LA Wrecks and Reef

This weekend I got the opportunity to dive the wrecks and reef up in LA area. The trip started on Friday afternoon when Jim, Lida, Franz and me drove up together to San Pedro. We had quite a lot of fun in the short road trip. The night was spent on Pacific Star and the dive started on Saturday morning.

The first wreck we dove was the Palawan. This is a huge wreck in about 120 ft water. The sheer size of the structure makes it a magnificent dive site. More intriguingly, most of the beams and rods were covered with dense and colorful sea anemones, and the huge deck was grown with tall gorgonians that gently swing with the current. The view is just breath-taking.

Looking around I found lots of fried egg jellyfish, swimming elegantly along the current.

I made a short video from a few sequences I took. I was just practicing shooting the video. Should I know they come out this nice, I would have taken a lot more.

http://vimeo.com/95824383

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For the second dive, we moved to Avalon. I followed the anchor to the bottom but only found a few broken pieces of the wreck. Then I saw a line put another diver so I just followed. Slowly, a giant shipwreck emerged in front of me, with colorful sea anemones, tall gorgonians, and a pure green background. It is just beautiful!

The last dive was at a reef called Arch. Somehow, we were all confused by the line up and headed to the sandy flat. To be frank, I had no idea what the site would look like. About 5 min into the dive, I was going to abort navigation and surface. At that moment, I saw some kelp, and then the reef emerged. The reef had a lot of structures similar to Point Loma; however, the color shifted toward more blue and overall it looked very bright. There were lots of yellow dorids hanging around in pairs. Inside the crevices, I saw quite a lot chestnut cowry gathered.

This is a rare opportunity to dive these sites. It’s a lot of planning, preparation and hardworking. But the underwater views are magnificent and the encounters are adrenaline rushing. What a fun trip!

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