Posts Tagged ‘Similans’

Update on Patong, Phuket following the Tsunami Warning

Posted on April 12th, 2012 by admin-scubacat-dw  |  Comments Off on Update on Patong, Phuket following the Tsunami Warning

At approximately 4.00pm yesterday afternoon, 11th April 2012 we received a telephone call. That was to change the afternoon.

The husband of one of our staff called to ask if we had felt the earthquake which had happened in Indonesia and to warn us of a potential Tsunami. Then the Tsunami Warning towers let off their sirens……….

This put everyone in our Dive Shop on high Alert.

Kath, our ever loyal Tourleader from MV Scuba Adventure telephoned saying she was struggling to get down to the shop to prepare for the trip that was due to go out to the Similans that evening! We suggested she might like to stay at home!

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand MV Scuba Adventure Tourleader

The rest of the staff however stayed at the Scuba Cat Shop in Patong, it is in a 3 story townhouse and so we gathered all the customers, staff and unsure tourists and invited them to go and sit up on the roof terrace in safety away for the potential wave.

Jack was manning the telephones, assuring concerned callers from India and various other places around the world that we were all OK and we would keep them posted of any developments. A concerned customer who was due to go onto the Liveaboard trip that evening called, after speaking with him we advised him to stay the other side of the Hill in Kathu until he got the all clear to come over.

At the new Scuba Cat Diving Shop, Kee Plaza Patong, the staff were moved to safety at their roof top restaurant on the 7th Floor.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Tsunami Update

Great news, all the staff and customers from both shops were accounted for.

The Scuba Cat Boats, MV Scuba Adventure and MV Scuba Sport were moved away from the Island and out into safety, Deep Open Water. Why? The ocean is deep. It is only when the wave comes close to shore when it is slowed down that the water is pushed upward into a huge wave. If they can get far enough out the wave, if it had happened would only have been a few feet high.

MV Scuba Fun had just returned from a day trip to King Cruiser, Shark Point and Koh Doc Mai. We quickly transported the customers to a hotel which was high up in the hills and waited with them for the all clear.

Then we were all surprised, Kath had walked for 40 minutes to get to us at the shop, she wanted to be with us and her customers for the Scuba Adventure trip. Ozzy, who lives in safety up in the hills above Nanai Road, had heard about the Tsunami alert when may people appeared outside his hilltop home and decided to come down and join us at the shop, figure that one!! Irish, need I say more!!!!

Everyone had been warned in Patong and the streets were cleared. Sean went down to the end of the Soi to see if the water was going out from the beach, there he met two Irish Ladies who had been caught up in the Thai staff leaving. At the time of the warning they were half way through having a haircut. The lady cutting their hair talked about the earthquake on Thai and then left, when Sean met them they had their hair half finished….. they were looking for a Pub to forget about their new hair styles.

Sean came back laughing and thought this was a great idea and promptly went and arranged beers for the staff and customers!!!!

The announced times of the Waves came and went without incident. We all proceeded to go down to the beach with our beers in hand, stupid I know but by this point we were all convinced the danger had passed.

This is what we saw………

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Patong Beach

The streets were empty, no tuk tuks, no traffic, piece and quiet…………

About 7.00pm we made the decision with the Captain and Customers agreement the Scuba Adventure would proceed on her Cruise as scheduled. Big Smiles all round from a group of very happy customers.

A Big thank you to all the Staff and Customers at Scuba Cat Diving for their calm during the warning and a big thank you to Patong for having the Tsunami warning system ready and working for just an event.

Having been here during the Tsunami of 2004 it was reassuring to see the quick evacuation of a large resort town to safety…….. THANK YOU.

Today is a new day, MV Scuba Fun is at Racha Yai/Noi on her planned day trip, the Scuba Cat IDC continues and Songkran will be here tomorrow……………the soaking we expected this year!

Marine Life of Phuket – Napoleon Wrasse

Posted on April 10th, 2012 by admin-scubacat-dw  |  Comments Off on Marine Life of Phuket – Napoleon Wrasse

The Napoleon Wrasse with it’s human characteristics is the largest of the Labridae family. It has distinctive thick fleshy lips, like Angelia Jolie, and a large hump on the head above the eyes that becomes more prominent with age.  The males are bright electric blue to green, purplish blue or a dull blue green, whereas the females and juveniles are red-orange above and red-orange to white below.  Mature males are recognized by black stripes along the body and blue scribbles on the head and juveniles have two black lines behind the eyes. The Napoleon is one of the largest fish on the reef with males growing to 2m in length and females 1m. It not uncommon for them to weigh up to 190kg.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Similans Liveaboard

Napoleon Wrasse, also commonly known as humphead and maori wrasse reach sexually maturity between 5 and 7 years. The female life span averages 30 years and males 25 years. They are Protogynous hermaphrodites. This is when females become males at about the age of 9. The factors controlling the sex change is unknown. Napoleon Wrasse are solitary but at certain times of the year when spawning is due to take place, the adults will move down current towards the end of the reef. The fertilized eggs float in the plankton until the larvae hatch and then they settle onto the substrate.

The Napoleon adults are found on steep coral reef slopes, channel slopes and also lagoon reefs varying in depth from 1m to 100m deep. The Juveniles are often found amongst branching corals in the shallows. They are diurnal feeders being active during the day and sleeping in favoured caves and large crevasses.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Liveaboard

The Napoleon is carnivorous and is an important part of the food chain in maintaining a healthy and balanced reef. They are opportunistic predators eating crustaceans and mollusks. They are one of the few predators of the toxic sea hare and box fish. They have also been known to eat the almost indestructible crown of thorns.

Unfortunately, one of the main predators of the Napoleon is man!!! They are highly prized particularly in South East Asia and are one of the most highly valued fish in the luxury live reef fish trade. They will fetch $100 per kilo and $400 for a set of lips!!!! The Napoleon has been classified as a threatened reef fish. Their slow reproductive cycle, late maturity, longevity, predictable spawning sites and natural rarity have made it highly vulnerable to over-exploitation.  In numerous countries it has become a protected reef fish making commercial fishing for it illegal. It is necessary to control fishing practices as there has been a decline in numbers and unfortunately it is not possible to breed this fish in captivity.  In 1995 the Maldives banned the export of this fish and the population has increased.

Napoleon Wrasse are naturally curious and will often spend time around divers. Some have even been known to recognize individual divers and actively seek them out.

If you would like to know more about the identification of species why not sign up for on a  Underwater Naturalist Specialty Course, which will enhance your knowledge and highlight the key things to look for or a cruise on board MV Scuba Adventure or MV Scuba Fun for a chance to see these for yourself.

MV Scuba Adventure Liveaboard – 4th to 8th December 2011

Posted on February 1st, 2012 by admin-scubacat-dw  |  Comments Off on MV Scuba Adventure Liveaboard – 4th to 8th December 2011

North Andaman Liveaboard –  Similans, Koh Bon, Koh Tachai  and Richilieu Rock MV Scuba Adventure departed from Patong on the evening of the 4th en-route to the Similans. Kath, the Tour Leader and Steve, the Dive Master welcomed on board Lucrezia and Rene from Switzerland, Mats from Sweden, Guido and Gianna from  Italy and Peter and Karen from England. With the boat briefing completed, cabins allocated, equipment set up we had a relaxing dinner where everyone became acquainted.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Similan Liveaboard MV Scuba Adventure

We woke to the beautiful scenery of Island 5 and 6, which is the home of Anita’s Reef. With the dive safety and dive sight briefing done we kitted up for our first dive of the trip. Anita’s reef did not disappoint. The stunning coral bommie was covered in glass fish, which was a sight to be seen. Nudibranch, Fusiliers, Snappers were all out in their glory. The pristine white sand was home to the dancing Garden Eels and Khuls rays.  A banded pipe fish was found on one of the large boulders on the corner of Island 5.  After breakfast we headed to Island 9 and North Point. This site is a combination of huge rock formations and reef. It is briefed as “but one get one free!!”  The rocky formation has several swim throughs together with coral gardens nestled between the rocks.   Turtles were in abundance as they poised for the photographers in the group. The turtles here are not at all shy and continued munching away as if to say”Oh they’re only divers!”   We also saw a banded sea snake head to the surface for air. In the shallows a rock formation was covered in Purple Dragon Nudibranch. A treat for the macro lovers on the boat.

After lunch we arrived at Koh Bon for our 3rd dive of the day. We were fortunate as we were the only divers in the water at this popular sight. We dropped in on the corner and made our way to the West Ridge. A large school of yellow snapper were below us as we reached the ridge. On the ridge there were hunting Long Nosed Emporers, Trevelly and Rainbow Runners.  A Devil Scorpion was camouflaged amongst the broken coral on the reef.  A meter away was an octopus hiding in a rock. There was so much to see!!! The glass fish again, were food for the larger hunters…a feeding frenzy. A Mantis Shrimp quickly ran across the reef, which was a first for some of the divers.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Mantis Shrimp

A highlight of the dive was to see 2 Napolean Wrasse swimming around us for a while.  The divers who chose to do the night dive on Koh Tachai Reef saw many different types of crabs, shrimps and spent about 10 minutes with a free swimming moray, which hunted successfully catching an unsuspecting fish for dinner!!

Day 2 and the Captain started the engines at 3.40am. We were on our way to Richelieu Rock. Here we did 3 dives. The Rock is worthy of multiple dives as the marine life here is so prolific. A school of giant barracuda were waiting our arrival! Fortunately, we were able to locate a sea horse and 2 ornate ghost pipe fish.  Cuttle fish were in abundance as they displayed their courtship ritual. The whole area was like being in fish soup with large schools of fish swimming around us. Cleaner pipe fish were found in the crevices, mantis shrimps along the bottom hiding and a devil scorpion camouflaging itself as a piece of coral. Needless to say there were many more creatures too numerous to mention. One highlight was seeing a zebra moray free swimming in the shallows.

The 4th dive of the day was a sunset dive at Jetski Rock on Koh Tachai. A chilled out relaxing dive. The trevellies were in menacing hunting mode as they circled the glassfish on the reef. They are truly the “Gangsters” of the reef. A moray was enjoying being cleaned by a cleaner shrimp as the surrounding marine life prepared for bed. The sunset when we surfaced was spectacular and gave the perfect ending to a great day. Day 3 started with the morning dive on Koh Tachai Pinnacle. With a slight current it was easy navigate around the site.  The corals on the pinnacle are beautiful. Soft corals, gorgonion sea fans, whip coral are abundant.  A few barracuda were hanging above the site and the resident bat fish were between two huge boulders. Rene and Lucrezia were lucky and saw a leopard shark. They did have photographic evidence, so we had to believe them!!

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Leopard Shark

The second and third dives were on Koh Bon. Hunters were menacing as they circled amongst the glass fish and then without warning a feeding frenzy. The third devil scorpion fish of the trip was also seen. However, the icing on the cake at Koh Bon was the manta on dive 2. We were in the shallows coming towards the end of the dive when the manta appeared. This amazing creature brought smiles to all our faces as it approached us several times. Dive 4 was a sunset dive in the Similans and on West of Eden on Island 7. This dive was relaxing as we slowly worked our way along the reef swimming between the coral blocks. Glass fish in abundance, feather stars in every colour and an array of fish. Day 4 and an early start on Elephant Head Rock and boy oh boy did it pay off…..As soon as we dropped in we had a white tip reef shark laying on the bottom at 20m. As we approached it swam away. However, several minutes later we saw two side by side. Elephant Head has some lovely swim throughs and one of the white tips swam into it. Kath was the only diver to see this. The huge granite boulders with the coral gardens between are very impressive. The second dive on Shark Fin Reef was an easy dive for the end of the trip. Shark Fin reef has dramatic scenery of huge granite boulders. In one of the long cracks in a rock there resting was a Jenkins Ray. Further along the reef we saw a large school of giant barracudas. This was the first trip of the season to the Similans and Richelieu Rock and if this trip was anything to go by then we should have a wonderful season.

Liveaboards – MV Scuba Adventure

Posted on August 25th, 2011 by admin-scubacat-dw  |  Comments Off on Liveaboards – MV Scuba Adventure

When divers think of Thailand the first place that often they mention is Similans. But there are many more dive sites accessible in the South Andaman, which also offer the same diversity and topography as the North Andaman.

Some of these dive sites also have the advantage of being open for diving all year around as they have shelter and protection from the mainland.

South Andaman Dive sites can include:

Hin Daeng (Red Rock) and Hin Muang (Purple Rock):

Both of these sites are about 70 km south of Koh Lanta and offer the best of the South diving experiences. Here the visibility can be good, but the water is plankton rich so it attracts some of the larger marine life.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Whaleshark

"Whaleshark"

Hin Daeng is the deepest drop of in Thailand, with a wall descending to 70m+ on the south side of the site. It is visible from the surface in the form a three pinnacles that break the surface, these descend underwater to red soft coral covered walls and reef.

Hin Muang is a series of submerged pinnacles dropping down to 60m+, it is 200m in length and covered in purple colored soft corals.

The diversity of marine life on both sites ranges from the big palegics such as Manta and devil rays, Whale sharks and reef sharks, to small ornate ghost pipe fish, long nose hawkfish and nudibranchs.

Both sites are exposed during the monsoon season so are sometime inaccessible due to weather conditions.

Koh Haa:

This is a group of five islands about 25 km west of Koh Lanta. There are three dive sites here and it offers dramatic and colorful scenery. The reefs are hard coral which has soft corals and sea fans, the area has many swim throughs and caves.

Koh Haa Lagoon is a shallow, protected area that lies between 3 of the Islands, The central lagoon area is suitable for beginner divers and snorkellers and provides a safe, nursery-area for many juvenile fish species. You may see Porcupine Puffer Fish, Ghost Pipefish, Octopus and Hawksbill Turtles swimming amongst the corals

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Koh Haa

"The Cathedral"

Koh Haa Cathedral is a series of large and spectacular, interconnected caverns and swimthroughs. The largest cavern has three chambers and is known as ‘The Cathedral’. The first two chambers are connected by a shallow swim through at about 9 metres. It is possible to surface inside the Cathedral and see the limestone stalactites looming from the high ceilings. Light floods in through the two large entrances and offers great photographic opportunities. The shallow area in front of the beach is packed with coral and is suitable for beginner divers. Look out for the coral formations that are several metres high.

Koh Haa Chimney at Ko Haa Neung is a tall, vertical chimney, often filled with small glassfish or sweeperfish, starting at 5m and going down to around 16m. Explore the arm that branches out to the east, bringing you out into a beautiful shallow chamber with several large exits. You can find banded sea snakes, lionfish, nudibranchs, frogfish, harlequin shrimps, many other crustaceans and beautiful cowries. Look for large schools of snapper and barracuda.

Phi Phi :

Phi Phi islands have many dive sites, but the most famous and rewarding are at the south and are two rock islands called the Bida’s, Nok and Nai.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Phi Phi

"Phi Phi"

There is also a wall near to Maya beach, made famous by the movie the Beach with Leonardo De Caprio, which offers good diving.

The diving offers walls and sloping reefs, with hard and soft coral, many large sea fans and anemones. Schools of jack fish, barracuda, snappers can be seen on all sites, with sea horses, ghost pipe fish and nudibranchs. Look out for leopard sharks in the sandy areas with stingrays, and in the shallow look for hunting black tip reef sharks.

Turtles both green and hawksbills can often be found at all sites but many are seen on Maya wall.

Shark Point and Anemone reef :

Located around 26km from Chalong bay these two dive sites are less than a km away from each other. Anenome reef is one submerged pinnacle and Shark Point is two pinnacles, with one slightly above the water line.

Both sites are covered in soft corals with gorgonian sea fans, barrel sponges and anemones, and they attract a large amount of marine life.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Turtle

"Turtle"

Leopard and bamboo sharks can be sighted here, along with tigertail sea horses, hawksbill turtles and cuttlefish. Schooling snapper, travalie and fusileers are common, with many lion fish, scorpion fish and different types of moray eels.

Koh Doc Mai :

The name means flower island in Thai and the dive site is a limestone island with vertical walls descending to 24 to 28m in depth. The East side is the most dived and has two caves along its wall, there are many crevices, big sea fans, whip coral and tree corals.

The site offers a good variety of macro life, tiger tail sea horses, ghost pipe fish, nudibranchs, many types of shrimps and frog fish. Many white eyes morays are found together and under ledges bamboo sharks are common. The dive is normally a one way drift along the wall.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Dive sites

"Andaman Sea"

If you want to enjoy the best sites that Phuket all around the Andaman Sea can offer in a 7 day liveaboard trip join MV Scuba Adventure from November to May.

MARINE PARK RULES AND REGULATIONS

DO NOT 

Collect anything except rubbish

Make loud noises, which disturb other people and wildlife.

Hunt, destroy, or do anything that harms plants, animals and the environment

Exceed 40m of depth if trained; entry level divers must not exceed 20m of depth.

Exceed no decompression limits

Dive in restricted areas

Feed any animals

Dive with gloves, (except on wreck dives and mooring line descent or ascent dives).

DO

Have a diving certification

Realise the significance of nature, in that we must share and learn to preserve it for ourselves and others.

Have a signaling device

Complete safety stops on every dive

Protect the environment with good buoyancy control

Dive 2011

Posted on August 8th, 2011 by admin-scubacat-dw  |  Comments Off on Dive 2011

Scuba Cat Diving will be bringing a small piece of Phuket, Thailand to you in the UK later this year.

Dive 2011, NEC, Birmingham, England , 22nd and 23rd October 2011.

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Learn to Dive

This is the 5th consecutive year that Scuba Cat Diving has had a presence at Dive, this is the biggest Dive Show held in the UK. The show is organized by the Diver Group and has been held annually since 1991.

We will be celebrating of our 5th Anniversary of attendance with special offers and promotions, a free live aboard trip  plus 10% discounts on all bookings made with us at booth 1265 on the Asia Pacific Showcase during the show!

Scuba Cat Diving Phuket Thailand Dive 2011

"MV Scuba Cat"

This year representing Scuba Cat will be Sarah, Kath and Clare. If anyone wants to drop buy and buy any of us girls a coffee that will be fantastic, make it a wine………… and you have gained a friend for life!!!!!

After sharing a drink and a chat with us, why not spend time looking around the rest of the show you will get ideas for the latest kit to bring with you on return visit to Thailand along with some fantastic free to enter seminars hosted by top name diving professionals.  Two of the UK’s best-known Diving Celebrates will be there, Paul Rose and Monty Halls. Also Mark Powell, a well-known technical diver, will be addressing the controversial issue of Solo Diving, plus many more famous names………

Do you enjoy underwater photography and would like to know more or update your camera equipment? For the first time Dive 2011 presents “Photo Zone” the area will include exhibitors of leading camera and accessory suppliers, alongside many experts with advise for you on getting the perfect picture.

Ever wanted to know what it’s like to free dive?  Take part in a 10-minute relaxation and breathing lesson followed by a free diving simulation.