Tuesday, June 28. 2022
Some South Australian scuba divers love doing it on the bottom! That’s where all the benthic action happens and is a treasure trove of sights and wonders most missed by pelagic divers.
Here on the bottom amid the sponges and ascidians a world of macro activity is constantly taking place. In this image a grazing nudibranch crests a sponge sporting tiny yellow communal ascidians. Meanwhile a little three fin lurks ready to photo-bomb.
While waiting for the perfect movement the little three fin must have done at least five circuits and was just not going to rest anywhere photogenic. Oh well, just capture the image and move on.
Here under Edithburg Jetty is one of South Australia’s most diverse, interesting, and beautiful benthic habitats where the action never ends.
#Edithburg #scuba #diving #nudibranch #ceratosomabrevicaudatum #benthic #critters #southaustralia #underwaterphotography
Monday, June 27. 2022
We were treated to an amazing laser light show, ‘Monochord’, while in Melbourne for the June long weekend.
Monochord is the work of laser and audio artist Robin Fox who states that there no deeper artistic messages here other than “it’s just really cool”. And yes I agree as it created an extraordinary Yarra River foreground to the lights and of Melbourne’s Southgate and the city skyline.
To bad we missed out on the audio!
#Monochord #melbourne #risingfestival #laser #yarrariver #southgate #birrarung #robinfox
Sunday, June 26. 2022
Well maybe not the sky but a great deal of rain. It seems to be the theme of the month; rain, rain, rain and more rain keeping me ironically dry and out of the water.
I am missing the diving but not the pea soup that is our local coastal waters. It’s going to take a couple of weeks of clear weather of to clear it all up. When and if the sky stops falling.
In the mean time at least there are dramatic cloudscapes to enjoy. The silver lining.
#Clouds #sunburst #landscape #barossavalley #rain
Saturday, June 25. 2022
A diver’s watch was once that life preserving instrument that made sure we did not spend too long underwater and risk a life threatening diving injury on our return to the surface.
Big names in watches like Blancpain, Rolex and Seiko led the way from the early 1950’s creating reliable ‘tool’ watches that divers could rely on with their lives. From the mid 1980’s the first dive computers started appearing on diver’s wrists or in their instrument consoles. Today it is rare to see a diver wearing a simple dive ‘tool’ watch. Even rarer for that watch to be completely mechanical and powered by a wind up main-spring just like those watches from the 1950’s.
Today I take my Yema diving with me for the nostalgic buzz of having that tiny mechanical heart ticking away the time of the world above.
And yes, I dive with computers as well. Two just to be safe!
#bronze #divewatch #scuba #diving #ocean #photography #portnoarlunga #yema #superman #underwater #watch
Actually it’s Autumn in Edithburgh when I captured this image but I won’t tell if you don’t.
We spend a bit of time every year in this idyllic seaside town and almost always there is a yacht or two moored in the bay.
I’d been debating with myself as to the merit of showing this image. Is it any better than any other idyllic scene? Perhaps not, but maybe there is a story here to share.
The boat here is a Bruce Roberts Mauritius 44 and it has open my eyes to the world of amateur boat building. Bruce Roberts-Goodson was an Australian yacht designer who made a business out of helping amateur constructors build the boat of their dreams with their own hands by designing boats and selling the plans that people like ourselves could build themselves.
The boat in this image, ‘Maluka’, is the labour of love of someone’s dream come true at the personal effort of their own hands. It’s the idea of a ‘maker’ taken to a new level and an idea I’d never considered. Now knowing this boat was not constructed in a factory and not sold as a luxury item has given me a new found respect and painted this image and it’s untold story in a new light.
Most likely I will never learn of Maluka’s past but at least I now know there is an extraordinary story hiding in plain sight in this idyllic image.
#Maluka #edithburgh #summer #southaustralia #ocean #aerial #bruceroberts #mauritius44
Wednesday, June 22. 2022
Here, several kilometres off the coast of the Fleurieu Peninsula lies the wreck of the ex-HMAS Hobart. It is a treasured gift to divers local and from elsewhere alike. She’s not that old but has made this spot hers as if she had always been here.
The Hobart “is big, really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mind-bogglingly big it is”, well perhaps I am exaggerating a little but could not help drop a favourite quote from a favourite book. With bigness, with expanses of endless blue, bottomless drop-offs, or massive vessels at rests end comes a deep and profound emotional connection with the surrounding space.
For many divers, this experience comes sooner or later as the aquatic world changes from novelty to respect and finally a deeply humbling sense of privilege and gratitude. A dive on the wreck of the ex-HMAS Hobart gives an inkling. Year’s of diving grows this into something beautiful until one day you find yourself 25 meters down, in the murky low light of the vessel’s midships and simply know what being happy in the moment is really like.
I can’t speak for Jess or Andy above me but in this moment I could not have been happier.
#Ex-hmashobart #wreck #shipwreck #scuba #diving #jess #andy #blackandwhite #Ocean #deep #murky #southaustralia #wirrina
Tuesday, June 21. 2022
Back in Autumn before the winter rains settled in and the sun was still shining, Andy and I took the boat down to dive the beautiful but infamous Aldinga Reef.
It was one of those special flat calm days when the universe seems to just say, enjoy. Schools of trevally followed us around the drop-off. Blue-throat wrasse abounded amongst the deep ledges. The diversity of fish variety was incredible and we just had the best day out on the ocean.
Months on now, in the midst of what seems to be the dreariest Adelaide winter I can remember in ages, I find myself hankering for a few days of slight seas and sunshine coinciding with a weekend. Adelaide gets periods of beautiful sunny, calm and cold winter days so I will just have to be patient.
Hopefully the passing of the solstice will herald some good weather again and get me back out into the ocean.
#Trevally #pelagic #aldinga #reef #dropoff #ocean #southaustralia #underwater #scuba #diving
Sunday, June 19. 2022
Here’s a follow up to my last image that may interest a few of my my technically inclined friends.
Not long after I received this stopwatch I watched it stop! And it stayed stopped. I'd peeked inside by opening the cashback a few times to admire that vintage Valjoux 330 movement but now it was time to start poking around in there.
I quickly found that the gear train had jammed somewhere between the mainspring and the escapement so decided to tackle this one myself.
To cut a long story short this is the very first movement I've completely disassembled and rebuilt successfully and has since not missed a beat.
#rotary #stopwatch #valjoux #valjoux330 #swiss #time #clocks #chronograph #gears
Saturday, June 18. 2022
Before I ever thought about watches, I wanted a stopwatch!
I tried my hand at swimming competatively as a child and that hallowed silver object with its white dial and its accusatory hands would make or break me every time it was used.
On race days it was amazing to see someone standing at the end of every swimmer's lane, stopwatch in hand, ready to clock their time and declare their place. Stop watches were everywhere!
We used to borrow one of those precious instruments from a friend for training and its utility and precision was something I admired. I was always sad to give it back each time.
It turned out swimming was not my thing and I forgot my love of mechantical stopwatches until now.
I often need to time things in my work and growing tired of using my phone those childhood memories sent me looking for one of those old stopwatches and I finally found this vintage Rotary split timer.
My stopwatch now sits on my desk at work ready to grab when it's needed and reminds me of childhod race days and that precious instrument I never thought I'd own.
#rotary #stopwatch #valjoux #swiss #time #clocks #chronograph #racing
Friday, June 10. 2022
They say of marine life that if you can’t eat it or it’s got no practical use then it will never get anything other than a scientific name. Well I have a third reason, being spiked by a sea urchin and needing something pronounceable to swear at!
The long-spine urchin, Centrostephanus tenuispinus, is actually quite beautiful for something you’d take great pains not to sit on, or experience great pains if you did!
Urchin spines really are no fun. A painful spiking can result from carelessly nestling into a bit of reef to coax out a crayfish or photograph a nudibranch. If it’s a clean stab a good flushing of vinegar will usually bring relief after the initial pain. If it’s snapped off inside it needs to come out quickly!
Best advice for divers or waders is, … don’t sit on salty blue pincushions!
#Rapidbayjetty #rapidbay #seaurchin #Centrostephanustenuispinus #scuba #diving #urchin
Thursday, June 9. 2022
I’d often seen snapper before on the wreck of the ex-HMAS Hobart but usually small ruggers and often large schools of them.
The occasional large snapper would cruise past from time to time but never really big and always very flighty. On this dive however we discovered several large, metre plus, fish sheltering inside the wreck down around 20m below the surface.
Attempts to approach and photograph from the outside proved frustrating as the snapper would simply move deeper into the wreck. In the end I approached them from inside the wreck coming as close as I dared not to spook them.
There was no sense of colour or detail from in here but watching their beautiful silhouettes against the backdrop of open water behind was magical enough.
I simply wished I could have lingered here longer.
#ex-hmashobart #wreck #scuba #diving #snapper #silhouette #fish #hobart
Sunday, June 5. 2022
From my youth I have fond memories of this iconic building, St Johns Lutheran Church. Not Sunday services but the friends I made and the antics we got up to.
I remember climbing that incredibly high ladder up into the bell tower when someone left the door unlocked.
I remember scrawling our names in chalk on the bell. Nothing that would be damaging but enough for others to know we had been there.
None of us was game to actually ring it but a gentle knock on the bell with our knuckles and hearing that soft mellow response barely loud enough to hear was satisfying enough to know we could have if we really wanted to.
Now when ever I visit Tanunda, the town of my youth, the cross atop the steeple of St Johns Lutheran Church speaks to me with nostalgia, “we were there once”.
#Tanunda #StJohns #church #steeple #aerial #cross #barossavalley #belltower
Saturday, June 4. 2022
Louey and I go way back. I’ve lost count of the years he’s been there waiting patiently in the shallows each time I come back to Edithburgh.
Sometime he’s sitting high and dry on the low tide sandy bay.
Sometimes he’s rocking gently to and fro.
And sometime, as I imagine him to night, he’s hanging on for grim life as an angry sea tests his moorings and his patience.
Louey and I go way back and despite tonight’s stormy weather I expect he’ll be there when I return.
#Edithburgh #louey #boats #water #rusty #tranquil
Friday, June 3. 2022
Of all the strange creatures that keep their own secret lives in the waters of Southern Australia, Erskin’s Basket Star is up there in the realm of ‘oh wow’!
As a starfish, and more specifically, a ‘brittle star’ they resemble some weird brain-like structure.
About the size of a pair of clenched fists they hide their true strangeness, a sight rarely seen, when at night and in strong currents they completely unfold that intricate structure in a vast feeding web.
I have never seen a basket star feeding. A logistically challenging night dive combining both strong currents and remote locations would be required. Something I am up for but not to be undertaken lightly.
On this dive off of Troubridge Point, Edithburgh we found three of the fascinating creatures, all bundled up and waiting for the cover of night.
#AstroboaEernae #basketstar #brittlestar #edithburgh #troubridgepoint #southaustralia #scuba #diving #monochrome #blackandwhite #underwater #photography
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