area at night.  Ugh.

On Thursday, I mounted the Go Pro Max on top of my head and took a time lapse of the entire dive.  It turned out fairly well, but it can be a bit boring in parts.
<insert time lapse here>

At 5pm we headed over to the island.  We strolled around it and I got some Go Pro Max footage.  The guys created a Manta and a Whale Shark in the sand that were really quite stunning.  




Then the guys played a little volleyball before serving the BBQ.  



After dinner, the chef played the bongo drum and the crew all sang a local marriage song.  I decided to lie on the beach near the water and look up at the stars.  What a beautiful sight.

Still, I wished we had gone night diving instead.  Maybe next week I will at least bring a snorkel and a dive light.

Friday was a banner day for small things as I found a Glossodoris acosti next to its eggs.  I also found some shrimp with eggs on their belly that were very cool.





At night, I was excited that we were going diving.  Finally.  Until I realized it was a manta dive.  Just like I used to lead every week in Kona.  Ugh.  There was a possibility that the mantas wouldn't show up and that there was a regular night dive as a backup plan.  But I got word that at least one of them did show up, so off we went to that annoying sit under the boat holding up our lights watching the one manta missing a cephalic fin go back and forth.  Don't get me wrong, seeing a manta up close is stunning and amazing especially since most of the guests have never seen one.  But I'm over it.  I tried to at least learn a little about how to film on my Go Pro Max at night but in general, I was bummed.

Maldives has plenty of overhangs to explore.  On Saturday, I got a cool shot of a wendel trap snail under one of the overhangs:




In the afternoon, David decided to jump off the deck.  In his speedo.  He did it once off the middle deck and then off the top deck.  Whoa! 

https://youtu.be/L8WmkN_1chM




We paid the bills and then at 3:30pm, we had a champagne toast.  Everyone but Frans got the Iron Diver Award (he skipped one dive to work on his Nitrox course, but he didn’t have to!).  They also gave out certificates for Best Dive Buddy Team (Mark and Wendy) and Reef Ambassador (to me for my Nudi talk).  Go Chicagoans!!!

We couldn’t go out to eat in Male on the last night because of COVID, so they prepared a buffet dinner on the boat.  I put out crazy rubber chickens that you fling everywhere on people’s napkins.  Nobody really noticed at first... but after dinner, we starting flinging one or two and then everyone caught on and it was an all out war!!!  People were flinging them pretty hard and it was one table against the other.  Seriously, every single person got into it.  Ron and Dennis were nailing David and Anthony.  Liz was jumping up and retrieving the forgotten chickens in the middle.  I smacked David dead on the nose and Andreas suffered a red mark on his forehead.  Even a big glass of water was spilled on my lap.  It was so much fun and something I will definitely remember.  Hilarious.

Right after we got done with the chickens, Captain Hussain came in with a big water jug of ocean water.  He captured a seahorse right off the back of the boat!  Whoa.  So cool!  We all took a picture of it.  Then he released it back into the ocean where it proceeded to live under the first rung of the ladder.  I regret not putting on a bathing suit, jumping in and taking a picture of the seahorse right there on the ladder.  I might be getting old.




I was told that later in the evening, the Captain also found a baby sea snake!

OK, the moment I'm sure you have been waiting for.  Here are the 18 nudibranchs I found on this trip (that's two more species than in 2014).

1 - Phyllidiopsis xishaensis
Hsin Lin helped me identify this one correctly on Nudi Base.

2 - Phyllidia exquisita


3 - Phyllidia sp. 5

4 - Goniobranchus gleniei

This one is specific to the Maldives.

5 - Phyllidia varicosa



6 - Phyllidiella zeylanica


7 - Phyllidiella sp. 1


8 - Phyllidiopsis striata


9 - Phyllidia koehleri

This one is specific to the Maldives.

10 - Pteriaeolida semperi


11 - Coriocella hibyae


12 - Thuridilla gracilis


13 - Phyllidia alyta


14 - Phyllidiella rosans


15 - Phyllidia ocellata


16 - Phyllidiopsis krempfi


17 - Glossodoris acosti


18 - Flabellina exoptata



So that brings me to 2064 lifetime dives.  Life is good and so far, COVID-free.