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Home » Ocean View goes to the Maldives November 2017" ( » Page 2)

Category Archives: Holidays

Ocean View goes to the Maldives November 2017

Posted on January 11, 2018

Maldives Whaleshark

Maldives 2017

The excitement had been building for months, our trip to the Maldives was nearly here, well you can imagine how excited we all were when the day finally arrived.

For me it started really well, my friend and dive buddy for the holiday managed to get me into the lounge with her at the airport, now this is the way to start your holiday, no shops, no hustle and bustle… bliss

We were all off to Paradise, with the promise of Palm trees, white sandy beaches and sunshine.

Paradise yes, sunshine NO!

The day we arrived in Malé, the area was experiencing a Tropical storm, it seems we had bought the British weather with us, sideways rain and gusting winds met us at the airport, the boats were bouncing all over the place in the harbour to take their guests to their beautiful Island resorts.

This isn’t quite like the pictures in the guide books… well… maybe like a guide book to the UK 😉

We eagerly waited at the airport for our transfer to MV blue Voyager, which was to be our home for the next 12 days. We were picked up on Blue Shadow, the Dhoni for Voyager, the ‘Dhoni’ is essentially a smaller boat that all the dive gear is stored on, which takes you off to the dive sites, so we had two boats at our disposal for the holiday, now I’m feeling spoiled.

Dhoni

 

After introductions, boat briefings and of course lots of unpacking, we had a relaxed dinner and an early night to make up for the long journey, we were all looking forward to the first day of diving.

 

1st December 2017

Lanken Manta stationWaking up at 6am was made easier by being handed a cup of tea whilst in bed, off for briefings and the first dive of the holiday, thorough briefings make the dives so much easier. We were still moored in North Malé Atoll, awaiting two more guests who had been delayed by the storm the previous day, so Back Faru was our first dive, this was an easy bimble for our check dive, with moray eels every few meters, a good start to the diving. Second dive of the trip was to be on Lanken Manta cleaning station, we were of course all hopeful for a glimpse of a Manta given the dive site name, we were not disappointed, the moment we dropped onto the station we had a Manta cruising around for us to watch, all mesmerized. There were a few shark shaped shadows at the edge of the reef, but they didn’t come in too close.

The grinning faces back on the Dhoni confirmed that everyone had thoroughly enjoyed their encounter with the first manta of the holiday.

Day one was topped off with the most sublime curry for dinner, I think we will be bringing the chef home, if we make it on the plane with our big bellies at the end of the holiday.

 

2nd December

A much better start to the day, the sky was a lot brighter. An early start again, time for briefings and dives. We had now moved down to South Malé Atoll.

Teeny EelFirst dive of the day was at Karumba, this lovely slow drift gave us lots of life to enjoy, we dropped in straight into a small shoal of Bat/Banner fish, early into the dive we were graced with an Eagle Ray gently drifting past us, closely followed by 2 or 3 black tip reef sharks, happily swimming around for our cameras, they weren’t shy either, coming in quite close. Also lots of the little critters too, octopus, Banded Shrimp, a lovely baby moray eel hiding in its little hole.

It felt like no time before we had to head for the surface, but hey, it was time for breakfast!

For our second dive of the day we were taken to Valassaru Caves, which are actually overhangs rather than caves, they provided plenty of places for the fish to hide. Our awesome guide Ali was trying to point something out to me in one of the deeper overhangs, I really thought he was shining the torch at a big rock… until it opened its mouth, I actually jumped underwater as I wasn’t expecting the ‘rock’ to move! What Ali had spotted was a huge Marbled Grouper.

Dive three was a bit faster, this is practice for what’s to come…. weeeeeeeeeeeeeee
If you blinked, you missed a lot, you have got to love fast drift dives, they are exciting.

Feather wormWe were then very happy when we were told that we could have a night dive today, a chance to catch some different fish out. Heart Tilha is a small pinnacle inside one of the island lagoons which meant there was no current, a nice easy bimble around a small pinnacle made for a relaxing end to the day, I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many feather stars, such beautiful colours and patterns.

The mango sauce at dinner seemed to be a winner all round, so a great day was finished off nicely.

 

3rd December

We stayed in South Malé Atoll for another day. Today was time for the practice run for the channel diving, we dropped down onto Cocoa Thila with a small current running, once down behind the pinnacles at the edge, it eased off to allow you to slowly make your way along the bottom to find a spot on the edge, once hooked on we could wait and watch. This dive we had just a couple of sharks cruising by, but it was a great taster of what was to come.

After breakfast, dive two was the same spot, the current had dropped a little, so it was easier to settle and watch, at least five Reef Sharks were cruising around, sadly it was all too soon before we had to come up off the ledge, and hook into a plateau further along the reef to watch all of the little fish going about their daily lives.

Nurse Shark

Todays diving was topped off to the max… Alimatha for our night dive.

This is where we witnessed a throng of nurse sharks and rays looking for their dinner in the sand, quite frankly they don’t care who they bump in their quest for food, it was all quite exciting, and non-stop.

There must have been about 8 sharks swimming around and maybe 4 or 5 rays. At one point though they all lined themselves up in the middle of the group, it was like they were having a mid-meal nap!

 

Nurse SharkWe had a few uninvited dinner guests as well, the appearance of a few Lion Fish at the edge of the group proved to be a pain, unfortunately literally for one of our guests, whilst in his quest to shoo one away with his torch to stop it from touching another diver, he got stung on the thumb. But all was ok the next day, he still had his thumb in-tact, just worse the wear for a very painful few hours.

 

4th December

So it seems we can’t escape the rain just yet, but it could be worse, it could be cold and rainy like home, but we are still at a balmy 28 degrees, so it’s all good.

We dropped onto the edge of the channel Miyaru Kandu, hopeful for the sharks, but unfortunately today was not the day, little to no current meant they weren’t out to play, so a very easy gentle reef wall dive, lots of little stuff to look at.

We then moved on to find another dive site to explore, always with the hope that some sharks or rays would glide past. The final dive of the day was at Fotteyo Muli, a site known for its amazing soft corals. Sheer walls with small indents and swim throughs with beautiful soft corals hanging from the ceiling of the overhangs made this a feast for the eyes. A fair amount of anemone and clown fish always provide entertainment.

Our itinerary is now being determined by the storm that has been going through the Maldives, the storm is heading North, so we are heading South, hoping for Mantas, more Sharks and if we are lucky some Whaleshark encounters… let’s see what the next 8 days offer up to us. We can’t control the weather, so we will be making the most of what we are offered.

 

5th December

Soft coralWe started the day at the same site as yesterdays last dive, time to see the beautiful soft corals in the morning light. Fotteyo proved to be a very pretty dive again, the soft corals in the morning light were lovely, lots of life buzzing around, we were lucky enough to see a free swimming moray, that then made its way into the hole of another moray, there was no aggression, so they must have been good buddies.

During the day we continued heading further south, we left South Malé Atoll, moving into Vaavu Atoll, which given the appearance of that lovely round yellow object in the sky is definitely the right way to be heading, we are leaving the storm behind us now and are seeing the results, blue water and bright skies, this is what the Maldives is meant to look like.

We were then in for a fun filled start to the second dive of the day, a steady current running along the side of the reef at Rakeedhoo gave us a great fly-by looking at lots of fish, once at the corner of the channel, the current eased right up to allow us to bimble along the reef to take in all the little critters making the sheer wall their home. We were graced with a huge Napoleon Wrasse at then end of the dive just before we had to come up.

Eagle Ray

It’s there, honestly

Because of the weather affecting the visibility etc, our guide has tried not to put peoples expectation up too high, on our final dive of the day, this paid off.

We dropped in on Mulaku Kandu not expecting too much but were delighted to encounter Grey Reef sharks, White Tip Reef sharks, a Marbled Ray, schools of Barracuda, and the show was stolen by a very cute baby Eagle Ray, who was gracefully gliding above us.

 

 

6th December

We had now progressed further south into Meemu Atoll. Dive one today was a fantastic dive. Dropping onto Gaahura Kandu, we started with a gentle swim down the side of the reef, this soon elevated into an exciting hook in on the corner of the channel to watch schooling barracuda, schooling jacks and of course a few sharks cruising around, flitting in and out of the schools of fish. As usual it was a disappointment when we had to unhook to go shallower, damn that NDL, we would have stayed all day if we could. However coming slowly up the reef wall at the very edge of this channel was a stunning array of coral heads, with nooks and crannies for hundreds of fish to hide in and go about their lives, giving us so much to look at whilst we hovered around on our safety stop, we even had a lovely Marbled Ray cruise past us at 5m, however due to having his head in a hole getting a picture, Dave completely missed it!

If we were going home today, we would all be very happy campers after dive two on Muli Corner. This goes down as one of the EPIC dives of the holiday, if you were in the right place that is… he hemmm

It started as all epic dives do, with no camera! We were expecting a strong current on a channel dive, no point having expensive kit bouncing around on the rocks when trying to hook in, however in true sods law style, we had… wait for it… Grey Reef sharks at about 25m right at the start, with the silhouettes of mantas high above us on the reef plateau, good vibes from the start. As we levelled up a bit we had a stunning shoal of Harlequin Sweetlips, with the grey reef sharks cruising along below us now, as we came up over the top of the gently sloping reef we had an array of exciting events waiting for us, lots of the usual little stuff buzzing around, shoal of Fusileers, a huge octopus in it’s hidey-hole, one that Ali the guide probably knows well to have found him in there. We were graced with a juvenile Black tip reef shark, all of 2 feet long, circling us, I felt like a helicopter above a coral head trying to keep track of it, such a lovely encounter. We then had an abundance of Turtles either sleeping under small coral head ledges, or swimming around joining in the fun, I’m sure I saw about 8 different individuals, we were then graced by two Mantas floating past and through us, it was a case of not knowing which way to look, Mantas in one direction, sharks in another, turtles over there, goodness we didn’t think it could get any better, until whilst watching one of the many turtles, we spied a mêlée off to one side, coming our way, should we be concerned that a large beigy-grey mêlée of sharks, quite large ones, on the hunt, having a bit of a tussle were heading towards us, I think Natasha and I had the same thought…  but we’re ok, they are just nurse sharks, the larger ones were in excess of 3m long, wow…. what a dive. With most of it pretty shallow, we all had plenty of air to last the full hour we were allowed, none of us wanted to come up, but all good things must end… for now.

Luckily, for the disbelievers among you reading this saying “no pictures no proof…” Nat and Annette captured most of it on GoPro, hurrah!

The last dive for the day was rapid, but uneventful by the standard set on dive 2… however little did we know the best was yet to come.

Whaleshark approachWe moored up for dinner, whilst everyone else was happily scoffing their beautifully crafted desserts, that I couldn’t eat, our guide rushed through the door to announce that there was an exciting visitor at the back of the boat, I was able to go and get the first shots of our unexpected dinner guest… directly off the back of the boat, a Whaleshark had decided to come and have his dinner too.

Of course I was very quickly joined by 23 other very happy gleeful people taking in this amazing creature, it probably took all the restraint we could muster to not get straight in, but all being respectful of this stunning animal in front of us, we went up to the Sky Lounge for our briefing on the guidelines for this encounter, if we were to get into the water to snorkel, there were some rules, which I am very happy to see!!

There was a limited number of guests allowed in at a time, minimum distance to be kept etc etc.

Whaleshark

The first group were allowed in to gently encounter this amazing animal. Quite amusingly, he pretty much ignored us whilst he ate his dinner. To say we were emotional is an understatement. To our surprise, he stayed at the back of our boat for several hours, I can only imagine the MV blue Voyagers lights attracted the best plankton. We were relieved and lucky to see that there were only 3 boats in the area, the animal was not swarmed, at one point there was a small set of red lights making its way to our boat, we amusing realised that one of the other boats was flying over a drone to see what was happening… we waved gleefully showing off our 5m long guest!

We can only hope that it might give us a swim by on one of our dives tomorrow. This sure did make up for the dodgy start we had due to the unforeseen weather at the beginning of the trip. Sweet dreams all round after this encounter I think!

 

7th December

Turtle CamoWe are leaving the most southern stop of the trip today, sadly heading back up through the atolls back to Malé, which of course means the end of the trip is approaching, but there’s still a few days left yet!!

Clown fish behindOur first dive was on Dhiha Magili corner, on this one it was lots of the smaller stuff, including a turtle here or there, you can see they are the master of disguise, for the few who stayed on the boat, they were treated to a pod of dolphins playing on the surface near the boat. Difushi Kandi, our second dive also provided lots of the little stuff, lots of time to practice my signature picture, the backside of clown fish as they disappear into their anemone, I’m getting really good at that shot now!

 

Manta Front onThe whole day paled into insignificance during the third dive of the day, we were going to chance a Manta Cleaning Station, Kurali. The best time to do this dive is usually the morning, but it was worth a shot, if not a bimble along the reef would do us just fine. We dropped onto the main cleaning station and all was quiet, so off we went after a while thinking it was going to be a quiet one, a little bit further along the channel, we were told to drop down next to a much smaller rock, and were duly treated to a good 30-40 minutes of manta action, from my spot at the back of the rock, I could see it playing over the divers at the front of the rock, then gliding round the back, and the first time it came past, it swam right over me, what a treat! At one point I managed to get a shot of its belly blocking out the sun.

Manta close upI watched with glee as one of them swam right over Gareths head, it came so close, that I’m sure it buzzed him. At one point I was filming a manta at the main rock, I looked over to Naserra and Glen to see Glen pointing behind me, I panned round with the camera to see another manta being sneaky hiding behind the main group, then what would you know a third one turned up, but as the main attraction was in front, most people didn’t know it was there, I’ll share the video so they can see what they missed, just like buses, 3 come along at once!

Before we knew it, we had to leave to do our safety stop, as we were gliding along, gently drifting upwards, another manta came into view below us making its way along the channel to the mini cleaning station, I had enough air to have stayed for another 20 minutes… why do these dives have to end after an hour??

We are now hoping that tomorrow morning will deliver a similar event. Fingers crossed!

 

8th December

Mantas

After the dive yesterday afternoon, we were hopeful, but the mantas decided to elude us this morning, to amuse us we had the eel garden spread out in front of us.

 

People saw lots of different stuff on dive two, we had Mantas gliding past us at about 25m, pretty cool.

 

 

Clown fish on purple anemone

The last dive of the day was on a lovely wall at Vatterru, with the treat of a huge Anemone colony, there were clown fish everywhere! But they are masters at disappearing at the precise moment you press the camera button, either no fish, or their backside…. hmmmm my speciality again.

Nassera and Glen were treated to a rare sight of a Guitar Shark on the corner, quite a lucky find for the few who saw it, nice one!

 

 

 

9th December

OctopiJumping in on Vatteru again this morning, a nice easy bimble along the wall with many overhangs to explore, with some Octopus action on our safety stop, we watched as a slightly larger octopus basically evicted a smaller one out of his little hidey-hole, I was fascinated with them, they move with such grace.

After several hours motoring back up to Vaavu Atoll, we were ready for dive 2 of the day, we were jumping in on Niyaru Kandu where grey reef sharks, white tip reef sharks, an eagle ray and a school of jack fish were on the list of sightings.

 

We had a bit of a fight against a current to get to the corner, once there we had a few reef sharks cruising around over the flat and out in the blue, but they soon disappeared when the ‘pro-photographers’ came along 10m off the reef to make sure they got the good shots of them, and as if by magic, poof, the sharks were gone, so we had nothing left to see. No other real big stuff turned up. There is always the next dive.

Dive 3 was much of the same, a battle across the channel mouth didn’t yield the results hoped for, just a lot of air used.

 

10th December

We are well on our way back now sadly. Back to South Malé Atoll, we re-visited a spot we dove on the way out a week ago, hoping for some more shark action.

Cocoa Thila did not disappoint. We dropped down onto the end of the Thila in the channel, at first we thought we were in for a quiet one, hooked in at the corner we didn’t see too much, just a ray going past, so we all un-hooked and drifted back a long the wall a short distance, as we reached the indentation in the side of the Thila, we were all in for a fantastic treat, as a shoal of sharks were cruising past. The large grey reef sharks were coming in pretty close, for me the baby black tips were the highlight, cute sharks!!!

Kudi Giri LionfishOur second dive of the day was the Kudu Giri Wreck, this was definitely one for the smaller aquatic life, including Pipe fish, shoals of Glassfish, Trevally, Hawkfish, Scorpionfish and turtles.

 

 

 

 

Kudu Giri WreckThe Kudu Giri was purposefully sunk as an artificial reef, next to a small pinnacle, it is a great little wreck, that can easily be covered end to end in one dive, still allowing time to explore the reef walls of the pinnacle.

 

 

 

 

Moray on steroidsThe third dive of the day was a very odd one for me, it is called Fish Tank, it is known for the huge abundance of feeding aquatic life, because it is off the jetty of a tuna canning factory, there is always some leftovers for the local fish to get an easy meal.

It was pretty crowded down there, fish everywhere feeding on the carcasses of the tuna. The Moray Eel population is massive, as are the morays themselves, they look like they are on steroids they are so large, clearly they have an easy living there, the highlight for me was when Sophie came and took me away from the main spectacle to show me a baby yellow box fish she had found, cute doesn’t cover it!

That was one of only two bits I enjoyed on this dive, the second was finding two juvenile sweetlips, they are so cute as they appear very confused, swimming around fast and erratic like they’ve had about 20 cans of red bull!

 

11th December

Manta Fly ByThis is our last day of diving on the liveaboard, so of course we are all hoping for something special.

Being so close to Malé now, what could we expect?

Well we weren’t disappointed!
We were back at Lanken Manta cleaning station, sadly there were also several other boats around, so it was very busy with divers.

 

For most of the last week we have been the only ones on the dive sites… we had been spoilt! Until this dive we hadn’t realise how spoiled we had been, it was diver soup down there, it felt really crowded. But the show in front of us more than made up for it, and what a show we had.

Mantas mantas mantasWe were all dropping in and before we could get settled we were treated to the ballet of the mantas, this went on for a good 45 minutes, at one point I counted 7 Mantas circling the small cleaning station, they seemed to be playing more than being cleaned, they were having fun, and so were we!

As usual, it was with a heavy heart that we had to leave the mantas and come up to the surface again.

What a way to end the trip!

 

 

Oriental SweetlipsWe had one more dive allowable, so a small Thila was chosen for the final dive of the holiday, after the Mantas, it was very sedate, a nice easy bimble, the viz wasn’t as good as we had been used to, Gareth likened it to Wraysbury… steady on there… we could see at least 8-10 metres!

For me the highlight of this last dive was finding a long nose hawkfish hiding in the coral.

 

As an end of trip treat, our last night on the boat meant one more meal, and we had been promised the curry again… And it was Goooooooood, the chef makes the BEST Dhal!! full bellies all round, it was fantastic!!

We then finished the evening off with a game of Cards against Humanity, for me this was my first encounter with the game, I’ve of course heard of it, but never played it. What was even more weird, is that previous guests had put their own stamp on the game and made some changes to the answers… Hmmmm, well I can safely say I know a few of the guests sense of humour a bit more now, and I will be afraid… very afraid.

 

For some of our group, this was the end of the trip, airport in the morning, and off home. However there is 3 days of R&R at Bandos Resort booked in for six of our group, some snorkelling, massages and lazing by the pool coming up, with perhaps a few cocktails thrown in for good measure.

 

MANTAS    SHARKS    TURTLES    WHALESHARK
What more could you want!?!

 

How about white sandy beaches, palm trees and sunsets….

Bandos Beach

 

Bandos Sunset

 

I believe by the end of the three days on Bandos Resort we had all had a great time!

Crane on beach at Bandos

Sue had managed to squeeze in as much snorkelling as possible, Gareth had managed to get some tranquil reading time in and enjoyed snorkelling off the beach right by the rooms, Nassera and I decided to get some Paddle Boarding lessons and had a good go at the watersports on offer, along with sampling the spa and cocktails.

We had regular sightings of the Crane, who was quite happy to fish with all the guests nearby, he’s obviously used to the attention.

Did I mention that we were thrilled on day one to see juvenile reef sharks in the shallows just off our beach, basically learning how to hunt in the shoals of fish lining the beach, being just half a meter away from them was amazing.

I won’t go into just how much food we all ate, all-inclusive means seconds and as many desserts as you can handle!

The last day finally arrived, it was with a heavy heart that I had to say goodbye to the sunshine and unlimited food.

Now just to decide what movies to watch on the plane!

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Ocean View Adventures in Scapa Flow 2015 – Part 1

Posted on October 22, 2015

Saturday 17th October

After 2 days, 758 miles and an overnight stop in Inverness we finally arrive in Stromness. The journey has been good and we even saw dolphins on the ferry crossing from Scrabster to Stromness.

MV Huskyan

MV Huskyan

We collected the car, left the ferry and drove round to the quayside for our first look at MV Huskyan. We passed Radiant Queen (our dive boat in 2013) on the way and then saw the new boat…….

Awesome!

She is a VERY big boat.

Emily is waiting for us and we are invited on board to start loading our kit. The handy new crane is used to bring all the techy boys’ cylinders and stages on-board. Crates are lowered and spots on the dive deck chosen. We received a quick briefing on what goes where and which lockers are whose. The full briefing will happen in the morning but for now everything is tidied away and we can now go and settle into the accommodation for the week.

The house is very spacious and Emily has got in a few essentials for us to get us settled in. Room-mates are negotiated, bags unpacked so the only thing left to do is relax and find the pub! Which is actually conveniently located directly opposite the house. Perfect!

Sunday 18th October

We gather on the boat at 8.00 am to finish the last bits of faffing and allow those that flew in to set up their kit. At 8.30 sharp Emily gives us the full boat briefing, dive procedures and most importantly the codes for the post dive drinks order. TM – tea with milk, TMS – tea with milk and sugar! All very easy.

9.10 the ropes are cast off and we set out into the Flow………..

Dresden

Our first dive of the trip is the Dresden. She is a light cruiser launched in April 1917 and went into service in 1918.

Displacement           5,531 tons

Engine                       2 coal/oil fired turbines

Length                       153 metres

Top speed                 28 knots

She was built very close to the end of the war when resources were scarce so was constructed on a bit of a shoe string – no brass or bronze here. She broke down en route to Scapa as a testament to the quality of her build. As a result though, there is very little salvage damage. When the hole was blown in her deck to retrieve the turbines the low quality was discovered and no further salvage was done.

She now rests on her port side at 34 metres and is slowly turning turtle. She is definitely more over than when we saw her 2 years ago.

Emily gives us our first history lesson/briefing. These have been further improved with the use of the Epic Pen! Which means Emily can annotate the wreck drawings and 3D images highlighting exactly what is where. Photographs are then used to show what you are looking for. This is all really useful stuff as the ships are so big, it’s a little dark and you have limited time!

We are to lookout for the deck peeling away from the hull exposing the deck beams, 5.9 inch deck guns and the ship’s crest on the bow.

Gun on the Karlsruhe

Gun on the Karlsruhe

We dive as a group of 4 as we are the only recreational divers, mostly on single 15 litre cylinders, in the group, which is fine as the cold generally will finish our dives before lack of bottom time. We had a 30% mix so a reasonable stay at depth.

We descend the stern shot and when we hit about 10 metres someone turns the lights out! I don’t remember it being this dark before.

Every time I equalised my ears water ran in to my mask so when I finally find the wreck at 27 metres I can hardly see. I cleared my mask just for it to slowly refill again. Seeing my gauges and computer is a bit of a struggle so adds to the stress levels somewhat. A wriggle of the hood seems to sort the mask out so I settle into the dive a bit more but not enough to use my camera.

We follow the edge of the wreck which is covered in life. We see the large railings of the bridge and then come to where the deck is peeling away showing all the deck beams like ribs. We reach the bow shot with 80 bar so decide to swim forward a little more to see if we can find the crest. The silt has been kicked up a bit so we may well have passed over the crest but it wasn’t visible to us.

We see crabs, wrasse, velvet swimming crabs, loads of star fish of all shapes and sizes and a sea scorpion sitting perfectly still on the hull. A very nice first dive but a little on the dark side.

Lunch!

Lunch!

Everyone safely back on board, lunch is served. It is pasta which is scrumptious and warming followed by ice cream. Baskets of various decorations and sauces are produced so we can create our own toppings. A bit like being a kid again! Yum.

During our surface interval Emily shouts from the wheel house “WHALE”……… we all run up to the bow to see. We wait patiently and sure enough, in the distance there is a spurt of water and then a dorsal fin…… we think it was a minke whale.

Karlsruhe

Our second dive of the day is the Karlsruhe which is another light cruiser. She was launched in 1916 and built to a higher spec than the Dresden. She lays on her starboard side in 28 metres of water on a slight slope. She is very broken up from the salvage of her engine turbines, condensers, the brass bridge and the cast bronze torpedo tubes.

Displacement           5,354

Engine                       2 coal/oil fired turbines

Top speed                 28 knots

Length                       150.8 metres

During the briefing Emily shares more information about the salvaging of the ships and points out the areas of interest. 5.9 inch guns, anchor capstan and the conning tower. She draws on the maps her suggested route and what to look out for……. fabulous.

We descend the line in our buddy two for this dive. The viz is much better and you could make out the dark shape of the wreck as you descended. I decide to try and get some pictures on this dive. The use of the strobe is still new to me so hopefully by the end of the week I should have some half decent pictures.

Capstan on the Karlsruhe

Capstan on the Karlsruhe

We see the 3 deck guns and one of the brass plates has been rubbed clean so it shines. We pass round the conning tower, pass the lifeboat davits on the sea bed and along to the capstans. Again we see loads of star fish, crabs, and lots of fish life.

A lovely dive and a great first day.

Monday 19th October 2015

We gather promptly at 8.00 again ready for ropes off at 8.30. There is a slight breeze today so not the flat calm waters we enjoyed yesterday but the Huskyan is still a very smooth sail. It was easy to forget you were on a boat as it’s so spacious and comfortable.

There is some debate on what to dive. The Kronprinz is an option or the Coln. The decider is that the Valkyrie dive boat has got to the Kronprinz first so we decide to dive the Coln.

SMS Coln

The Coln is a light cruiser launched in October 1916. She lays in 35 metres of water on her starboard side, her topside at 20 metres with her bow tip clear of the sea bed. She is still in relatively good condition and has an almost complete range finder still in place on the conning tower.

Displacement           5,531

Engine                       2 sets of coal/oil fired turbines and twin propellers

Length                       155.5 metres

Top Speed                29 knots

Emily once again gives us a very comprehensive briefing. The shot line is tied around a piece of the bridge mid ship and the recommendation is to head to the bow. Following the centre line of the deck there is the bridge structure, conning tower, two gun mounts left after the guns were salvaged, anchor capstans, the hawse chain hole and then over the top to follow the line of the deck back to the shot. If you have enough time and air then forward of the shot is the torpedo box (the only complete one left in Scapa) and diagonally down from there is a smallish gun.

Gun Mounts - Coln

Gun Mounts – Coln

We descend the line in our buddy 2 again and the viz is good. The Coln is a lovely wreck which I enjoyed very much last time we were here. We follow the briefing instructions and head along the centre line of the ship keeping the deck on our left shoulder. The conning tower is huge! The gap between the range finder and the tower top is quite small so having seen the photos during the briefing really helps us identify what we were looking at. The ship is covered in brittle stars….. Everywhere seems to wriggle and writhe with legs, shoals of fish, anemones and more starfish….. Lots of life on these monsters of destruction!

Back aboard another fantastic feast is waiting. Jacket spud, beans and cheese. My favourite! Pudding today is warm ginger cake which is gorgeous.

Warmed up and refuelled we headed to Burra Sound to see one of the block ships. These ships were sunk on purpose to block some of the entrances and exits to Scapa Flow. The main entrances were blocked with chain link metal curtains pulled across by boats but the small gaps were filled with sunken boats or had roads built between them to close the gaps.

Gobernador Bories

We would be diving Gobernador Bories wich was a 2,332 ton steamer that worked as a whaling ship in Chile, Argentina and the Falklands. She was bought by the British Admiralty to sink at Scapa Flow but this didn’t run smoothly and she sank in the wrong place. She now lies on her port side between 13 – 17 metres.

We have to wait for slack water as this area is tidal and we have strict instructions to be ready to jump at 1.55. We could have anything up to an hour in the water before the current starts to run again back out to the Atlantic. The briefing is brief as this is only a small, broken up wreck sitting at about 16 metres but the viz should be excellent. There will be kelp, lots of fish and an intact propeller.

We busy ourselves with kitting up and are obediently ready at 1.55, sitting at on the benches waiting for orders.

Fighting Butterfish

Fighting Butterfish

Finally, the signal to jump is given and we drop in to the water, swim for the shot and descend. You can see the sea bed coming into view quite quickly and the green clears to beautiful clear water. The wreck structure is visible but very broken up and there is plenty of fish and crabs. The water feels definitely cooler than this morning. A chilly 11 degrees. Brrrrrr.

We swim slowly towards the stern, picking our way through the kelp, watching the fish and crabs going about their business. I spy 2 butterfish having a fight, trying to bite lumps out of each other. The current is starting to pick up so we peer round the stern to see the propeller and rudder and then retrace our fin kicks to the bow.

Cold getting the better of us we inflate the SMB and gradually make our way to the surface.

A huge mug of tea and cheesy puffs are waiting for us and we then head back to Stromness.

Tuesday 20th October

Kronprinz Wilhelm

Today we will start with the Kronprinz Wilhelm

Displacement           25,388 tons

Engine                       46,000 horsepower turbines, 3 propellers

Length                       175 metres

Top Speed                23 knots

The Kronprinz was a Konig class battleship and sits virtually upturned on the sea bed, resting on her starboard deck at about 38 metres. Her super structure is buried in the seabed but there is a lip that can be swum under to see two of the 10 inch guns, upside down on the sea bed. They are huge. It took 75 men to operate one of these guns and the shells were nearly a ton in weight.

Emily clearly explains the layout and how to find the guns – just follow the shot all the way to the seabed. Head towards the stern and you will find the huge rudders sticking up. There is a lot of salvage damage. The engines, the 5 torpedo tubes and the armoured plating from along the hull edge have all been blown off the ship. So once passed the rudders bear right to follow the line of the hull up to about 15 metres to avoid getting lost in the salvage damage.

Life on the Karlsruhe

Life on the Karlsruhe

I’m sure I we can manage that!

We wait patiently for the techy boys to kit up, clip on their different stages and jump in the water. The boat circles round again and we jump in the water. As instructed we follow the line all the way down, past where it is tied into the wreck down towards the sea bed. We peer under the lip and can see the metal sides of the guns. Another diver is heading towards me and as I turn I realise I have inadvertently swum under the lip down the side of the ship. Eek. It is dark and the viz not at its best so making out what is what is a little tricky even after a fantastic briefing.

We follow the deck line to the stern and are greeted by the huge rudders. Aahh, I remember these! They are still just as impressive even in the limited light that we have. We swim between these huge structures up on to the hull which is covered in white plumose anemones and allows us to shallow out the dive to about 18 metres to properly enjoy the white carpet beneath us. Starting to feeling cold we send up the SMB after 30 minutes and slowly ascend.

Lunch today is a lovely beef curry followed by a choice of banana cake or lemon drizzle cake. Yum. Weight will need to be removed from my BC at this rate!

Brummer

Displacement            4,308 tons

Engine                       twin turbine

Length                        139 metres

Top Speed                34 knots

The Brummer was a fast mine layer launched in 1915. As a mine layer she was constructed longer, thinner and lighter than the cruisers and could carry 360 mines. The mines were rolled off the back of the ship in trolleys which became the mine’s anchor and the mine itself would then float up and become operational. She was armed but not as heavily as the other ships as she was never intended to be in the thick of fighting. More a nip in, drop mines, nip out kinda boat. She was also a sneaky ship with a mast that could be lowered to mimic the silhouette of the Aurora, a British ship – I remember this from the briefing 2 years ago.

Her lighter construction means she has deteriorated more than some of the other wrecks. She now rests on her starboard side at 36m with the side of her hull at 24m. The deck is slowly peeling away and only held in place by the capstans on the bow. The key things to look out for are a deck gun, the bridge structure, the conning tower upside down on the sea bed and an iris from the large flash lights used to open and close the light for signalling – I also remember we found this by chance last time.

Life on the Karlsruhe

Life on the Karlsruhe

We kit up and wait patiently again for the techy boys to attach all their bits and bobs. I sit marvelling at the amount of kit one diver can carry and pondered whether it is worth all that extra faff. Finally it is our buddy 3’s turn and we wait for the shout to giant stride in to the water. Splash. Splash. Splash….. Followed by furious paddling back again to collect my camera being passed down to me. By the time I get to the shot line I am out of puff.

We are a buddy three as another buddy pair had a couple of problems with their ascents on the last dive so one of our divers is taking a well-earned rest. We descend the line slowly, stopping to check our new buddy’s cuff dump is now working correctly and then continue down the line.

Dark, dark, dark!

We are about 1.5 – 2 metres above the wreck before we can see it. We can see the techy boys’ torches flicking around below us. We follow the deck line with the wreck on our right looking for the gun. Fin. Fin. Fin. We must have missed it. Eventually we turn back towards the shot and the bridge structure. Just as we are getting low on bottom time the iris comes in to view. I try to take a couple of rushed pictures and then we head up trying to shallow the dive. The edge of the deck is at about 25 metres so didn’t help overly with buying back some bottom time. We hit 2 mins remaining so signal to ascend.

Post dive snacks!

Post dive snacks!

Back on board there is cheese and biscuits waiting with some rather tasty local cheeses.

As we sail back to Stromness the conversation turns to the weather. We are due to have some bad weather but the forecast keeps moving when it will arrive. It is now looking like Thursday could be at risk from the weather gods. Emily says she will keep us informed as things can change very quickly up here.

We will have to wait and see……

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