Before I start rambling on about my recent trip, I would like to thank all of the guys on Wetpixel who have helped me take my first, small, steps in underwater photography. I have literally spent days on the site, reading and researching all things underwater, it is a fantastic resource, (although I guess you knew that already). Also thanks to Peter Mooney from Scubapix in Cairnes for his advice and ability to move mountains, (and UPS), so that I could get all the photography kit together before going on this trip.
I have just come back from 2 weeks at the Red Sea, more precisely, Naama Bay, Sharm El Sheikh. It was my first diving trip abroad and the first time I had dived since 1996!! I had manage to tempt my girlfriend to come with me so she could learn to dive and being that I had not dived for about 12 years and not having my BSAC logbook or record of my brief, (40 or so dives) diving past, I thought it would be prudent to start from scratch again so we both enrolled in the PADI course at the Red Sea Diving College at Naama Bay. I was a little apprehensive going into the water for the first dive, as the last time I went diving I arrived at the surface with a banging headache and a mask full of blood ☺ (burst eardrum etc). Anywhoo we both raced through the first five days with no worries, did our advanced open water and Nitrox bits and pieces and were keen to dive without the attentions of an instructor.
I previously used a Canon A640 and canon housing for snorkeling in Taba last year where I re-ignited my passion for all things underwater. For this trip I gave that to the other half along with an Ikelite AF35 just to stop her using the on board flash, and bought a Canon EOS 5D for myself with Aquatica housing, Macro and 8” dome port with shade. Lenses were the 17-40mm f4 L for the wide angle stuff and a 100mm f2.8 Canon Macro lens for the little stuff / fish portraits. I also bought a couple of Sea & Sea YS-250 Pro strobes with UCLS arms and joints. (all the gear and no Idea)
I would image that most of the European divers here will be pretty familiar with the dive sites round Naama Bay. We did all out diving through the Red Sea Diving College, who have a number of boats that depart daily from Naama Bay. The first “post qualifying dive” was at Shark Reef and Yolanda in the Ras Mohammed National Park, a nice drift dive along a wall and over the coral gardens of Shark reef that then leads to the debris of the Yolanda, a ship that sank carrying bathroom furniture etc. We had the resident crocodile fish and it was a great place to find blue spotted stingrays and I think in the 3 times we dived it we saw a minimum of three on each time. I also saw the only nudi of the trip which was a shame as it was on the bottom in a real current. Being a drift dive with some healthy currents that seem to come from all directions as the dive progresses it was difficult to get too close and manoeuvre round the wreckage to get a good shot. I was hopeful that “Shark Reef” would live up to its name but sadly not, a school of tuna racing overhead and a turtle out in the blue was about as big as the life got there.
The Straits of Tiran offers several nice dive sites namely Jackson and Gordon Reef with Woodhouse reef between the two. The back of Jackson reef is meant to see some decent hammerhead action during the season, however not so on our trip
The best dive of the trip, in several peoples opinion, was a drift dive over the saddle between the back of Jackson to the front of Woodhouse Reef, and when I say drift I mean drift…the current was whipping us between the reefs at 30meters and out into the blue, a really exhilarating dive although I did wonder why I took the 8” port out that day as it seemed to catch the current and drag me through the water and I think I took the sum total of one shot. I think that was mainly as I was trying to hang on to my better half to stop her from drifting too far away as he is considerably less sturdy than me.
We thought that it would be remiss of us to visit Sharm and not dive the SS Thistlegorm, even though it meant a 4am start. It was worth it though even though as we closed on the site, we noticed that we weren’t alone, only about 15 other dive boats were there. Still, it was not too overcrowded with only one other group on the wreck at the same time as us. For a first wreck dive it was pretty good, a little murky, the guide said!! I thought that 15m visibility was bloody good compared to the soup I had dived in the past. The Russian guide, Victor, was really into his wrecks and gave us a potted history of the Thistlegorm on the way to the site, which I think, really enhanced the dive, to see all those shells, bikes, boots and trucks there in the hold was fantastic. Sadly the second dive, the penetration dive as Victor called it, to the sniggers of the Brits in the group, (some people never grow up
The next problems was with the rear focus button (*) on the 5D started sticking in so I could not review the photos or check exposure or focus on the internal parts of the wreck
We ended the 2 weeks having logged 21 dives, experienced trying to get on to and off a boat that is bucking in 5-7 foot swell (not great for handing cameras up or down), and diving in the fastest current that the instructors had been in as well as my first camera flood, so all in all it was a pretty good experience.
There was the obvious disappointment of not seeing anything bigger than a 3’ eagle ray in the depth below us, not that I was expecting to see Mantas or Whale Sharks but I would have loved to see a small to medium shark, or even a large Napoleon.
The big positive for me is that the other half now wants to book a live aboard trip to the Maldives in Feb and maybe go to the Brothers and Elphinstone to see the Oceanics in Jan (Thanks for your report and photos Stew, I owe you a beer).
I have put my first U/W photography efforts on Flickr if you want to have a look and comment on any of them, please do so, I would appreciate any critique of any of them from you guys.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tjsnapper/set...57608426389760/
Anyway, I am off to the dive show at the NEC on Sat to catch Alex and chums giving their lectures as well as purchasing a drysuit so that I can freeze my fingers off during the winter months in the lovely soup they call the Solent.
Cheers and safe diving.
Tristan