Sunday, March 22, 2020

Uncharted Water: DLNR closes all ocean access



If you suddenly wake up and don't recognize any of the stars in the sky, everything seems alien and unknown, then that's a good description of planet earth, and the State of Hawaii today. As of now DLNR has closed off all access to the ocean including beaches, harbors, and public shoreline access.  Many businesses are closed. Air travel to the islands has been discouraged, and as of next week all arriving passengers including returning residents will have to quarantine for 14 days. 

For the past four days or so at my house we've been sheltering in place (I know that's not a good term for this) in order to minimize the odds of somehow contracting COVID19 or worse, giving it to someone else.  There are as of today three known cases on the Big Island, all travel related.  But since there is no testing until next week we really don't know the extent of the spread, and we are assuming we are all infected for the purposes of minimizing contact and flattening the curve.

This new reality is going to continue to accelerate into the unknown for a while still--that's how exponential functions behave until the delays from mitigating factors allow rates of change to flatten out, then hopefully, go negative.

We are going to be on stay-at-home behavior probably through most of April.  The travel quarantine that begins next Thursday will help protect the population from infection originating elsewhere.

The primary mission right now is to protect our community, our Kupuna, and do it in a way that doesn't destroy our humanity.  This is why we are not hoarding food or other necessities.  Take only what you need leaves something for your neighbors.

So what to do when you are housebound?  I remember that Queen Lili'uokalani was housebound in 1985, and that didn't stop her from giving hope to her people.  I'm doing some home recordings and videos and posting the to #songsofcomfort as a contribution.  Here's a link to one of them.



Stay safe.


Monday, March 16, 2020

3/16/2020 A Day at Pine Trees

Out on the Amelia today, Aquatic Life Divers new boat but with Kona Honu crew.  Dive ops help dive ops when one of them has a boat in the shop.   Fun going out with Capt. Zain Hicks, who I knew from Big Island Divers a few years ago.

Water glassy but the wind was coming up.  Overcast and kind of cold, which makes sense since it's still winter.  But the world seems to have a pallor descending on it because we're all so freaked out with friends and family on the mainland subsisting in various stages of lockdown due to exponential spread of coronavirus here in 2020.

No  cases of infection on the Big Island that we know of, but since there is no testing capability to find out if people are infected short of them showing symptoms, we're in the dark.

Fuck it Dude, let's go diving.

We pull up to the mooring at Suck'em Up.  I look at the close shoreline lava shelves and see hardly any surge. A good day to explore the lava tubes and inshore caves with little danger of getting skylighted.  Also good conditions for photographing nudis, which surge makes frustrating.  Here are a few of the little monsters we found in Suck'em Up ad Skull Cave.  Gold Lace nudis are so delicately beautiful, and the Hermit crabs Crab were spectacular.  Way off the mooring we stumbled onto some Harlequins, but my fav was the Tom Smith's nudi that Sandy found, and the family nursery of the White Margins was pretty cool too.

Gold Lace nudibranch

Harlequin Shrimp

Harlequin Shrimp

Hermit Crab


White Margin nudis and eggs
Tom Smith nudibranch

The second dive was at Pyramid Pinnacle where we found more small kine, three different Leaf Scorpions and a threatening Guard Crab.  Id been cold on the first dive, having tried to get by without my hooded vest. That wasn't going to work for the second dive in 77 degrees and cold wind topside, so I adjusted my weight and donned the vest - ah, a nice 75 minutes of not being cold.

Here are the rest of the critters that came out to play today.

Varidcose phyllidia and Disappearing wrasse

Flying Peacock Flounder

Pissed off Guard Crab

Leaf Scorpion with a big red eye

Leaf Scorpion two

Leaf Scorepion three

Sleeping Peacock Grouper

Purcupine Puffer in Suck'em up

Adult Rock Mover Wrasse

Yellowtsil Coris with lunch
Barred filefish

Friday, March 6, 2020

Pahoehoe Beach Park with my old camera and new plate coral 3/6/2020

Recently I dug out my ancient Canon G10 and the Fix housing with Inon 2000 strobes, thinking it would be perfedft for a shore dive with lots of lava rock to traverse.

The idea today was to dive a new spot near Mile marker 4.5, one that involves lots of lava rock walking.  On pre-gear-up inspection the site looks great.  Fairly ease entrance and exit into a little inlet with deep enough water to giant stride in and steps to climb out.   But there was a bit of swell that i didn't like and the walk was longer than I'd expected, so thumbed the site and went to Pahoehoe Beach Park, a well known and super easy walk-in dive.

The plan was to make it all the way out to the end of the reef at about 80 FSW.  All the way out we heard Whale Song. 

The big reveal for me was that at about 70 FSW, further than I've ever been before, there was another big patch of my favorite Plate Coral, Porites rus.  Pics of very healthy looking coral below.

I was curious how I'd like using the G10 system after being so used to a DSLR, but it was great.  The pics got plenty of light from the Inon strobes, and everything worked perfectly.












Tuesday, March 3, 2020

White Margin nudi and Ewa Fang Blennie day: High Rock and Lone Tree 3/3/2020


The Fang Blennies were e3verywhere today, but i wasn't fast enough to get a pic so you have to take my word for it.  Hwever, the White Margin Nudis were not moving so fast and so here they are. The bottom ones are from the underside of Lonetree arch (Big Arch) and they show beautiful cup coral neighbors who move even slower.




It was also a day for multiple sightings of Octopus, Peacock Flounders, and Gold Lace Nudis both flying and stationary.

Dragon Wrasse

Flying Gold Lace nudi

Resting Gold Lace
Here are the Flounders:




And the Octopus

Octopus meet Ty

BAck off, OK
Blackside Hawkfish

Looks like a nudi but its really a blood star foot

Four spot butterfly and pincushion star

Leaf Scoprion

Lei Trigger

Seacucumber Crab

Empty Striated Cone (stay clear)


Yellowtail Coris