During our time here, I have been checking updates on the volcano hoping
we could see some interesting lava flows, but unfortunately, the
volcano has been very tame the entire time. We are out of time so we
spent yesterday exploring the Southern part of the island including
Volcano National Park.
This is the route we took.
We cooked nearly all our meals outside on the patio. Including breakfast before our long day of exploring.
Our first stop was this tiny town Milolii. The whole town in built on
new lava right on the coast. It seems like a neat place. We drove to the
end of the road shown in the photo.
After a short hike from our parking spot, we arrived at this wonderful beach. There was only one other family there.
The water had neat rocks at some parts with fish swimming everywhere.
Underwater was a mix of black and grey sand.
This is a blackside hawkfish I snapped a photo of while we were snorkeling there.
Our next stop was South Point, a place with an interesting military history. This house caught our eye.
The Southernmost part of the United States
South Point is a highly visited spot by many tourists. We saw lots of
people climb out of their cars and snap photos at the cliffs near the
parking lot. I think this place is a neat attraction because it is the
Southernmost spot in the United States and many tourists mistake the
parking lot area as "The South Point" If you walk South for a few
minutes you get to the actual South Point (shown in our photos). Or at
least I think this is the South Point. The point to the right (East) has
rocks going out further into the surf, but I am guessing the only count
land above the high tide mark as land. As you can see from the google
map photo, there is not much out there.
Shelley furthur South on land in the United States than anyone else in the world.
Our next stop was a black sand beach with tons of people and tons of sun-bathing turtles.
Next, we headed to Volcano National Park. Here is Shelley near some steam vents in the park.
The park has a lighted lava tube you can hike through.
The park is also located in a very lush rainforest.
Our final stop was Hilo for dinner. I saw this large tree near our parking spot.
On the two hour drive back, we were treated with an awesome sunset and some chilly temperatures (see below).
This is our last post for this trip. Thank you to everyone who has been reading along. See you guys soon.
For months I have been reading about South Point and I have found it is
known for two things, large pelagic fish (swordfish, tuna, sharks,
dolphinfish, jacks, etc) and a nasty current. The current at the point
is apparently so strong since ancient times boats have tied to the cliff
to avoid been swept away on a non-stop trip to Antarctica. This site
was a little spooky, but I had to see what was under the surface. The
photos tell the rest of the story.
South Point is the Southern most point in the entire United States and
below the cliffs is crystal clear water. The figures below the water are
large rocks (van size) about 30-50 feet under water.
On the top of the cliff is several boat hoist used long ago to lower small boats into the waters below.
Near the boat hoists is this rusty ladder that takes you to the water 40
feet below. It swings in the wind and is made of rebar welded to tube
steel. This ladder is usually used by cliff divers who climb back up
after jumping to the water below.
Below the ladder is some ropes tied to the cliff and ladder to help anyone who is about to be swept away by the current.
I threw my camera and fins over my shoulder and climbed down the ladder.
The water seemed about 30-40 feet deep at the base of the ladder.
While down there, I did not detect much of a current, but I stayed near
the rope just in case. A current pulling you from shore with no chance
of rescue is too creepy for me to risk.
Underwater the rope had some interesting life swimming near it. The
small fish are baby jacks. They will hopefully grow to be several feet
in length. The photo below also has a neat crab on the rope (look carefully).
Below me was lots of neat fish and large boulders. If you look closely,
you can see another ladder. It was kind of a discouraging site.
The hardest part was the climb back up. Here is a photo of the ladder from the water. Some of the ladder seemed a little shady.
This time, I really just wanted to see if I could get down there. With
more rope and planning, it would be amazing to dive there. Maybe next
time.
Yesterday, I found a cool small cave about 160 feet down. Unfortunately,
it is difficult to take photos of videos that deep because the camera
housing starts failing at around 120 feet due to the pressure pushing
several buttons on the camera at once. I figured out a way to squeeze a
few more out of the camera housing and took a flashlight down to the
cave today. I was able to film some neat Hawaiian Longfinned Anthias.
There are two videos and descriptions of what was going on below.
The
first video you can see long wire corals as I am approaching the cave
as well as several fish. The second video mainly features the anthias.
The video is not too awesome as most of the functions on the camera were
failing due to pressure.
The video starts at about 120 feet as I am swimming through a boulder
field and coral rubble. In this area there is a little current and long
wire corals grow. Around 45 seconds, you can see several wire corals. At
1:06, I hit the bottom at 162 feet and start filming the cave with my
flashlight. At 1:40 you can see my depth at 162 feet and my dive
computer starts warning me that I am too deep. The video ends as I
approach the Hawaiian Longfinned Anthias. The male is the large one and
females are the smaller ones behind them.
In other news, Shelley and I found the coolest playground. It features multi-level
castles, bridges, and even ship. Everything is made of wood and very
well done. We love the humpback weathervane. It was raining when I took
these pictures, so they are not that great, but the park is massive and
wonderful.
The last several days have been amazing! On Monday, Shelley and I got up early and drove nearly 300 miles exploring the
island. This island is big. Here is the route we took. This took us
through rolling green hills, cloud forest, dry wastelands, rainforest, lava flows, a zoo, and giant swells hitting a cliff.
One of our first stops was a cave that continues for miles. I went 100
yards until I couldn't see the entrance and stopped trusting my
flashlight. On my out I snapped this photo of Shelley at the entrance.
One of our favorite stops was at a zoo. There was less than 20 people at
the whole zoo and the animals were very friendly. These nice donkeys
walked over to us when we talked to them and let us pet their noses
(which are as soft as a puppy's belly).
This is the largest bromeliad I have ever seen. Between each leaf was a
small ecosystem. These plants are what poison dart frogs breed in, but
there are not any dart frogs on the big island.
Here is Shelley next to a lava tree. This is the result of hot lava hitting a very moist large tree.
We found this wonderful state park (no one was there but us). The part
is a huge Ironwood tree forest right on the ocean cliffs. The sea was
angry.
Here are some of the waves and Shelley's "stay 50 feet from the cliff rule"
On Tuesday, we got more diving in and had maybe our most memorable experience with Green Sea Turtles from shore. Humuhumunukunukuapua'a (the Hawaiian state fish) are fairly easy to
find, but difficult to photograph. I have several hundred bad photos of
these fish where they are blurry and swimming away from my camera. When
photographing fish, I have learned, many ignore you if you ignore them,
but as soon as you face them, they swim away. I wanted a good
triggerfish photo and I saw this fish in about 5 feet of water and he
had just gulped up a huge scoop of sand (probably eating a crab) he
turned to me and spit out the sand (through his gills) as I snapped his
photo.
One of my favorite fish are anthais. These are some of the most colorful
fish but usually live in places too deep to dive. I have been following
another divers blog and he has wonderful long-finned anthais photos. He
talked about a particular site he sees them and I followed his lead and
found this little guy. This is the first one I have ever seen and he
was not shy at all and allowed me to take tons of photos of him as he
gulped plankton from the water.
Some of the turtles here are not shy either. This one (which I think has
been fed by people) would come over to Shelley's voice and rest his
head near her feet. We didn't touch the turtle but did take good photos
of it.
In other news, our dryer was broken in our original condo, so we were "upgraded" to a different condo. The view is more ocean and we can
see the cruise ship that comes every Wednesday. Here is our view:
Thursday night was certainly a highlight of this trip. Here is the story: Shelley really wanted to do the night dive with Manta Rays here on
the Big Island. To my surprise, Shelley suggested we just climb in the
ocean after dark and swim several hundred yards around a point out to open sea to the spot
the boats take the divers (which they charge $150 each). To be honest, it
sounded pretty scary to me, swimming in the open ocean at night is a
little intimidating, but I didn't tell Shelley it sounded scary. The
photo below is Shelley getting her gear ready after dark. The shore was
dark, so we tied glow sticks to each other and to the lava cliff we climbed in at to mark our exit route.
The dive was amazing. The video below is amazing (its Shelley in it).
Earlier in the day, I got some great photos of a rare fish. And also a not so rare fish. If you learned to draw a fish in kindergarten, you probably learned
to draw a fairly accurate Sleek Unicorn fish. These fish strangely look
just like goldfish crackers.
Whomever designed the fish of the world wanted to kill scuba divers. The
most colorful amazing fish in Hawaii are mostly found in deep water that
lures divers into depths that are dangerous to dive. The Hawaiian
long-finned anthias is a perfect example and is usually found 100 feet
or more below. The female is the most beautiful of the species (uncommon
in the animal kingdom, except for humans of course). The male is show a
few post before this. I found this little fish swimming upside down
near the ceiling of a small cave at about 100 feet down.
The highlight of the trip from me, had to be seeing a tiger shark from shore. Seeing a tiger shark underwater is a rare event. I know divers with
12,000+ dives who have never seen one underwater. On this trip we have
made Sandwich Island Divers (now out of business)
our dive shop and the owner Steve has provided us with tons of tips and
some awesome stories from his decades of diving here. He told us we had
a good chance of seeing a tiger shark if we dove near the harbor. This
"tip" kept me away from the harbor for most of our tip, but seeing the
large groups of dolphins off shore eventually lured me into the water.
The first dive was a little a spooky as I hoped I didn't run into a
tiger shark (which grown up to 18 feet). The dive ended with no shark
and no dolphins. Shelley refused to dive the site so the next day I
headed out alone once again looking for dolphins. About 30 minutes into
the dive I ran into a couple of divers who signaled to me they saw a
shark, they pointed in the direction I was headed. I keep going in that
direction and saw my first Fishers Angelfish (3 actually), but no shark
or dolphins. After the dive Shelley and I walked over to some rocks near
the dive site and I spotted a large dark figure swimming right off the
rocks, "There it is!" I yelled to Shelley "Do you see it?" She did.
We
spent the next several hours on the rocks watching a 14 foot tiger
shark swimming around. He was hard to film with the glare on the water,
but below is what we got. In the second video he grabs something at the
surface (maybe a snorkel?). In the last few weeks, many divers here have
seen the tiger underwater, but I not interested in seeing it alone.
Diving alone in a know tiger shark territory is asking for it.