Saturday, March 31, 2007

March 31 – Khao Lak Weather

Khao Lak Weather

Again…nice weather. 33c (93) today. A bit muggy, so it’s a definite day for diving or staying in A/C and napping.

I was home for lunch and found Ba-ruce standing in our pond! So he must be feeling a bit hot today.

The forecast seems to be for another good week of good clear weather, possibility of afternoon thunderstorms. There might be some storms after that.

The irony is that is during Songkram – the water festival! so It would be ironic for storms to pour in.

More later as Karin comes back from finisihing her Open water class today.

Tomorrow – Staff diving day! We’re going out to the Similans with several of our Thai friends from Happy Snapper (the best live music bar in Phang Nga) who really helped make this area a community rather than some tourist trap. We’ll be teaching some to dive, teaching some to swim! and also do some sweet fun dives just for ourselves!!!!

Friday, March 30, 2007

Today’s dives….


Today we had some guests – the Zamudio family from Chicago (area) diving and snorkeling with us. They were staying here in Khao Lak, stopped into see us, and the next thing you know…diving

They had a great time on the Similans. They went to Island #4 (Koh Mieng) and based thier diving from there.

Here’s Lucas and Julie (mom) diving. There really are smiles in there under the regs. Lucas ended up grabbing one of our camers and doing a bunch of pix (100+) during his dives.



And Anna was guiding them with her great mickey mouse ear mask. Regardless she’s great fun and very fun to be around.

Great weather and good viz…more than 25 meters…still thinking it will get even better! Our normal conditions in April are VERY smooth and very clear. So hopefully….

Killer whales loose in Similans!!!!!!

But first some shop insite….

This our vicious dog Ba-ruce. Thai’s can’t pronounce two consonants like “BR” very easily so he is Ba-ruce instead of Bruce.
He is currently curled up in the coolest spot in the shop. Twice now when a guest has entered our shop he has rolled over. So it seems his best defense would be tripping any neer-do-well’s that attacks us.

He has just learned how to ride a scooter, and now we need a wee helmet and goggles for him. Then he will be a proper driving doggie…


Today we have a few clouds puffing about, as you can see, but other than a very brief sprinkles for 3 minutes last night it’s hot and calm. About 33 (93) right now and should get down to 26 or so tonight (79-80). Again, great weather, and the diving is now officially out of control. Over 30 Meters (100+) viz at a lot of sites.

Just yesterday there were Killer Whales seen in the area!!!!!! I didn’t believe it when I heard the same story four years ago, but I saw them with my own eyes then. So I did some research and apparantly there is a pod that lives here in the Andaman, another warm water pod near the Seychelles and also a pod in the Caribbean. A Marine Biologist said they will be feeding on Manta’s!!! What an incredible image (and pretty suckey if you like Manta’s).
But that means this year….
Manta’s
Whale Sharks
Whales
Killer Whales
Rare Pleurobranchs
Extremely rare Nudibranchs

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Another DAN oxygen provider course….



Pauline is heading off to Egypt in two hours and she wanted to get the DAN Oxygen course done before heading there, so here certification and memory was fresh.


She packing up the Oxygen kit here, after saving my life. For weird reasons I seemed to die of DCS pretty frequently when conducting these courses.



Nick, her boyfriend, is also heading off. They saved my Little Anne a few times too.

Who was wearing gloves? That’s extra credit for him….

Lots of fun teaching these guys, making a difference, baby steps….but hopefully they will take this knowledge and never use it….


We do these courses every few days. Our dive safety center is called Diver Safety (pretty clever huh?). We’re offering provider and Instructor Level courses and in the next month we’ll be going on the road next month to different places around Thailand doing these courses..

DAN oxygen class today

Los of these courses lately. As the season winds down and job offer from other region pur in, instructors and DM’s are realizing they mght need these courses. A few even realize how beneficial all this is.

But Discounted prices for current DM’s/Instructors means a great deal for these guys, and we love teaching it! Dorky, but true.

After a couple of seasons of doing these courses, the impact is starting to be clear. Safer divers with fewer cases of DCS in the area are the goal.

Of course there will always be silly people making silly mistakes, but what can you do? So more and more courses, and maybe we will make a change.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Sunny and warm…just the way it should be…

Finally feeling the sun pouring in. Warm…bordering on hot now. Jut right for the diving and snorkeling. It’s about 32 (90) outside with a few scattered clouds. We might get our typical afternoon thunderstorm, but’s it’s 3 and no real clouds yet…so…
The weather for the next few days looks to be okay. We should have some rain and clouds late tonight and early tomorrow, but then it looks to be clear with our normal afternoon rains for the rest of the week. waves are small and will be a touch choppy on Friday, but not to worry. Viz is predicted to be about 20m at most sites, while there still seems to be pockets of murk coming off Burma in the Richelieu and Surin areas, and occassionally Koh Bon.

Highs of 32-34 (low 90’s) for the next week with lows of 25 (75-78) at night. So it looks like you can skip the Parka’s…

Happy faces – great trip


Today, several very happy guests came back from a trip on the White Manta. She is a great new ship running in Thai waters, and we keep getting great reviews from her…especially the abundant and delicious food…

Here is Jillene and Derrick from Canada…First Mantas ever on this trip…

“it was over way too fast” – Derrick



Here is a picture of Sharon


She did her DM course here just before the tsunami and she came back to see the beauty and more manta’s!

She reckons she’ll stay an extra week in Khao Lak (or month, or year….)






And David did some diving on Koh Tao before coming here, and we definitely got him hooked on real diving with great fish and coral.


While they were diving we had our rainstorms come through, but it cleared up while they were on the Similans…


If you have questions, or need to see what we do…www.wickeddiving.com…or call me direct 089 076 1180

Monday, March 26, 2007

The last few days have brought some rain…


With all the rain, our air has cleared and the trees and jungle are very green again. We were starting to see slightly less green (it is a rain forest after all…so it’s never really anything but green).
Now we are getting almost daily reports about Whale sharks and things are clearing up to 20+ meters on the Similans.

Still getting a bit of murk on Richelieu and Koh Bon. But our last guests, Maarten and Heather from Canada were diving at Richelieu. The weather got a bit choppy, so several people skipped the dive. The professional Photographers on the trip set up all their gear for Macro (seahorses, Ghost Pipefish, Nudibranchs abound on Richelieu). Sounds like a perfect set up for…Whale sharks!!!

Seems that if you plan on it, that you prepare for it, you won’t see them. But if you skip a dive, then everyone else sees them!!!

Looks like clear weather for the next few months.

Songkram (the end of the dry season celebration – much like New Years, but very warm and fun) looks to be dry this year! WE’ll figure out a way to get wet


Don’t Forget to visit our website at www.wickeddiving.com

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Similan Marine Life – Nudibranchs

Flabellina, chromodoris, halgerda, ovulide; just to name a few of some of the   weirdest, intriguing and highly evolved creatures of the ocean, and yet creatures which even those of us who spend a third of our waking day under the sea still know so little about.  Last week, during a night dive at Koh Tachai North reef I came face to face with something which I was unable to identify.  I had absolutely no idea what it was.  It was about fifteen centimeters in length, dark red in colour and appeared to be a kind of unshelled mollusk moving with impressive rapidity.  My customers were as equally mesmerized.   This is rare as usually guests seem to want to see either ‘action’ or ‘big things’, and this malleable blob fell into neither category.  Back on the boat I consulted the underwater bible to the ‘dark side’, Helmut Debelius’s Field Guide to Nudibranchs and Sea Snails.  Page 153 revealed the pleurobranchus forskali, which is a type of notaspidea or sidegill slugs.  The passage includes the following rather disturbing description:

These slugs are grazing carnivores, feeding on sponges, tunicates, and other sessile invertebrates.
 

The passage also mentions that they are ‘voracious predators’ who use their ‘strong jaws’ to ‘feed on a variety of large prey’ and they eat each other.  This seems particularly vicious as despite moving faster than most other slugs, ‘fast’ for a slug is still an excruciatingly ‘slow’ pace in which to be eaten.  In the past I have witnessed a type of gymnodoris munching away at a fellow slug – head first.  This order of courses actually made me wonder whether the ‘eaten’ managed to steal a few retaliatory bites from the ‘eater’ first?  Or perhaps it was a self defense mechanism on the part of the ‘eater’ to make sure that the ‘eaten’ didn’t turn around to join in the meal.  Either way, this detail along with the description below is an attempt to pull the reader towards the incredible and addictive world of the ‘dark side’; rather than diving to see big fish (which you would need to be blind to miss), search instead for the slugs of the sea. 

Now for the Clever Part

In the sea, slugs can generally be catergorised as either snails or ‘nudibranchs’, which literally means ‘naked gills’ in reference to the bushy plume on their bodies through which they breathe.  So far about 11,000 species have been identified, (and this does not include the glorious family of flatworms, which will require a whole other article!)  Due to their often individual markings, and ability to take on the colorings and even shapes of their food, they are very tricky to identify.  However, this hasn’t stopped me from scouring the nudibranch bible and to no avail deciding that I simply must have ‘discovered’ a previously undiscovered slug. 

Now what is really remarkable is how nudibranchs have evolved out of their shell, and in the case of the flabellina  pteraeolidia ianthina, evolved out of the need to eat! (Commonly found on Richelieu Rock, Koh Tachai Pinnacle, Elephant Head Rock) The removal of the shell has been achievable through the development of a new line of defense – stinging cells which are ingested from prey (which  includes stinging hydroids, sea anemones and the spawn of other nudibranchs).  The cells are either stored in defense glands along their bodies or secreted.  These chemicals are frequently toxic or distasteful, and therefore not a top food choice for a hungry fish.  However, their cryptic patterning also helps to make them nearly invisible, which is not just a challenge to the recreational diver to identify, but also for predators to find.  If they are spotted then their bright colouring reminds fish of their inedible qualities. 

Fortunately, the chances of nudibranchs being eaten before they die of old age are not so high as they have an incredibly short life span, from as little   as three weeks.  This means that reproduction needs to be efficient and needs to be speedy.  Consequently, when they are not busy eating one another, a nudibranch can mate with another member of the species with surprising ease because they are hermaphroditic; they are both male and female. Apparently, they ‘can rarely fertilize themselves’ but just entertaining the notion that there is a small possibility is pretty astounding.  When sperm  sacs are exchanged the eggs are deposited in a colourful spiral, often on top of their favorite food.  This nutritious start to life is used to its full advantage by certain types of facelinidae, which feed on algae rich hydroid coral.  They algae is actually ‘farmed’ and then stored for photosynthetic nutrient production, meaning that the algae is able to grow and multiple within the nudibranch’s tissues and it need never eat again!

Ultimately, the moral of this story is: next time your dive guide shows you a blob -get excited. Oh and watch out for those spearing textile cone shells…

Saturday, March 24, 2007

The Yogi Fish


As with many other underwater creatures, I saw my first ever ‘yogi fish’ during my first liveaboard trip to the Similan islands.  That was about five months ago and now I have seen many different sizes and shapes as well as those in rather compromising positions.  However, it took a recent customer to declare his love for the eight armed rubbery mollusk, for me to really lay back, re-admire and then do my homework.  This is what I came up with:

The Devil Fish
Ancient sea farers were terrified of the eight armed octopus and hence its rather unfortunate nick name, the ‘devil fish’.  Personally, I think the name ‘yogi fish’ would be far more fitting, due to its incredibly malleable body which allows it to squeeze through the smallest cracks and holes, with the only limit being the size of its eyeball.  This makes it an extremely problematic pet for those who insist on taking it out of its natural habitat. (See the external link below for footage of a yogi fish squeezing through a one inch hole.)  In fact octopuses kept as pets have been known to escape their own tank and invade neighbouring aquariums for a captive food source.  This impressive flexibility is due to its lack of internal or external skeleton. 

Three Hearts and a Beak
Octopuses have three hearts which live in its large head; two pump blood through each of its two gills, while the third pumps blood through the body.  This also means that octopuses always have very high blood pressure. As well as three hearts these rubbery devils also have a ‘parrot-like beak’.  The following passage taken from the National Wildlife Federation gives a little more elaboration: 

In its den, an octopus will often simply lie hidden, its arms coiled, before unrolling one to snag a passerby with the suckers at the tip. While swimming, its preferred attack posture is to parachute gently down with all eight arms outstretched and envelop its prey in the web connecting the arms. Having wrapped up its victim, an octopus holds it against its underside and bites it with a retractable, parrot-like beak.

After scouring available video footage, I actually found film of a giant octopus lying in wait and then leaping up to kill a passing shark (see link below). When hunting a little less ambitiously, the beak can be used to drill through the shells of small crustaceans such as snails, shrimps and crabs.  A toxin is then secreted to dissolve the tissues. Octopus can also ‘taste’ prey/ food with its arms, which are lined with rows of suction cups.  They also have excellent eyesight.  With all this overloading of sensory skills it hardly matters that they are deaf, but they also hide some additional surprising skills…

Jet Skiing on Autopilot
Most of the times I have seen an octopus has been when it is peeping out of tiny gaps underneath coral, flashing from a grey to a white colour with impressive rapidity.  However, there have also been times when I have seen an octopus flinging itself from rock to rock and then freezing as if transforming itself into an inanimate object unworthy of our attention.  These many different means of movement are as interesting as they are varied.  As octopuses do not have full control over their arms, they simply send a high level command for movement and off they go.  During this brief burst of research I also came across several accounts of octopus using their arms to ‘walk’.  Of particular note were the ‘walking’ octopus marginatus, which is also known as the octopus that ‘resembles a coconut’.  The report from the National Wildlife Federation explains that this “crawling arm serves as a distraction to would-be predators; this ability is also used in mating.” This leaves me wondering whether it is to distract the female or for impregnation itself?  Even more intriguing are the descriptions of ‘jet propulsion’ where the octopus actually builds pressure by sealing off all orifices except a narrow funnel, and uses the thick muscles of the mantle wall to squeeze the water out the hole, allowing it to travel to speeds of up to 25 miles per hour.

Clever Devils
It comes as no surprise that octopuses are highly intelligent and reports of the ‘devil fish’ climbing on board fishing ships and opening cages of crabs/ ‘ready made meals’ remind us of why they were feared far more than most other marine life.  Octopus have both a long term and short term memory which dispels the three second myth used to justify putting small fish in even smaller bowls.  Unfortunately their short life span of around six months limits their learning curve, while learning from their parents is not an option as they both die shortly after copulation.  It has been suggested that they also learn by doing and even through observation rather than through instinct.  However, as little credit is ever given to the IQ of sea creatures this has yet to be scientifically proved.  So why such a short life?  With the ability to regenerate lost arms, (which may be useful since they have a tendency to eat their own arms, or even to discard them when under attack), an incredible ability to change colour and even texture, a hidden weapon of squirting ink (as a block to predators who hunt by sight or smell), their largest threat to life is the definition of a Catch 22: Reproduction is the primary cause of death! 

The Ultimate Sacrifice
Males can only live for a few months after mating, while females become so preoccupied with their unhatched eggs that they rarely eat during the one month incubation period.  Further research found that rather than forage for food, the primary cause of movement for the octopus is to search for its victim/ mate.  When successful the experience is quite bizarre, and has been observed on many a night dive to Koh Bon: the male will extend a ‘specialized’ arm and begin to caress the female.    It will then insert it into the female’s mantle cavity. Apparently at this point a sperm packet then slides slowly down a narrow groove in the arm and enters the female’s oviduct. Meanwhile, the octopuses are both flashing different colours as different pigments come into view as the cell walls are stretched or squeezed.  Next time I see what I can only presume to be the suicidal male, seductively stretch out one of his eight arms to gently caress the female, trying to convince her that the price of starvation is worth the continuation of the species I’ll feel less inclined to stop my divers from photographing the ‘private’ experience.  After all, it may be their last ever public showing. Meanwhile, newborn common octopuses spend the first few weeks of life invisible to divers; they have been described as ‘flealike creatures the size of rice grains’ who drift along the surface of the ocean as plankton.  As they gain weight they eventually drop to the dark crevices and rocks of the bottom of the ocean. 

Ultimately, what this brief research has revealed is that octopus are pretty incredible creatures, who deserve far more attention from divers such as myself, who used dismiss them as both to common and too large to warrant much excitement; let alone declarations of love.  So in response to my recent octopus adoring customer I would like to say a genuine and heart-felt ‘Thank you’!

Amazing Links:

Octopus escaping through a 1 inch hole

Octopus eats Shark

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

coconut grove restaurant

This is one of our all-time favorite restaurants. With good food, classic Thai hospitality and sunsets like this. Whether with friends or just a quiet night under the stars…this is really one of the reasons we live here. Order the Indian Curry – big but tasty.

During the day this is also a great pplace to settle in. Order a Lemon juice or mango shake, run around in the water, spend a few hours doing…nothing.

We sit here with the dog while he runs in circles in and out of the water.

Bang Niang beach is quieter and more focused on the smaller, bungalow style resorts. So the beach has less people, and plenty of space to wander quietly.

If you head along the Bang Niang beach road, you’ll find it. If not, look for our bikes. Or the dog. Arrive early for sunsets…..


Wicked Diving
Liveaboard Guide

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Praise to the Liveaboard!


Wake up to the calm seas as the water takes on the warm pinkish tint of the rising sun.  Fresh coffee brews as the boat sails to the first dive sight of the day.  Maps are laid out and dive briefs are given.  A description of which fish will be seen at which depths.  The topography, the currents, the duration and the ease of collection after the dive.  Down to the dive deck.  Music drifting out of the surround sound system, before the boat reverses and the signal given. 

Wake up!  A plunge into the ocean.  BCD fully inflated and bobbing around in refreshing coolness.  All ready?  Regs in.  Dowwwwn. Silence.  Inhale.  Exhale.  Bubbles.  Ok?  Ok – ok – ok – ok .  All four divers down and happy and floating.  Now let the underwater adventure begin. 

Slowly moving along the reef or around a submerged pinnacle.  Swimming over familiar rocks and coral, visiting the same fish whose habits you have observed so closely every four days that you feel as if you are visiting a mute friend.  At times I often marvel at how the twenty or so most frequently dived sites around the Similans have become as familiar to me as an urban town, such as Khao Lak.  The main difference being of course that it could only be an act of the divine to travel around a town suspended in mid-air and controlling your depth with the slightest inhalation or exhalation.  There’s also the constant novelty of the underwater world; the genuine anticipation of what this dive, despite the hundreds before it, will bring: Leopard shark? Mantas?  Or the Big Fish itself? Of course there is always the unexpected; the guitar shark at Breakfast Bend, the weird and wonderful pleurobranch at Koh Tachai Reef, which ensures that even the most dived sites continue to hold their trump cards.

Sixty minutes later and the silence of the underwater world is broken as simultaneously as the surface is.  Regs are removed, masks are dragged down and after a delay of a few seconds for readjustment, conversation initiated: “Did you see that?; What was that weird looking fish.” Or “WOWOWOWOWOWOW! Its tail nearly hit me!”  At this point I will be leaning upon my surface marker revelling in the consistently high level of job satisfaction that working as a dive guide in the Similans never fails to bring.  Meanwhile, the Captain of the boat will be sounding the horn and sailing over to collect my divers.  As a fellow guide continuously comments, “Its just too easy” (pronounced with a accentuated ‘Zeeee’.  Indeed, the liveaboards are the easiest way to dive the Similans.  Dive, Eat, Sleep, Dive, Eat, Sleep and so on.  Or course there is always the option of jumping onto the dingy and exploring one of the Princess’s tropical islands.   

Islands number Four and Eight are accessible to the public, and have fantastic view points across turquoise waters and lush green hills.  Some prefer not to leave the comfort of the boat! Professing that rather than going to the beach they would rather “stay and relax”, which is a comment which in itself makes me smile.  One tour leader is renowned for this habituation to boat life.  Just to ensure his days are spent either in the water of floating above it he describes the island visit as “Bex’s Island Adventure”.  However, I love scrambling up the rocks, using the crude but effective system of rocks and ladders to reach the top.  On the boat the furthest I ever walk is from the dive platform to my cabin.  A strange comment since I don’t actually sleep in my cabin.  After all why sleep inside when the sundeck offers an unlimited view of the night sky and a soft gentle morning wake up?



Check out our websites

www.wickeddiving.com

www.khao-lak-diving.com

www.diversafety.org

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Rain – but just enough

We just got a bit of rain today, seems like our “air-conditioning” is back. Normal to have a bit of rain in the afternoon around 4 O’clock or so. Cools things down as we head into these, the quiet hot months.

Great diving though. The fish are really hammering us with their beauty and numbers!

check out www.wickeddiving.com for more details….

Open Water Diver!


One more of us – one less of “them”!

 
I Just signed off Ingrid from Norway as an SSI open water diver!

We had a really good time during the course and fotunate, as she was the only student!!!

Though her fiance Erik joined us for the dives out at the Similan Islands.

It was cool that they could share the experience of seeing their first turtle, lionfish, barracuda etc.


They were kind enough to share some photos they took during her course.
First photo is from island Four, Honeymoon Bay (doing some theory during our lunch break)

The other one in the pool- the eager student and me (Karin).

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Frog fish! Obscure and ugly but utterly delightful



Two hundred plus dives in the Similan National Park had brought me my first whale shark and a subsequent two more.  Mantas!  Again after never seeing one I have since become an expert observer of the beautiful water gliders as they  cut through the ‘air’ swimming effortlessly through currents and circling divers, sightings of  which, like the whale shark, produces a new genre of ‘adrenalin junkie’ divers who dive simply for the ‘hit’ of seeing the big stuff.  That is of course until time and multiple dives pulls you over to what has become to be termed the ‘dark side’…

Several weeks ago at Koh Tachai Plateau a fellow guide gave me an insight into a new addiction; an addiction of finding what spends its life, and the lives of its species before it, trying not to be found.  The guide swam over to me excitedly pointing at his compact camera and waving his arms frantically.  Meanwhile, a manta soared over our heads.  I replied with a confused look and a raised arm towards the performer.  If he had a great shot of the manta I would rather appreciate it later back on the boat, but at the moment I was enjoying the live show.  My friend spared it a glance but clearly felt his camera deserved all of our undivided attention.  I felt reluctant to draw my eyes away from the giant pelagic dancer, but humored him.  He rapidly pressed the giant buttons on his digital camera until he found his prize.  Through the excitement, the sea water and the thick plastic housing I saw a red blob.  ‘Great.  I’ll return to my manta thanks.’  That was his first frog fish.  I’d yet to see one, but all was to change on my last liveaboard… 

East of Eden, 17 meters, just before a renowned sandy patch which I must have swam over countless times.  A patch of rubbley indistinct coral.  A tiny piece of rubbley indistinct coral.  A miniature rubbley piece of fish, commonly known as a ‘clown frog fish’, white adorned  with orange spots and extremely cute.   It was reminiscent of a garden gnome, well hidden but clearly the rightful proprietor of its little coral patch.  The clown frog fish was fixed onto the side of a piece of coral, utterly at one with its surroundings.  So still that it was looked glued to its perch.  I was mesmerized.  I wanted to move closer.  Meanwhile, my customers took a quick snap and moved on.  After the dive they professed that they didn’t understand what all the fuss was about.  Why become so excited over a tiny indistinct fish when the reef is swarming with the most beautiful and exotic fish just screaming out to be noticed and admired? 

Strangely enough, although I had been a virgin frog fish viewer, the experience was repeated the very next day.  Perhaps this was because my eyes had received its first lesson in obscure marine life identification.  Or perhaps it was just luck.  However, my second ever encounter was equally as intriguing.

At Koh Tachai Plateau at 27 meters there stands a barrel sponge.  Sitting directly on the top, wedged in between the circular rim is a large, red, about the same size as a football, an utterly ugly, utterly delightful frog fish.  Instantly I was mesmerized.  Tiny little eyes glazed over in what looked to be a deep state of meditation, mouth slightly agape in a way that actually made it look to be taking slow and controlled inhalations.  The creature really did belong to another world – the underwater one – and upon closer examination it was possible to see its inbuilt fishing line extending from its first dorsal spine and hanging above the gaping mouth.  Invisibly observing.  Invisible.  It was eerily still.  It was incredible. 

Ultimately what these two encounters have taught me is that there are alternatives to the adrenaline hits of having a whale shark charge through your dive group or a manta circle you.  In fact part of the beauty of the ugly frog fish is the dedication it takes to spot, which can result in such a sense of satisfaction, causing dive instructors to dance around at 20 meters in front of a digital image.



Check out our sister site…www.diversafety.org home to the best safety classes in paradise!

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Recent colorful dives!

Here is a recent article from the Phuket Gazette about the unusual conditions that have been occuring in the area….some opinions at the bottom….


“PHUKET: Many of the island’s beaches are experiencing algal blooms that are causing murky conditions commonly called “red tides”, but marine biologists say the situation is not dangerous and sea conditions are expected to return to normal soon.

Suree Satapoomin, a researcher at the Phuket Marine Biological Center, told the Gazette that the blooms were first detected on west coast beaches, with the most common microbe detected being Ceratium furca, one of the 2,000 known species of Dinoflagellata.

Usually considered plants, Dinoflagellata are unique in that they also have some animal characteristics, such as preying on smaller organisms for food.

Water samples containing Ceratium furca were taken off Koh Hei in mid-February. The microbe was subsequently found in samples taken at Kata, Kalim, Patong, Nai Yang and Kata Noi beaches, where poor water quality led researchers to suspect its presence.

K. Suree said that although algal blooms are common in Phuket this time of year, they usually dissipate in about a week. The blooms this year have already lasted longer than normal.

Samples taken have not revealed any dangerous accumulations of toxins sometimes associated with red tide, but K. Suree warned people with sensitive skin or allergies to take precautions as exposure can cause itchiness or a rash.

The blooms are the result of strong sunshine and relatively calm sea conditions, coupled with high levels of phosphorus and nitrogen in the water, both the result of “human activities”, she said.

Divers descending greater than 10 meters are advised to wear insulating wet suits, as water temperatures at depth are unusually low at the moment, she said.

As cold water tends to harbor more nutrients, this factor might be fueling the algal bloom in shallow areas, she suggested.

The algal blooms are expected to dissipate soon, with conditions at Nai Yang and Koh Hei already back to normal, she said.

Blooms of Ceratium furca along Thailand’s gulf coast are common because beaches there are flushed only by one tide daily, compared with two tides on Phuket beaches, she said.

Results released by the PMBC also revealed the return of the bright Enteromorpha in Patong Bay in January and February, along with concentrations of the diatom Chaetoceros of about 5 million cells per liter of water.

Enteromorpha is the bright green seaweed that has been found in Patong in years past. It’s growth in the bay was partly attributed to Patong Bay containing high levels of nitrogen and phosphorous, two main constituents of human waste.”


We’ve been noticing these “red tides” passing through, but hadn’t experienced one before, not on the Similans. But we have been told that this was due to current changes related to El Nino – Currents are bringing water and effluent from the Kra Buri river (the large river that forms the border between Myanmar and Thailand) so providing an unusually large amount of phosporus and nitrogen. These are both found in fertilizers, particularly from the Shrimp farms in the area.


don’t forget to visit our site at www.wickeddiving.com to look for updates and insight into our passion for diving….

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Extraterrestrial Mollusks

Space ships.  I don’t think I have ever dived anywhere else where I have seen so many space ships – and not just during night dives but during the day as well.  For me these highly evolved, highly intelligent, elephantine mollusks have always appeared extraterrestrial.  The way in which they hover, speed backwards and perform a stunning display of electric flashes so utterly hypnotic that leaves you wondering what level of evolution they have achieved.

The Bon Soon Wreck, East of Eden, Richelieu Rock and of course the ‘Three Lovers’ (shown above) at Koh Bon; always together and always vying for one another’s attention.  Reaching out one of their eight arms here and another one there, meanwhile emitting an auroral glow around their floating bodies.  A marine biologist once warned me never to shine my flash light in the eyes of a passing space ship due to the real risk of permanently blinding it, and yet their pulsating electric ripples are best observed in the dark (although this does carry the risk of losing ones customers who always have a tendency to disappear during complete darkness).

Their vision is one of the most highly developed in the animal kingdom, and they perceive contrast rather than color, so their light display has a secondary purpose of allowing them to communicate with other spaceships.  Why they have W-shaped pupils has yet to be explained, although it has been proposed that this is to allow them to see backward and forward at the same time.  Perhaps their extraordinarily large brains may hold the key.  However, they are clearly aware that any potential enemies are still an evolutionary stage or two behind as they possess and impressive array of chameleon skills allowing them to reflect the coloring of their environment as they travel over different shades of coral, rocks and sand, which leaves the reptilian master of disguise lagging behind; not only is this an effective disguise from predators and prey, but with the ability to change color in less than a second, it is the speediest transformer in the entire animal kingdom

Closer observation will actually reveal finely tuned buoyancy.  Unlike their Octopi cousins, who scramble over the coral, they can regulate their depth by changing the liquid-to-gas ratio in their chambered cuttle-bone.

Italians like to eat space ships.  Last month I dived with an Italian chef and as I made the ‘cuttlefish’ hand signal he replied with the ‘spaghetti’ symbol – consisting of a twist of the wrist and a greedy glint in the eye.  After learning that some marine biologists believe that they learn by observation, I felt a protective urge to shield these culinary inclinations from the three spaceships in view.  Indeed I have spent many a happy dive hovering face to face, with a hand positioned on my forehead slowly raising a finger.  The spaceship humors my mimicking and has been known to raise an opposite arm.  Hurrah!  Communication with life from the blue planet!

Check out our website www.wickeddiving.com

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Praise to the Liveaboard!

Wake up to the calm seas as the water takes on the warm pinkish tint of the rising sun.  Fresh coffee brews as the boat sails to the first dive sight of the day.  Maps are laid out and dive briefs are given.  A description of which fish will be seen at which depths.  The topography, the currents, the duration and the ease of collection after the dive.  Down to the dive deck.  Music drifting out of the surround sound system, before the boat reverses and the signal given. 

Wake up!  A plunge into the ocean.  BCD fully inflated and bobbing around in refreshing coolness.  All ready?  Regs in.  Dowwwwn. Silence.  Inhale.  Exhale.  Bubbles.  Ok?  Ok – ok – ok – ok .  All four divers down and happy and floating.  Now let the underwater adventure begin. 

Slowly moving along the reef or around a submerged pinnacle.  Swimming over familiar rocks and coral, visiting the same fish whose habits you have observed so closely every four days that you feel as if you are visiting a mute friend.  At times I often marvel at how the twenty or so most frequently dived sites around the Similans have become as familiar to me as an urban town, such as Khao Lak.  The main difference being of course that it could only be an act of the divine to travel around a town suspended in mid-air and controlling your depth with the slightest inhalation or exhalation.  There’s also the constant novelty of the underwater world; the genuine anticipation of what this dive, despite the hundreds before it, will bring: Leopard shark? Mantas?  Or the Big Fish itself? Of course there is always the unexpected; the guitar shark at Breakfast Bend, the weird and wonderful pleurobranch at Koh Tachai Reef, which ensures that even the most dived sites continue to hold their trump cards.

Sixty minutes later and the silence of the underwater world is broken as simultaneously as the surface is.  Regs are removed, masks are dragged down and after a delay of a few seconds for readjustment, conversation initiated: “Did you see that?; What was that weird looking fish.” Or “WOWOWOWOWOWOW! Its tail nearly hit me!”  At this point I will be leaning upon my surface marker revelling in the consistently high level of job satisfaction that working as a dive guide in the Similans never fails to bring.  Meanwhile, the Captain of the boat will be sounding the horn and sailing over to collect my divers.  As a fellow guide continuously comments, “Its just too easy” (pronounced with a accentuated ‘Zeeee’.  Indeed, the liveaboards are the easiest way to dive the Similans.  Dive, Eat, Sleep, Dive, Eat, Sleep and so on.  Or course there is always the option of jumping onto the dingy and exploring one of the Princess’s tropical islands.   

Islands number Four and Eight are accessible to the public, and have fantastic view points across turquoise waters and lush green hills.  Some prefer not to leave the comfort of the boat! Professing that rather than going to the beach they would rather “stay and relax”, which is a comment which in itself makes me smile.  One tour leader is renowned for this habituation to boat life.  Just to ensure his days are spent either in the water of floating above it he describes the island visit as “Bex’s Island Adventure”.  However, I love scrambling up the rocks, using the crude but effective system of rocks and ladders to reach the top.  On the boat the furthest I ever walk is from the dive platform to my cabin.  A strange comment since I don’t actually sleep in my cabin.  After all why sleep inside when the sundeck offers an unlimited view of the night sky and a soft gentle morning wake up?



Check out our website

www.wickeddiving.com

www.liveaboardguide.com