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Vancouver Island, Vancouver (by Walter Marti)
The captain tried to impress us with on of the top dives of the area. Browning Wall, it goes down hundreds of feet from the surface. Covered in white metridiums, soft corals, metridiums, lots of diverse invertebrates, metridiums, a macro heaven, and more metridiums. After the dive the three of us were unimpressed. It’s hard for me to take macro video shots on a sheer vertical wall, I can’t anchor my camera. Linda loved it but, been there done that. Amos, thought it was nice, what was the name of his website again?? John suggested we try a spot for wolf eels, not very picturesque, but surrounded by wreckage of a sunken ship. Great dive. Lots of stuffs. And, I could anchor my video camera. Linda and I didn’t have to find the wolf eels, they found us. At least one did. He came out and was all over Linda. She had to push him away to get a picture. I got some great video of the two interacting. Amos, went the wrong way and didn ’t see them. After seeing my video, he was impressed. “No one has shots like these!” He inquired if we could go again. Fine by us. He asked Linda what it would take for her to leave her camera behind and haul a second camera for him, and be his model. She told him that a great shot of her and the eel that she could put on the wall would be payment. Deal!! My duty was to find the same spot. Which I did, and the eel found us again. He unloaded 72 shots on the two of them, I got more video. We all came back elated. And six hours later, we did it again. Linda, the model and Amos shooting 72 more. After the eels we tried a change of pace. More beautiful metridium clad walls. I spied a fish I wanted to video. It dashed into a hole, I looked inside and didn’t see anything. Outside I found a pretty little nudibranch and set up a macro shot. Suddenly my camera was being grabbed from me. I look up and see a six foot octopus with four arms on my camera and four still in that hole. After a quick tug of war, he realized it wasn’t as tasty as he had thought. There were high wind warning for the first few day we were there. The Clavella hid out in a quiet cove on Nigei Island, at The Hideaway, a floating house, lodge, boat slips, and miscellaneous out buildings (all needing work). This was our base of operation. After the fourth day, the winds subsided and we finally moved on to a new locale, Shushartie Bay on Vancouver Island. There we made three more dives for wolf eels, as well as octopus. When returned back to Port Hardy, Linda and I went south to Port McNeil to do some whale watching. We went out on a boat, and whales we did see. Lots of Orcas, Killer Whales and a sole humpback. It was a really enjoyable, and different trip. My idea of vacation always included, palm trees, rum drinks with little umbrellas and bikinis. Not conifers, rum toddies and drysuits. Would I do it again? I could be talked into it. I experienced many things I hadn’t before, and enjoyed them all."
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