Tonight must be special – not only the superb conditions at the shores, but critters are all out, mating, fighting, spawning, and hunting.
What first came to me was a show put up by four octopuses, one large female with three smaller males. These males took turns to approach the female, trying to mate with her. But the female chased two away and showed an obvious interest to one specific male.

Most of the time, the two stayed in crevices about a foot apart, flirting by extending one arm out and touching each other. At certain moments, the female would go all the way out toward the male, devouring her smaller partner under her arms. The two became tangled and twisted. Then, in the blink of an eye, they were apart, back to their crevices.
I spent most of the time watching the show quietly from afar. After that, during a short tour along the canyon, I noticed that many tubeworms were spawning, not the massive eruption of white clouds, but a slow release of thin and long fibers from some parts sticking out to the side of the tubes.
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On my way to the shallow, there was a higher number of jackmackerel in the water column, swimming in an unusual frenzy. Then from the murky water, a bat ray emerged, followed by a twisting shadow of a large leopard shark.

What a great dive!













