Trip Report and Photos
Diving with Ross O.
May 14, 2006
Story
and Photos © Elaine Jobin,
may not be reproduced in part or whole without advanced written permission.
E- Mail subject line: "Who wants to go diving
this weekend?" Reply: "I do, I do" In so few words, a dive trip formed.
I enjoy commercial dive charters a lot, but, they normally head to the
islands. Diving with Ross usually means I will have the opportunity
to see and explore our local coastline.
It also means a chance to spend some quality time with friends, and
today it would be Ross O., Beth O, and, Jeff and Susan Shaw.
Our first stop was at a new reef that Ross has been exploring. It
is located a short distance north of Marineland. It has some beautifully
decorated rocky terrain in very pristine condition. Nudibranchs, shrimp,
gorgonians, and, anemonies are abundant Visibility was about 20 feet,
not enough to get a good sense of the layout of the reef, but enough
to have a beautiful dive.
There also seems to be some old debris on this reef - nothing identifiable,
perhaps old trash that has become part of the landscape.
On our way to our next dive site we motored past Marineland and had
a brief chat with the Popeye Maru. They were on a surface interval from
their photo expedition"in search of the rainbow nudibranch."
We traveled to the Johanna Smith. The water on the surface promised
good visibility. The trip down the anchor line gave us hope for a great
dive - until we got close to the wreck. First I watched Ross disappear.
I could barely make out his fin that was about a foot from my face.
Next I saw some wreck formation, also about a foot from my face. Huddling
close, Ross, Jeff, and I looked at each other and called the dive. Ross
went forward along the chain to check the location of the anchor to
make sure that it would easily free when we left the site. Next I heard
and felt what I've come to know as Ross repositioning the anchor - I've
nicknamed it the "Signature Overstreet Bunny Thump Maneuver." Visibility
may be so poor that I can't see him, but when I hear the noise and feel
the chain, I know exactly what is going on.
Our last stop of the day was at the wreck of the Olympic. Visibility
here was decent at about 20 feet. I had a Nikonos V, set up to do some
macro of the life on the Olympic. My strobe with the "sealed battery
compartment" that had flooded the previous week seemed to be in pristine
working condition after I had washed it out. I took a look at it on
the dive site and watched the flash head fill with water - uh oh, something
structural was amiss with the strobe - and no photos. We took a nice
tour from the midsection around the bow and back and called it a day.
Until next time.....
Visit the origional trip report post on
diver.net