BHP Jetty Night Dive

Wednesday 15th July – BHP Jetty Night Dive

It was just the two of us today on the BHP Jetty Night Dive, but what the rest of you missed was probably the best visibility we have had for the past couple of months.  The conditions were pretty close to perfect with a light current running north to south and virtually no swell.

With a maximum depth of around 8.3m we were down for 67 minutes which at 15 deg C did start to get a bit cold, but we were rewarded by some great things to see.  No Great Whites or Manta rays that we had been promised, but the number of Seahorses and colourful Nudibranch were fantastic.

Having experimented with video last week, I took a few more snippets today along with a lot of photos so I will share a few:

Firstly, for those of you who haven’t been on a night dive, this is Aaron ahead of me:

The legs of the Jetty are covered in soft corals, feather anemone and there were a lot of starfish and these Nudibranch crawling around:

Camoflague Starfish - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Camouflage Starfish – BHP Jetty Night Dive
Feather Anemone - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Feather Anemone – BHP Jetty Night Dive
Purple Spotted Orange Nudibranch - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Purple Spotted Orange Nudibranch – BHP Jetty Night Dive

The Seahorses were out in force:

Seahorse Family - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Seahorse Family – BHP Jetty Night Dive
Seahorse Pair - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Seahorse Pair – BHP Jetty Night Dive

Including this beautiful orange seahorse!

Shortly before the turn, Aaron spotted a Cuttlefish hiding under some rocks:

Purple Cuttlefish - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Purple Cuttlefish – BHP Jetty Night Dive
Purple Cuttlefish - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Purple Cuttlefish

And then further on we met another one swimming in the open water:

And then a small Stingray next to a shoal of juvenile Catfish.

Stingray - BHP Jetty Night Dive
Stingray

 

On the way up to the beach, we stayed under and scanned the sand for other interesting life.  As always there where quite a number of Blue Swimmer Crabs and small fish, and then we came across this Sand Eel trying to hide from our lights.

And this which has now been identified as a Horrowed Sole.

Next week, the Perth Scuba Manta Club have pencilled in a dive on the coast North of the river, but that will be weather dependant.  The wind and swell are dropping after the weekend, so fingers crossed…

North Coogee Marina Wall Dive

Sunday 31st May 2015 – North Coogee Marina Wall Dive

Today, it seemed like a good idea to go out on a club dive with Perth Scuba as I have signed up with them to do my PADI Instructor Development Course (IDC) with them next month.  Club dives are a great way to get back into diving if you haven’t been for a while or if you just want to keep up your skills and meet new people.  Best of all they are free (apart from air and equipment if you need it).  Being free, however they are always going to be a shore dive and site choice is going to be largely dependent on weather, the group and the lead Dive Master’s personal preference.

The site of choice today was North Coogee Marina Wall.  The conditions were a lot better than the last time I came here with almost flat sea and water at 18 deg C.  The max depth on the dive was 8.4m with a bottom time of 58 minutes.  I used the GPS in my BlackBerry Z10 inside a Cressi Dry Box which from the track I think did remarkably well considering at times there was 8m of water between me and the sky!

North Coogee Wall
North Coogee Marina Wall

At some point I need to correlate the GPS timestamps with the dive profile readings from my computer to work at what depth it does actually loose signal, but given that it shows us quite nicely going around the end of the wall, I think it is probably at around the 8m mark, as most of the dive time was spent below 6m.

In terms of things to see, there are lots of shoals of smaller fish using the rocks for protection.  Lots of Toadfish on the sand and a good variety of different puffers.  If you look into the holes you can often see Octopus eyes peering back at you.

Small Shoal
Small Shoal
Common Toadfish
Common Toadfish
Spotted Puffer
Spotted Puffer
Yellow Spine Puffer
Yellow Spine Puffer
Shoal of Stripey
Shoal of Stripey
Octopus
Octopus

 

Mindarie Keys Marina Boat Dive

Sunday 24th May 2015 – Mindarie Keys Marina Boat Dive

After last weeks aborted mission, we couldn’t have asked for better conditions today.  For quite a few of the divers going on the boat with Western Blue Dive Charters, the mission was to catch Crayfish.  For me, I had my camera.

Mindarie Keys Marina Boat Dive Map
Mindarie Keys Marina Boat Dive Map

First stop was a deeper dive (23.6m) at “The Wall”.  As you can see from the Google Earth track, this site is on the edge of the limestone shelf which presents lots of crevices, caves and hiding places for Crayfish.  The water was 20 deg C which is great with a 5mm wetsuit.

We were down for 33 minutes, so I got to take a few pictures of fish and a few bubbles.

Stripey
The very common and imaginatively named “Stripey”
Flying Saucer
Flying Saucer

 

 

Saddled Puffer
Saddled Puffer

 

The only catch of the first dive
The only catch of the first dive

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dive two

We then moved on to “Caverns” which as you can see is a piece of reef which breaks the surface a bit closer in to the shore due west of Mindarie Keys.  This dive was 14m for 45 minutes after spending 1hr15 on the surface.

With all the swim throughs and caves at this site and better visibility being a bit closer to the surface, the Crayfish were easier to spot.

Crayfish Pair
Crayfish Pair

These guys managed to escape the hoop for today, as did this big one!

 

Crayfish in Cave
Crayfish in Cave

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But his friend was dinner tonight!

Scuba Dive in Perth Australia – Introduction

This is intended to be a general interest blog for those who go scuba dive in  Perth Australia and the surrounding area.  My plan is to post up photos, dive profiles, maps, equipment reviews and other items that may be of interest to divers wherever they may be, and hopefully you will one day come and discover the delights that the underwater world has to offer here in Western Australia.

What I love about scuba diving is it gives you a great excuse to go to some of the most amazing and beautiful places around the world.

As it happens, this week I will have been diving for 16 years having done my original PADI Open Water course off Palm Beach in Sydney back in 1999.  A couple of years later I did the PADI Advanced Open Water at Sharm El Sheikh, Eqypt, followed by Rescue Diver and PADI Dive Master in Jamaica in the Caribbean.  As you can probably tell, I am a warm water diver! Having lived most of my life in the UK, I still haven’t ever dived there, although I have been diving in the Mediterranean and that was pretty cold when we got below the thermocline at 10m!

Now, however I have started again to scuba dive in Perth Australia.

Sunday May 17th 2017

Today was supposed to be the first dive to record in my blog, however the weather conspired against us and a lovely storm rolled in from the Indian Ocean.

Weather Radar on the day
Perth Weather Radar on the day. Copyright www.bom.gov.au

Watching it for the few days before, it was supposed to have improved by Sunday, but on the day the rain rolled in.

Driving rain over the pool
Driving rain over the pool

 

 

 

 

 

Next week will hopefully improve …