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Conditions:
Seas 3-5 and snotty with 6ft swells
Visibility: 35 ft and green
Water Temp: 81 degrees
Dive 1: Moby 1 Barge and Moby's Reef
S: Jody (lead, anchor), Matt (fish), Mike W.
(deco)
A: Jody 30/30 Matt and Mike 32%
D: Plan 100ft, Max 103ft, Avg 80ft
D: 30 minutes BT
D: Explore 150ft off the anchor with reel,
then turn and drift with Anchor to shallower reef
D: 50/1 40/1 30/1 20/3 10/3 = 9 mins
RB: 1000 PSI
With the rougher seas Jody choose the longer
and more pleasant run around Cape Florida before heading out
into the ocean. Jody and I were diving single 80s so we choose
an adventure dive to the Moby 1. A barge that none of us had
visited. There is an excitement the builds were visiting
somewhere new and not knowing what your going to find. Jody
explained that this barge was not put down by the Miami DERM. It
was an illegal sinking, and as such, it was probably put down
next to or on top of the reef to attract more fish.
I stopped the boat within 1 ft of the GPS
numbers and there was nothing to be seen on the bottom. This
barge went through Andrew and the GPS numbers were wrong. Jody
took over and made several passes up and down the reef line
looking for it on the sounder. He got a good reading and we
dropped anchor to explore. After confirming that it set, we
geared up and jumped in.
The water was thick and murky. We hit some
patch reef that was 20 ft wide and 4-8 feet off the bottom in
places. Several large fish, but no big schools. Jody had an idea
on which way to swim so we tied off the reel and swam out.
Nothing but reef. We turned and swam back to the anchor. Jody
clipped off the lift bag and we lifted off on using the "poor
man's scooter". There is another reef line with the wreck of the
Tarpon in 80ft of water. It took us over 10 minutes of drifting
to hit the next ledge.
This reef was a sloping reef line that went
from 80ft to 50 ft or so. We set the anchor and headed off again
in search of the Tarpon. No luck again. We were skunked on two
wrecks, but saw some new reef. Jody thumbed the dive and Mike
ran the minimal deco up the line. At 10 feet we cut the ascent
short as the occasional jellyfish we saw at 20ft became a wall
of them at 10 ft. We bolted back to the boat. Since we never hit
the barge, we named the reef area after the barge.
Dive 2: St. Anne D' Aurey
S: Matt (lead) Mike (deco), and Jody
(anchor)
A: Jody 30/30, Matt and Mike 32%
D: Plan 80ft, Max 74ft
D: 50 min bt
D: Around the wreck with possible drift
D: 40/1 30/1 20/3 10/2 = 7 mins
RB: 1000 PSI
Fish count: 33 species
We lifted anchor from the first dive and
prepared for the next drop on the wreck. My first attempt had a
weak reading on the sounder and anchor didn't set. We hauled it
up and ran for another drop. After the anchor was deployed we
drifted right over the wreck and the anchor set only 130ft from
the numbers. We geared up and jumped in again.
I didn't waste anytime getting to 20 ft,
under the "jelly-cline" that was as solid as the last location.
We swam over the wreck to the anchor in the sand and made sure
it was set. Then we swam over to the wreck with a very
impressive bow. On the wreck I realized I was narc'd out of my
brains. Way more than usual for a 70 ft dive. I was guessing it
was CO2 build up and I choose an easy path to the stern with
some deep slow breathing.
The Bridge was in the middle of the boat.
Underneath was the engine room packed with Glassy Sweepers. I
didn't feel good enough to go in so we continued on. The stern
had skylights showing a room underneath, but I couldn't figure
out how to get in. I continued up the port side of the boat that
was listed into the sand. At midship, about 10 minutes later my
head cleared and I felt like swimming through the inside from
hatch to hatch. The inside was packed with fish. The engine and
what looked like a generator inside. Back on the starboard side
we continued up to the bow. Just past the striped out and open
bridge was a large winch with Gray and Schoolmaster Snapper
swimming underneath. I found a Blackbar Soliderfish tucked
inside the gears.
There were two cargo holds with holes big
enough to swim through. Jody and I swam down into one and popped
right out the other. There was nothing to see inside. The bow
section was cut open on both sides for another swim thru. I went
in the hatch and choose the port side to exit as the starboard
had several entanglement hazards. I looked behind me to see my
team exiting. Then I looked left to find the snarled teeth of a
Barracuda a foot away from my head. He was not happy with my
invasion. He swam around in from of me, past the bow. Once the
team exited he swam past us again like a sentry patrolling the
side of the ship. I swam around the outside one more time and
ended at the starboard side next to the anchor.
30 minutes into the dive and Jody gave the
team signal to "drift off" the wreck with the anchor. I Ok'd and
Mike tossed a thumb. We replied and headed up the line. Even
with my problems at first, it was a very good dive. On the boat
we debriefed and explained to Mike the difference between our
teams directional signals on site and drifting signals to go to
another site.
Even with the rough weather we made a great
dive trip.
--Matt |