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Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Logistics To South Africa




Logistics To South Africa




With a flight off Bali, a lay over in Singapore, a quick stop in Phuket and finally landing in Bangkok, Thailand. I am now setting up for the next round of crazy. I took a motorcycle taxi straight to the Nepal Embassy and turned in my paper work. Last time I did this I had to pick it up the next day. When I handed it through the window the woman said, ‘Please wait five minutes.’ I take it not many are heading to Nepal. Fine. With a few days of writing and research I’d still have time to do a few friends a few shopping favors. Luckily I know Bangkok and the location of an electrical/computer/gadget center called Pantip Plaza just up the street from the Indonesian Embassy and not too far from Sukhumvit Road under the sky train tracks. Wandering in a strange town with a goal is always fun.




I flew from Bangkok to Istanbul, Turkey, waiting it out for 8 hours and carrying on to Durban, South Africa, another 10 hour flight. The good part of the flight was that it was Turkish Airlines. Wow, what service! And the meals are edible! They give guests blankets, headphones, Wifi, and a toiletry kit to go. The movies and music are up to date.



When I got off the plane I walked into a rather vacant international airport that was built previous to the World Cup back in 2010. A driver awaited with a sign and off we went to the Blue Marlin Hotel overlooking the ocean. Due to my time clock being ‘off’ I thought a couple beers and a nap might put me on the proper clock. I sat out by the pool bar with Enok, the bartender and watched surfers finish their day. Beyond the surfers whale blows could be seeing in between the 2-meter swell. The fresh chilled air was a welcome change from the humid heat of South East Asia. The rainy season has commenced in Thailand covering 2/3 of the country in rain. The temperature here is about the same as San Francisco in the foggy summer while watching the swell and surfers wrap around Fort Point under the Golden Gate Bridge into the calm deep bay.




While I sat there waiting for my nap to sway my steps, three dive guides joined me for introductions and we had a good long chat about the ocean, sharks, and travel. I decided to do an introductory dive the next day. We sorted out my gear and had one for the road. I went to bed listening to the waves crash on the rocks below my open window. My alarm went off at 7 but it was really 2 in the morning and got ready to go. When I got to reception I looked up at the clock and realized my phone was still set for Thailand. Back to bed until 6 when I woke up and had a cup of tea before we set off for a dive on the local Shoal a couple kilometers out in front of the Blue Marlin. The swell remained at about two and one half meters high and choppy. The surge underwater was back and forth with no real current. Visibility was about 15 meters and not really a photo opportunity but nice to get in the water. That was an interesting dive.




Most of the group showed up through out the night and we were set for two dives the next day. The two dives with Crystal Divers in the Blue Marlin Hotel were an amazing introduction. We went to the same Shoal but it’s a big shoal, made of an old sand dune that soft coral and small Nudibranch has found purchase in an otherwise un-hospitable location or just the opposite. Crystal Divers took us out through the surf bouncing, jumping, and crashing through white water in a ‘skiff’ with a pair of 85’s on back and ended up diving back on the Shoal at a place called Raggie Cave. A few Raggie Tooth Sharks were there to greet us and we got a photo full in no time. I just wanted to let you know I made it. Logistics are not that easy pulling this off but it is worth it.



Oh yes; and another book is coming rather quickly, I’m thinking with in three months it will be at the editor. You can find already existing books at the http://spbrabooks.com/davidcdagley/ site below.




Go to my site listed below for more travels:



Saturday, June 11, 2016

Sanur, Bali



Sanur



So I got a hold of a friend of mine who lives here in Bali that went to Uni in California with me and more recently joined on a live aboard surf trip out in the Mentawi Islands and even that wasn’t so recent maybe 2012. I asked him if he was going surfing anytime soon and if I could tag along and take photos. He said yes and we went out the next morning. Until then I decided to go visit a friend I made a few years back at Barb’s Sports Bar in Sanur and said hello and had a few cold ones with the Aussie expats that frequent the place. Always a smile and always the coldest beer in Indonesia, bar none.




At an ungodly hour of 445 am we met and off we went to Sembangan Beach on an island that is close to Bali and crossable by a bridge. We were the first people there and off they went and I found my spot close to a key between a right break and a left break and as the day went on the waves grew into double over-head and I just clicked away.




More surfers showed up shortly, took a quick look out and went to wax their boards. I was later joined by a couple other photographers that really didn’t seem that interested and were waiting for something bigger but it didn’t come that day.




A couple of acquaintances from Lembongan passed through on separate occasions and we went to Lingi Longa Bar and listened to music. It was a great place to meet people and get your Rasta roasted. Music carried on into the night and fun was had by all.




I spent most of my days writing in the mornings or all day and usually done with it in late afternoon. There are lots of things to do around Sanur and for me it’s better than Kuta but anybody who hangs out at all on Bali pretty much know that.




I joined up with a woman that went to my same high school that I hadn’t previously met and of course we had mutual friends and knew family names and all that. She seemed to know Bali pretty well and decided to take me off the beaten path. There is touristy hot springs on Bali up near the volcanic crater lake and then there are hot springs at the edge of the crater lake where mostly Indonesians go. This was a treat and we got to hear a lot of stories about some of the crater villages that appear to have no roads to them.




My time in Indonesia has come to an end and now it’s time to prepare for something not so entirely different and yet is unique in place, logistics, and people. The next big adventure is the Sardine Run off the coast of South Africa where the sharks converge for a feeding frenzy of sardines. Tuna, Whales, Seals, and Sharks all join in a timeless journey to the tip of Africa for a feed. If we are lucky we’ll get some good camera work and some stories out of the deal. I’ll show you.





Go to my site listed below for more travels:


Friday, June 3, 2016

Lembongan To Sanur




Lembongan and Sanur




The Mantas and Blue Spotted Rays have moved on. When the Mantas were at Manta Bay and Manta Point the water was murky with algae and plankton and the seabed was covered in small groups of Blue Spotted Rays all over the place, then nothing. The swell picked up and it was difficult to get back there but from what I’ve heard they have all gone for now.




We dove on the north side of Nusa Penita for my last two dives, sites I had already been on but this time strangely there was no current and Wakary, our dive guide went into ‘little stuff’ mode and we managed to see lots of Nudibranch, Scorpion Fish, crab of all sizes and all within maybe 100 meters. The water was too warm to bother looking into the blue for much. A large tuna did grace our presents but that was about it for the big stuff. Again coral bleaching is on the rise but not where we were diving and looking around.




Both dives were about an hour each and everybody had a good time searching versus drifting. Of course the clown fish put on a show of protective defiance even at their meager size they get in your face as if to rough you up.




When all was said and done we headed back to Big Fish Diving and washed our gear and hung it up to dry. I was done with Lembongan for now except for my adopted Manta. 



If you want to see Big Dipper's online profile, please go to http://mantamatcher.org/individuals.jsp?number=INNLP0397A.


  


Here are some of the websites and social media pages you can have a look at if you like;
Global MMF website: www.marinemegafauna.org




I had dinner at Mickey’s Sports Bar with a stack of Australians watching the first Game of Origins, a footy match of all-stars that play they heart out for a match and then return to their squads and then again join up a few weeks later for the second match and again for the third a few weeks later. It’s good fun. The only segment of Australians that don’t seem to care one bit are all from Victoria.



I had a couple quiet ones with my Finnish friend and a woman I just met from South Africa and that was the end of my time in Lembongan. I’ll be back but not until next year. I have a lot on my plate at the moment and it’s going to take a while to clear.



I took the morning ferry to Sanur, just across the strait and am sort of hunkering down the best I know how. The second day here I went diving at Tulamben, The Liberty wreck. It was a nice dive but the visibility due to the swell was less than expected, maybe 10 meters.



We did manage to see a couple turtles, leaf fish, Scorpion Fish, Banded shrimp, a dwarf Frog Fish, Garden Eels, Mantis Shrimp, and a Pigmy Sea Horse among other aquatic creatures. All in all it was a nice day with All 4 Diving and four folks from Switzerland. www.all4diving.com. Sanur is bigger than this blog so it’ll be addressed in a couple days after I get some good shots of the surfers here with the swell once again on the rise.







Go to my site listed below for more travels: