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Diving in the Keyes



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 20th 07, 02:12 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
KurtG
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Posts: 126
Default Diving in the Keyes


I had my first glimpse of wild reef systems over the weekend. Very,
very cool. Dived in Key Largo which was also the site of 3 diving
deaths on Friday which prevented us from diving the Spiegal Grove (
http://www.cdnn.info/news/safety/s070318.html ), but all worked out well
as I spent more time on the reefs.

I was completely amazed by the wild life and corals. I saw a French
Angel (1 of many) which was about 2 feet long and the size of a serving
platter. Many mated butterflies. Schools of blue chromis. Tons of
Tangs, Yellow tails, lobster, crabs, Butterflies, damsels, etc. A brain
coral that that was 6 feet tall and 3 feet across at it's base. Parrot
fish, zoas, on and on.

The sand between reefs appeared lifeless, but looking closely, it teamed
with a blennies. Copepods (or similar flea like creature) swarmed
around small cave entrances, and I even found small multi-celled
cylindrical creatures that floated freely that I can't identify.

My last dive I spent looking for eels and succeeded with a 7 foot Moray,
another small moray, and yet another that resembled a snow flake eel.

It does put my aquarium to shame, but then again, it's the only way I
can keep a reef in my living room. I'll still keep it.

--Kurt
  #2  
Old March 20th 07, 02:15 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
George Patterson
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Posts: 523
Default Diving in the Keyes

KurtG wrote:

I had my first glimpse of wild reef systems over the weekend.


Way cool! Closest I've gotten is the Boston Aquarium with its schools of French
Angels.

George Patterson
If you torture the data long enough, eventually it will confess
to anything.
  #3  
Old March 20th 07, 04:21 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Susan
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Posts: 39
Default Diving in the Keyes

Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water

Susan
"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:5tHLh.12673$1a6.8166@trnddc08...
KurtG wrote:

I had my first glimpse of wild reef systems over the weekend.


Way cool! Closest I've gotten is the Boston Aquarium with its schools of
French Angels.

George Patterson
If you torture the data long enough, eventually it will confess
to anything.



  #4  
Old March 20th 07, 10:37 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Pszemol
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Posts: 725
Default Diving in the Keyes

"Susan" wrote in message newsjJLh.9037$zx.6243@trndny05...
Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water


Diving has little to do with swimming... :-)
You can do diving with very little swimming.
  #5  
Old March 20th 07, 02:16 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
KurtG
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Posts: 351
Default Diving in the Keyes

Pszemol wrote:
"Susan" wrote in message
newsjJLh.9037$zx.6243@trndny05...
Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water


Diving has little to do with swimming... :-)
You can do diving with very little swimming.


I had to swim 200 yards with no gear to get certified. I don't know if
that's a requirement or if the instructor just wanted to get a feel for
our skill levels.

If you can't swim, you usually have a reasonable fear of water, and it's
best to feel perfectly comfortable jumping 10 ft off a boat with 80 lbs
of gear on.

Not that I wouldn't encourage anybody to get swim lessons and get
started. It's a really awesome experience.

--Kurt



  #6  
Old March 20th 07, 04:18 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Susan
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Posts: 39
Default Diving in the Keyes

I took swim lessons and still am not the best swimmer. I guess I should
have done lessons in my "younger" years and not as I got older. I totaly
agree that fear plays a huge part in swimming. Once I realized I could just
stand up in the 4ft. of water and had no reason to fear I took off across
it. I've always wanted to dive in the reefs but I know I would never make
it.

Susan
"KurtG" wrote in message
.. .
Pszemol wrote:
"Susan" wrote in message
newsjJLh.9037$zx.6243@trndny05...
Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water


Diving has little to do with swimming... :-)
You can do diving with very little swimming.


I had to swim 200 yards with no gear to get certified. I don't know if
that's a requirement or if the instructor just wanted to get a feel for
our skill levels.

If you can't swim, you usually have a reasonable fear of water, and it's
best to feel perfectly comfortable jumping 10 ft off a boat with 80 lbs
of gear on.

Not that I wouldn't encourage anybody to get swim lessons and get
started. It's a really awesome experience.

--Kurt





  #7  
Old March 20th 07, 04:28 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
~Roy~
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Posts: 176
Default Diving in the Keyes

You really are as dumb as you sound are you not asshole. Swimming has
nothing to do with diving..get ****ing real you clueless ****wad!

On Tue, 20 Mar 2007 05:37:25 -0500, "Pszemol"
wrote:

"Susan" wrote in message newsjJLh.9037$zx.6243@trndny05...
Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water

Diving has little to do with swimming... :-)
You can do diving with very little swimming.



-------
I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!
  #8  
Old March 28th 07, 02:43 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
swarvegorilla
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Posts: 578
Default Diving in the Keyes


"Pszemol" wrote in message
...
"Susan" wrote in message
newsjJLh.9037$zx.6243@trndny05...
Wow, how neat!!! I'm jealous. I can't even swim in shallow water


Diving has little to do with swimming... :-)
You can do diving with very little swimming.


I agree, just for the sheer weirdness of it you should try and get divetime
in a swimming pool with scuba gear.
Its great, you can just look around..... like being in space, going up and
down.
Your breathing is easy and normal, infact the one thing to remember is not
to hold your breath.
First time I did pool time with scuba I was impressed.
I swim well but its effort, diving unless theres a current can be a lot
less effort.
Even to lay on the bottem and watch a blenny go about it's life.
is really something.


  #9  
Old March 20th 07, 10:36 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Pszemol
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Posts: 725
Default Diving in the Keyes

"KurtG" wrote in message news
Copepods (or similar flea like creature) swarmed
around small cave entrances,


Could be fish larvae, too...
  #10  
Old March 20th 07, 02:20 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
KurtG
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Posts: 351
Default Diving in the Keyes

Pszemol wrote:
"KurtG" wrote in message
news
Copepods (or similar flea like creature) swarmed around small cave
entrances,


Could be fish larvae, too...


I bet you're right.

I also saw two blue chromis during their ritual mating dance on the sand.

I also found many black/dark blue fish with a yellow tail and bright
blue dots along it's back fin. It's about 6-8". It turned out to be a
"yellow-tail damsel". I'm starting to understand the need for
scientific names.

--Kurt


 




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