Saturday, February 25, 2012

Diving under Kalizma

On the 25th morning we tried diving the Furana North divespot but after 2 attempts we just had to admit that the circumstances were not in our favor. The inflowing current was too strong for us to be able to stay at the reef and to do a drift dive without a dive marker was too hazardous as the waters above were so turbulent that the surface boat would have lost our bubbles (and us).

Cathodic anode before

So, we packed it in and motored back to Kalizma. As we still had plenty of air left in the tank I took a scraper and went down below to expose the propellers from seagrowth. After 3 months of sitting Maldives the growth was remarkable.

Center propeller before


Oysters the size of my hand and crabs in all sizes. Barnacles and seagrass. Well, staid under for the best part of an hour and cleaned all 3 props and the rudder while my dive buddy took care of the stabilizer fins and the bottom as far as the air let him do it.

Anode after


At least it beat the conditions of diving in Mumbai harbour with less than 30cm visibility with torches. There also a particular grass tends to grow on the bottom and it is like long fronds, like a beard. I remember when we tried to find the seawater inlets and scrape them free of growth, crabs were biting our fingers.

Center propeller after


In Goa at least we can see a bit and there I remember I came up with a small crab in my ear after a scrapping session. Luckily he did not like the surroundings and came out on his own free will.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Diving Bandos Island

Went in the NE corner and ventured East with the strong current in the beginning. The visibility was quite good but as the current became less, when we rounded the Island, the visibility deteriorated. At the start we "bumped" into a reef shark, the high light of the dive.

BA chart 3323, inset

Lobster



Reef shark

Damselfish

Orange-striped triggerfish

Duskyfin rock cod (no flash)

Duskyfin rock cod

Scribbled filefish



Thursday, February 23, 2012

Diving Banana reef

As my other deckhand hadn't yet seen Banana reef we went here again. Good dive and lots to see.

BA chart 3323, inset

Some flora

Oriental sweetlips (juvenile)

Spotted boxfish

Spotted boxfish

Sabre squirrelfish

Blue-faced angelfish

Turtle coming out of a cave

Turtle

Turtle

Circular batfish

Sleek unicornfish

Moray eel

Moray eel

Pardeep

Me



Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Diving Club Med corner

We ventured out of the atoll and went for the Club Med Corner, actually the NE end of the Hulhumale' & Hulhule airport Island & reef. It was a nice dive, hardly any current and many things to see. At the end when we came up a huge school of dolphins passed us by and I had still my goggles on so I could watch them below surface for the first time of my life. I think I could even hear them talking in their high-pitched squeaks.

BA chart 3323, inset

Turtle

Blue trevally

Clown triggerfish 

Honeycomb moray eel

Black-saddle coralgrouper

Napoleon Maori wrasse

Yellow boxfish

Eagle ray

Eagle ray

Dolphin


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Diving Maldive Victory

This day decided to go and dive the Maldive Victory. She was/ is a general cargo ship that sank in full cargo upon arrival Male' in 1981. For divers delight the wreck is still standing upright so it offers a lot to see. I have quoted the Maldives Victory history text below from here.

BA chart 3323, inset

The ten year old 3,500 ton freighter, Maldive Victory, struck the Hulhule Airport reef at full speed on Friday, 13th of February 1981. All the passengers and crew survived, and what was a disaster for the shipping company soon became a bonus for the local diving industry, which was crying out for a wreck dive to add to the established dives of North Male. 

Hold & booms at the mast house

Bags of old cargo

The cargo including two limousines and several thousand bottles of liquor where mostly recovered during a nine-month salvage operation that saw the wreck stripped of its cargo and anything else of value, though a few cassette recorders can still be seen on the deck. The ship sank in 35 metres of water and within moments sea life took up residence on this perfect artificial reef, the wreck lies upright on the sandy bottom with the bow facing north. The anchor hanging on its chain from the bow actually moves in the strong current.

Discarded radio

Bollard

The Maldive Victory, the most famous of Maldivian shipwrecks, was sailing to the Maldives capital, Male, from Singapore with a cargo of supplies for resort islands. When she sank panic spread through the island when it became known that the long awaited foodstuffs and the building materials were lying on the bottom of the ocean, and so a number of salvage teams quickly assembled, made up mostly of local divers but also by diving instructors from nearby islands.

Panama lead

Holds #1 & #2

They were successful in bringing a great deal of merchandise to the shore, but most of the goods had been ruined by contact with the salt water, and the financial loss was enormous. Sea water, which exerted so much pressure at the depth of 35 metres (115 feet), that corks were actually pushed back into the bottles, penetrated into thousands of bottles of wine and other types of liquor. Even two brand-new automobiles, which had been loaded onto the deck, were turned into useless hulks. Even today bits of scattered cargo are found in the hold of this 110-meter (360 feet) long wreck.

Sleek unicornfish 

The bridge

The sailors and the few passengers aboard managed to make their way to the landing strip, only about thirty metres (a hundred feet) away; all were rescued, and none were even injured. The freighter was only ten years old, and hailed from Singapore; the holds were full of merchandise, chiefly for the tourist facilities.

Aft propeller still there

Pardeep going up

We went down from the buoy attached to the aft samson post. The current was outward abt 1knot. We pulled ourselves down the rope to the mast and from there in the lee of the current we made our way down to the deck. After that we examined the forward mooring deck and holds and made our way aft. Aft was another hold & the superstructure. We swam around the accommodation and ended up on the bridge. After this we were almost done with our air so we made our way back to the aft mast and went up the same way we came with a decompression stop.