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Maldives (M.V.Keema, Reethi Beach) : 7th April 1999 by Derek Dear

Lincoln and District BSAC109
Dive report on the Maldives 99
 
Back two weeks and just posting the first of the dive reports, trying to write the log, edit the ten hours of video film, sort out the 500 plus photos and even been told the lawn needs cutting! Was planning to upload the report in one lump, a very long long report, with a video attachment and a number of large full screen colour photos (but thought Keith might have a fit, so will space it out a bit. <g>)
 
Day one
 
Our first dive in this years Club trip to the Maldives, we are diving off the MV.Keema. Today's dive is the checkout splash after a long journey. It is on Kuda Giri, which is a reef wall with a substantial wreck lying at 18m descending down to 34m. The group of ten divers sorted out their weights before descending down to twenty meters, slight problem with ears caused by long dry journey? Reef has been damaged by 'El Nino' but here the effect is quite patchy, overhangs and caves as good as ever, and patches of Coral look fine but in between too many dead areas. The plan was to swim around the Giri , in a clockwise direction with a diversion off to see the wreck . First lionfish of the trip, concentrating on the reef almost missed the wreck and as the Vis was 25+ and we were only twenty odd meters away, it was a shock to turn around and see it. Still boat shaped and lying upright, looked at the wheel house and cargo hold, then back to the reef, plenty of fish, water warm and great viz. What more could you ask for from a checkout dive. Sixty mins of very easy diving.
 
Dive two started fantastic and then got better! Slow getting into the water as Nick got tangled up with the video camera, as we descended we were met by two large eagle rays, they were spooked by the earlier divers, they circled us then we started a fast drift dive along the reef wall, loads of life, very large Napoleons (Cheiilinus undulatus), then came across a sleepy hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), when it awoke it must have been surprised to discover it was surrounded by divers! as it circled  another turtle joined it. Coral was bleached but the wildlife was abundant. No chance to stop and look as the current was strong, but very easy diving so air consumption good.
 
Today's third dive was full of Moray Eels, they seemed to be everywhere , saw my first honeycomb eel  (Gymnothorax favagineus) and even saw one sharing a hole with a more common yellow-margined (Gymothorax flavimarginatus)  eel, all were fairly well grown specimens.
 
Day Two
 
Dived today with John C , not a member of our Club, who we met on Board Keema, said to be an advance Diver, in his middle to late sixties, he had said he did not want a deep dive which suited me as I was not bothered about doing a  40+ m dive. Began with a quite hard fin, which turned into an impossible dive as when I reached the reef wall saw divers hanging on! Grabbed John as he hurtled past and we all agreed to abandon the dive. Entered again at the other end of the reef to reach the corner where we attempted to hang on to view the passing sharks. Not being very comfortable and seeing two other divers peel off we decided to join them. A quick drift dive was in progress when John suddenly grabbed the dead reef and stopped. With great difficulty I fought my way back to him where he signalled he was at 50 bar, as we were in only 15m it was no problem, so at the next convenient area when he signalled to ascend I agreed.
Then things began to go wrong, the pickup doni was above us, other divers were completing their dives and requiring the boat and John got out his SMB and decided he wanted to be left to float along at six meters, to watch the fish! , Refusing to heed my signals that he was drifting on to the reef, the boat could not follow and other divers were in need of a pickup. John then did a ten-min stop, endangering the boat, divers and my temper! No one of our group would dive with this Prat for the rest of the holiday!
 
Buddied in a threesome, slow descent to twenty meters, reef a bit dead but that just showed up the colour of the fish. Moray eels, LionFish and huge groupers. Bit slow at first swimming up the centre of the channel, saw a crevice full of painted crayfish, Panulirus versicolor, huge antennae, six feet from tip to tip,. Saw a friendly turtle that fell in love with the video camera and came up to investigate. Then on to the  reef edge, monitoring air was glad others had a  similar amount left, decided to swim into the blue to watch a vast shoal of Jacks, Carangoides fulvoguttatus, spinning and circling making patterns in space, a quite amazing sight. The dive was ended with a drift back along the channel, the current being more noticeable now , on the return journey saw a free swimming Moray eel.
 
A wall dive, the bottom out of sight! Descended to a line of overhangs, swim through and small caves. Lots of life on the wall, Dive guide showed me some micro shrimps, hiding in the caves, it is amazing how most divers seem to miss the best creatures of the reef while searching for the large sharks and rays, during the next few dives I saw five different species of Nudibranch some the size of my finger nail and others a couple of inches long, these were exciting as the colours were vivid. Then a large Octopus, a huge Napoleonfish, dark green with red eyes and bigger than me! Not bothered about us divers, then along came the sharks, large white tipped reef sharks. By this time air was running low so ascended to the reef top which was completely dead, to have a very fast exciting drift dive back along the channel, a great way of finishing the dive.
 
Day three
 
Spent a lot of time as the coral was in such a bad way looking for Nudibranchs. These for the uninitiated are molluscs without shells. Sometimes called sea slugs, but nothing like their dry land cousins, these nudibranches are very highly coloured, undersea works of art, which being molluscs do not move very fast, so a photographers dream subject, I saw them in size from half an inch to a whopping four inches. Altogether five different types, from dull light brown to one, which was purple with black and white stripes! Another was white with a circle of black spots.
There are a huge number in the Maldives, usually found on the reef top feeding on sponges. Nudibranches often lay their eggs in brightly coloured rings, which delicately adorn the reef.
 
Unfortunately due to not having a Macro lens on the Sea & Sea camera pictures taken were disappointing.
 
Same dive as yesterday, but with the idea to go a bit deeper to see more caves, did not happen as we are all now getting close to decompression time, so repeated earlier dive, still lots to see and we this time spent longer on the reef point. The dive had started with a cruise through a large pod of spinner dolphins, Stenella longirostris, named because they will jump out of the water and spin on their tails! Others said they could hear the calls underwater, (not me!) difficult diving as a threesome and as I knew John W. was experienced stayed with Nick as he had the video camera to control. At the reef point, as usual lots of feeding fish and in came a cruising shark. Waited for the next event as the other divers were leaving as they were running low on air, we were only at twelve meters so felt confident to wait and watch. Finally rose on to the reef top and over to the sandy gully floor where the others were doing a safety stop , looked around one last time and saw the largest eagle ray, aetobatis narinari . Swim majestically past, almost wore a hole in my cylinder trying to attract the others attention, finally they looked down and saw it as I followed the dive guide back to the reef edge. Did a good six-min safety stop to finish this wonderful dive.
 
Day Four
 
This was again close to the bleached coral so we knew what to expect, but was lucky as soon as we had descended we spotted two Eagle Rays and a medium size Shark. Unfortunately the dive deteriorated after that and apart from a friendly large Titan Trigger fish, Balistoides Viridescens , not a lot else was seen, was using the video camera again hoping that we could get some good footage of the smaller fish. Nick and I soon separated from the others as the current picked upped. We knew that all we had to do was to go with the current and that the boat would follow. After fifty mins was getting a low on air when we spotted a sandy patch and an anchor line! We had taken the dhoni, the diving support vessel., from the Keema to the dive site but by superb underwater navigation , or good luck, had landed back at the live aboard MV Keema.
 
Our problem today was our decompression warnings.  Nine, thirty plus dives in three days is beginning to add up, so will miss out the afternoon dive.
 
Today's site was a cliff wall down to a sandy bottom at approx. fifty-five meters, Saw rays and barracuda, stops at nine meters and at six meters meant that the dive was shorter than the previous ones.
One of the best things our group had decided on before coming to the Maldives was that each diver would carry a ' Clanger' strapped to his cylinder. This resulted in that everyone saw everything that was spotted, a Ray, Shark or turtle caused a clang and a pointing arm, no getting back on the boat and half the divers seeing less than the other half.
 
Took the video camera again, even as we descended we spotted a sleeping stingray and another bigger one further on.  While filming, getting very close, a white tip reef shark swam into view. The next half hour was quite pleasant, getting blasĘ about seeing Morays, Lion fish and Groupers. Nick, my dive buddy, and I fell behind the rest of the group, our normal position, we examined everything before swimming on, sometimes long after the others had forged ahead. Suddenly Nick grabbed the camera, I do not know how he had spotted two Octopuses. One dark brown and the other who changed colour rapidly going through the complete spectrum. A marvelous sight, and the dark brown one sat on a rock and remained in view. Had we disturbed the beginning of the next generation of Octopuses?
 
Day five
 
Today's dive was full of sharks, none to close but clearly visible in deep water, also Eagle rays. Had a warning come upon the dive computer as I entered decompression time and then went slightly deeper to photograph yet another Shark!. Paid the price with a lengthy stop at six meters and as a precaution, and as I was tired missed out the afternoon dive.
 
Needed to change 'O' ring on cylinder before diving, the equipment supplied by MV Keema was all first class, so entered the water with 180bar. Descended at reef edge, cleared ears at seven meters and again at eighteen meters, right ear has been slow to clear this trip. Visibility not as good only twenty meters!, was on the look out for something big but no luck, Down about thirty five meters when Nick signalled to me"4" I first thought he meant he had only four mins left of no-deco time, then realised he meant, did I want to go to forty meters, as it was a sandy bottom at the base of the reef , So I had my photo taken at forty one meters. Slow ascend followed, we had by this time lost the others so explored the reef face. Saw an octopus but it could not be tempted out of its hole, neither could the Morays, hopefully took a good photo of a large Napoleon which swam up to me. Finished the dive watching the small stuff at approx. eight meters.
 
Good wall dive, very gentle, white tip reef sharks in the distance, nothing very close, till we get to the corner of the reef, after the previous deep dives we have kept to approx. thirty meters to keep deco times to the minimum. Others went to the overhangs and swim through. Said to be better coral at the deeper parts of the wall, still lots to see of the marine life.  At the corner of the reef was a bit deeper than the others when a shark came to investigate, was my closest encounter to date, he was at my depth and came right at me! got the camera going as fast as I could hit the button. Wonderful, then into the channel, fairly stiff current took us close to a large cave where a giant Napoleonfish was prowling, it came out with a bit of persuasion from Nick.
 
First night dive of the holiday, its the dive I always look forward to. We had arrived at Guraidhu and for the first time in days saw other dive boats, a popular site, we arrived just as a huge pod of dolphins were sighted, larger than our dive guide had seen before, the pod was estimated at more than a hundred and remained quite close to the dive boats for most of the day and were still in the area the next day.
The night dive was around a small Thila called locally Potato reef, a good choice for a night dive as the boat could anchor above the thila on a sandy basin, and in an hours dive the divers can circle the reef and wherever they are they would be able to surface and see the boat.
We descended over the reef edge and I did what I normally do and switched off my torch and relied on the lights from my buddies' video camera as using a camera and a large torch is not practical. Its a small reef and when we had been shown it from the boat we thought that in our hour we would circle it half a dozen times, in fact by taking it slowly and seeing some much life we circled it just over a once and a third. We started the dive at 6:30 and some thought this was a little early but by the time we were at 15-20 meters it was dark enough and soon it was totally black. Life was abundant, first saw some cleaner shrimp, almost transparent then a large Nudibranch, tried to  get my buddies attention by feeling for my cylinder 'Clanger' but it had slipped and as I was searching for it a hand suddenly grabbed mine and placed it on the line, another diver from the group had seen me and had quessed the trouble and had helped me out,  next a sleeping turtle was surrounded by divers and then an Octopus was chased over the reef by the cameras, it changed colours and gave quite a show, throw in Moray eels, Lion fish large hermit crabs and a host of beautiful things I have yet to discover names for it is no wonder that this dive was rated to be the best dive done by many of the group , with some divers naming it the best ever in over 200 logged dives!

Miyaru Kandu:
 
Dropped into the water and descended to 20m. Arrived at a boring, flat, sandy area. Thought this dive would be a complete wash out, but as I had the video camera, decided to make sure all divers were filmed. Suddenly, Mick spotted a honeycomb Moray Eel. It was large, and very pretty. Mick coaxed it from its hole by wiggling his fingers. Was able to sit on the sandy bottom and film. About 10m further on, they all began to signal. A horizontal crack in the wall, bout 3m long, was crammed full of about 20 spiny lobsters. So intent on all being in the same gap, some were clinging upside down on the roof. Another boring patch followed then Mick called me to look round a rock. A darkish-brown, huge scorpion fish lay on a grey rock. Could get quite close to film, but not quite as close as Mick wanted. Saw some garden eels. Found I was using more air than usual, due to using video camera. Another empty patch of white sand. Albert (Dive guide) took out his slate. "Anyone for snow boarding?" It looked just like a ski slope. At the bottom was a huge sea cucumber. Nick saw a Triton triggerfish  propped against a rock. It didn't move, but was still alive, as it watched us.
By now, were at about 7m and at 40 bar, I signalled to Nick to ascend. Could have been a boring dive, but had its exciting moments.
 
Dive eighteen: Full Moon: Kuda Thila.
Our last dive from the Keema. Only the seven from 109 Lincoln did this dive with both our dive guides. A gentle, relaxed dive to finish the week, the aim was to stay shallow, as some folk were flying home next day. It is surprising how much more we saw than we would have done earlier in the holiday. I spotted my first stone fish without help. Also saw a ribbon eel and a Ghost Moray.
 
Reethi Beach hotel, opened last November, medium size, lots of extras, ( that were not needed, like a Gym, Badminton and Tennis  Court and Swimming pool,) Food , International, will never win prizes but you do not go to the Maldives for gourmet nosh. Salad Bar at lunch and Dinner, all meals buffet style and a very good range of desserts and cakes at meal times, I am said to be a finicky eater, (Wot Me?) I found something to eat at every meal.
Rooms had the most sophisticated Air conditioning I have ever seen, all remote controlled,)  TV and a good size but best  of all Maldive Bathrooms, these bathrooms were bigger than the cabin I had on the liveaboard, about three times the size,   and were without a roof, sit back and watch the stars! Open Air showers, yes plural, the bathrooms had two high pressure showers so no waiting for a shower , shower with a friend! Sheer Luxury.
 
Staff were friendly, and with a disabled wife could not do enough to make things as pleasant as possible, allowed free emails , could have posted this dive log direct from the dive site if I had thought! 
 
First dive at Reethi Beach Hotel House reef, told that the reef was dead, so with trepidation we had our kit taken to the entry point, its the best way to dive! Entry from the beach , thirty meters to the drop off, where we descended to only eighteen plus visibility. A slow drift along the wall and in the space of the next hour we saw , half a dozen lion fish, five Moray eels, range ring from a couple of feet to a four footer, a friendly turtle who wanted to play, three Nudibranches, the common purple one with black spots, a thin ribbon type ,blue white and green and finally a dark brown one which was new to me.Also saw an octopus which would not leave its home and a large green shrimp thing<?> again not recognised, well I am a diver not a expert!
 
The dive school is Sea Explorer, run by Robert , their equipment  was new and so still in good condition, the hotel only opened last November. We were charged 168 pounds for unlimited diving on the House reef, if it had been full of live coral it would still be a bit expensive as after four dives plus a night dive we felt we had seen it all, so paid extra, sixteen dollars for a two tank dive off a boat and visited local dive sites. The boat dive would normally cost thirty dollars plus the sixteen dollar boat fee, that's thirty odd pounds for a trip and cylinder plus weights a bit expensive.
 
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Derek Dear          
Lincoln Club Secretary
Club Web Page
http://homepages.enterprise.net/linclub/derek/bsac109.html
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