A Night Dive at the Shores

The stormy weather finally passed and the ocean becomes calmer. I headed to La Jolla Shores for a night dive. When I got there, the sun had set but the gorgeous golden light was still at the horizon.

After the darkness fell, the air felt colder and the waves were loud. From afar, the dark horizon looked creepy. The wind also picked up. The wave was small but fast. The surface was choppy. Dropped down to the shallow sandy flat. The water was pretty surgy with lots of particulates. After a few kicks, I ran right into the transmission blocks and knew I was way south. I found the wall and started heading north. There were sections where I could see the wall collapsed recently.

Despite the surge and poor visibility in the shallow, at the canyon it was quiet. The water was slightly murky but it was not bad at all. The visibility opened up quite a bit as I got closer to the V point. I noticed lots of young plainfin midshipman in the water column. Most encounters was common and I spent quite a lot of time with a young San Diego Scallop.

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Near the V point, the kelp was still there. Interestingly there was one lone squid trying to deposit egg onto the kelp. When I got there, the egg was already attached to the kelp but somehow the squid could not release it from its body. I watched and it took quite a while before the egg was released.

On my way back, the sand dollar field looked even bigger than before. The sand dollars had a dark red tint at night under lights. They all lined up perfectly. The water above 30 ft became quite murky and surgy. A nice dive.

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