Day 1: 28 December
The last-dive calendar that I keep on my Mac dashboard recorded 336 days. "I must get back in the water and savor the great feeling of interest, discovery and quiet that the underwater offers," I thought.
Twin Rocks never cease to amaze me. The moment we dropped down there were schooling jacks right below the buoy line. Fantastic! We headed to the two rocks and there we were greeted by yet another school. The first one was made up of foot-long jacks and the other were smaller like a bunch of teenage juveniles. It's such a wonderful feeling being in the vortex with jacks swimming all around you and seeing them up close.
Patay na Buli (Dead Palm) was our next destination. Divers named this place after the dead tree close to shore that served as their marker. There we saw a school of barracuda! Thanks to my dive buddies, Dindin, Rob, Dita, Frank and Harry!
Day 2: 29 December
My friend and Timor-Leste dive buddy, Fr Flavie joined me diving for the day. Jon guided us and we were with the group of (another) Jon, Mike, Irene, Jeff and Cecile. We first did Cepok II and for the second dive, we went to Beatrice Point. The latter dive was interesting as we navigated the coral atoll behind Sombrero islet. The dive ended with what my buddies called a "head rush." We rounded off a corner and immediately after we were hit by a strong current. Jon signaled for us to hold on to rocks and let the oncoming current rush right into our faces. Wonderful!
We let go and let the current drift us away from the coral reef. We hanged and did our safety stop seeing only dark without any hint of how far was bottom. Comfort was when looking up we saw the bottom of our boat that was waiting for us.
We dropped at Eagle's point and around the cathedral and came up to the undewater cross and castle for our third dive. We surfaced on the south side about a hundred meters from where we dropped. We saw a schooling barracuda, but I missed the sting ray that Jon saw.
I've done this dive once before and one of the interesting features was towards the end of the dive and in the spot where we did our safety stop. Quite a sizeable area is made up of hard corals and the view is really nice. This place reminded me of the drift dive off the Nusa Penida across Bali island. Like in that island, one can hardly see a patch of sand as almost every inch is covered by hard and spiky healthy corals.
30 December
Gigi, Inday and Jeng joined me at Villa Milagros. We had a great time leisurely chatting and visualizing a possible retirement place, which was primarily inspired by the way Villa Milagros is set up. They went to town with Babes and disappointed that the Anilao market did not have any other fishes but tilapia and bangus (milkfish). The locals said that the catch is low because of the full moon.
Day 3: 31 December
We brought the ladies to Caban Island while Dindin and I went to Bahura (Coral). I was told that it would take for dives to round this underwater coral atoll. It's an interesting site of a sloping wall, healthy corals and numerous fishes. The atoll is down at 10 meters and we ended this dive with a safety stop with the corals just below us.
We then moved to the stoney beach just behind Caban, which is called Maricaban, and facing Sombrero Island. We did our surface interval snacking on the Zamgo products of the three lady entrepreneurs. We had calamansi juice and bottled durian. Sarap! Oishi!
Just a few meters off Maricaban, we dropped at Kirby's Rock. There's no other place I ever seen like this one. The dark monolith is covered with bright yellow colored nudi branchs as if they were flowering on the rock. They are regularly space as appears to have elegantly decorated the entire rock. It's an amazing sight/site.
Moving a little farther to the wall we saw four divers who were taking photos of something. Dindin and I waited a little bit and then we took their places. In an instant, Dindin was engrossed in taking a photo of something. After a while, I came closer to check out what it was. I saw an orange colored tiny creature and thought it must be a nudi branchs. Then Dindin took out his knife and outlined to me without touching the creature -- a frogfish! I was staring it in the eye yet I could not figure what it was (and instead got fixated on the orange-colored creature). What a creature! I've seen these in Timor but it was my first time in Anilao. It curved its body almost to a concave so that it could very well cling to the side of the rock face.
Then Dindin move to another spot on the wall where he had remembered the other diver was taking a photo. There we saw another frogfish! This was more rotund than the other that Dindin signaled that it might be pregnant. We must have stayed on this spot of the wall for some 20 minutes to savor the rare up-close sight of frog fishes. For the first time, I saw the valve on one side of the fish just under its fin. (The fin is shaped like that of a frog's webbed feet and grasped the coral underneath it for support.) The valve opens to let water out and closes as the fish draws in water. It was just like the one that an octopus has. I was told later that that value is used to for propulsion. Dindin had me stick my head in close to where the frog fishes for a pose.
Saturday, January 2, 2010
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