Slow days

lionsmane-jellyfish Well been out a couple times the past couple weeks but not a lot to report. Dove near Key West a couple times, and once to the east. I pretty much think that in the summer if you are going to dive close to Key West you just are not going to see that much fish. One day Cat and I went out and got stung by so many jellyfish I just lost my temper and drove home. It was like a horde or something out there, there was a million moon jellies but then there were other mutant jellyfish. We saw big lions mane jellyfish, eating the moon jellyfish I guess.  More disturbingly I saw box jellyfish, not sure what type of box jellyfish but these things looked scary. They were almost transparent and they responded to you, like they swim around, not mindlessly like other jellyfish.

Then I went out a day with Brain Lee, Andy and Jason. We dove all deep stuff all day, it was kind of entertaining watching Brian and Jason argue about when is the appropriate time to hit a spot using a scuba tank, vs continuing to free dive it.   I had an ok day shooting a couple muttons, some yellow jacks and some ceros. No one else really shot anything which was weird. I got to dive some deeper stuff to 75 feet, which I enjoy. I also saw the gun I lost the other day. It had growth on it.  I went to get it on the next dive but a mutton distracted me. Then Jason went down with a tank, and couldn’t find it.  I saw fish in the deeper water,  a nice cubera, a huge mutton, but no one else seemed to be seeing anything so we moved on.

We dove the Vandenberg a bit which made me wish I had brought my camera.  There were schools of hundreds of baby yellow jacks that would just envelope you on a dive.  I got a hog off the deck on the bow. That is close to 90 feet.

The next day Cat came out with us, we were supposed to go out to the blue water for dolphin and wahoo, then come in and take advantage of the lack of current and chum one of the wrecks out front. Instead we went to American Shoal which sucks, at least this time of year on a weekend.  Then we dove some patches in hawks channel which also kind of sucked but Cat was in heaven taking photos of the coral.  We shot next to nothing, no fish photos.

There has been a bunch of fish in the Gulf but with bad vis reports we didn’t head out there.  We probably couldn’t have done any worse though.

Abacos

abacos_2286 Went to the Bahamas this last weekend and was seriously disappointed. We had a great time but the visibility was terrible. In many places the vis was less then 20 feet. We drove all over the place burning gas that cost $6.15 a gallon looking for vis and didn’t find a lot.

The best vis we found was on a little strip of reef by the north end of Guana and actually some spots in the sea of Abaco had pretty good horizontal vis. All our plans of deep diving off the uninhabited keys were shot by the vis and the massive swells. On the outside of the reef there were huge swells. They had a long intervals so they were far apart but they were big, creating huge rolling waves where they hit the reef.

Catherine got really screwed by the vis, even when the vis was decent on the last day there was so much sand suspended in the water it really interfered with photos. That aspect of the trip was pretty frustrating. Well that and it took me like a day or so of practice to be able to hit the side of barn with a pole spear.

The first couple days kind of sucked discovering the bad vis, finding out it’s everywhere almost. I also seemed to miss everything the first couple days, Cal picked up shooting his gat-ku pole spear pretty much instantly while I was missing like crazy. I have to make sure I spend a couple days practicing with the pole spear before I go again. I also need to tighten up the band a little I think. I was shooting a sea stinger with the stock band which was lovely to load but I think it was under powering it a little.  The first afternoon we got there I think Cal got a yellow jack . I got a couple queen triggers for the novelty of it.  The next day we drove the boat all over finding all the bad vis. Then once we gave up we dove some stuff right near Guana and Cal got a Nassau and I got a horse eye jack.  We found a cool swim through and decent ledge. We saw a small black and huge Nassau on the ledge but couldn’t get the shot on them.

The next day my luck seemed to be changing, I shot around 7# trigger shore diving. Apparently big ocean triggerfish cruise around in the inshore waters in Guana. There is actually some pretty awesome stuff to shore dive but I will get to that later. Next we drove around forever the other direction and found the vis sucked that way also, Cat and Cal’s mom tried to swim with some dolphins but the dolphins just laughed and flipped them the bird, staying just out of camera range.

abacos_1959 Finally on the way back drove up to one of the many giant coral towers just off the beach.  It actually didn’t look that bad, so I jumped in to check it out. I could actually see the bottom in 35 feet, halleluiah!  I promptly missed a huge bar jack. Then I dove to the sand and started doing some aspetto style stuff. I could actually see down there which was nice. First thing that swam up was nice hog, I promptly drilled him, while he struggled a nice tiger grouper appeared to watch. Once I got control of the hog I tried to dive down and find the tiger but he was hiding. I ran the hog back to the boat and came back to the same spot. I got down to the sand and saw the tiger slide up into a hole. Another hog bigger then the first swam in and I nailed him. I hit the surface and was being followed by a reef shark. Pretty much every spot, once you shot one fish a reef shark would start following us around. So I started to swim the fish back to the boat, and on the way back I saw a big parrot fish. People shoot and eat parrot fish in the Bahamas and they usually are kind of spooky when they are big. I tried to get to the boat quick to drop off the fish and get a shot on the parrot, but Cal discovered the same fish and shot him. The parrot fish bent the gatku pole spear at a 45 degree angle, which was kind of funny.

I knew that all that commotion was going to draw fish in so I swam quickly to the spot and saw what at first I thought was an impossibly big mutton snapper but then I realized it was a dog snapper.  I dropped on him slow as possible and followed him toward the reef he started swimming but didn’t spook.  Inch by inch I closed the gap, then the fish messed up cutting to the right and I shot him in the tail. Fish took off like a rocket but I horsed him to the surface and he was in the boat shortly. After that we had a ton of fish so we went into the Sea of Abaco and looked for lobsters but didn’t find jack. Perhaps the same hurricane that screwed the vis drove the lobsters deep?

The next day we took it easy and tried to find stuff to dive in the sea of Abaco. We found some conchs and ate them cracked & fried that night. We did a tour of the island, checked out the beaches. We dove a little jetty and I saw a school of porgies some of which had to be pushing seven or eight pounds. We ate at Nippers, a restaurant on the island which I think sucks.

The next day in the morning while everyone else was sleeping Cat and I swam back to the jetty. When we swam up there were several huge triggers, a monster margate, two muttons and porgies which actually dwarfed the muttons all hanging out in front of it. Pretty awesome to see all those fish in fifteen feet of water, like a hundred feet from shore. The only problem is they all ran as soon as they saw us.  I worked down the jetty, crawling over the top of it trying to ambush the porgies on the other side and couldn’t make it happen.  The we swam around a small peninsula and hanging out in the grass there were two muttons, one of which had to be pushing 15#. I tried but couldn’t get close enough to get the shot.

Everyone was up and we headed to reef after that.  We dove some new shallow spots, there were ok but not that popping. Cal and I both got another Nassau and he got a little mutton, I got another trigger.  We had some close encounters with a frisky reef shark.

On the last day we found an awesome ledge and basically failed at getting any of the big fish on it. We saw a black grouper that had to be around 30#. There were two 15# Nassaus on it as well. I did get a nice cero though. Then the wind picked up and skies went gray.  We all getting pretty beat from all the diving so we called it early.

The last day we went to the jetty before our flight, Cal was too lazy to swim there so he drove a skiff there and scared all the fish off it.

Jellyfish are gone, and water is clear

andrew-bolphin Well been awhile since I posted on here. Have only been out a couple times and both times I didn’t have a camera with me. Catherine has had to fill in for a manager who has been away so she hasn’t been able to be out with me in a while. Hopefully this weekend she we will be out.

I went out about a week ago with Jon Paul, Brandon and their two girlfriends. We had a great trip to the gulf. I didn’t even bring my gopro because I thought the vis would be marginal. When we got out there there was 30-35 feet of vis, some of the clearest water I have ever seen out on the gulf side.

The shooting was excellent. We got out limit of red groupers and a bunch of hogs, many 3, 4 and 5 pounds. Brandon shot one that looked around 6 pounds which is great for the Keys. The amount of fish on the coral heads out there made the Atlantic side of the reef look dead in comparison. Big schools of 2-3 pound mangroves were all over. I actually felt like I could shoot a hogfish on almost every single dive if I I wanted to. Some coral heads had ten or more legal hogs on them. We got a couple dog snapper as well. We also saw a 30# black in 25 feet of water which spooked when a nearby jewfish boomed. In the afternoon the vis silted up a bit but all in all it was excellent and well worth the 40 mile drive.

Then yesterday I went out with Andy, Capt Dan and Andrew. We went out front and it was kind of cluster f**k. The water was clear but there was a nice amount of west bound current. The jellyfish were gone thank god. We went out to around 60 feet of water and started diving. We got on some fish and Andy came up with the idea of dropping a chum cage down…which sounded good but in practice we were zipping by the thing so fast that shooting fish off it was pretty tough. Long story short the line of the chum cage broke, a big moray wrapped itself around it and was trying to bite anyone who tried to retrieve it. I have to go back and get the chum cage, as it’s still sitting in 60 feet of water in front of Key West.

That wasn’t the only thing I lost though. We were diving on the rolloff in around 65 feet of water and I shot a big black, who promptly rocked up. Then while trying to untangle my gun, the crimp that attached my float line failed. We dove that spot for an hour and never saw the gun again. I have the spot marked and will have to go back with a scuba tank to look for it.

Other then that it was a fun day. Andrew shot a nice dolphin in 50 feet of water. I shot 3 muttons almost in succession in 60 feet of water. Which has got to be almost my favorite, nothing like sitting on the bottom in 60 feet of blue water calling in a mutton. Of course I left my gopro on while I searched for the missing gun and had no batteries at this point.

Don’t really have any photos from the trips but I will take a couple screen shots from the gopro. Also have some left over coral photos from the beginning of lobster season.

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