24 Jun 2021
One last day of diving- all shallow reef dives. Yesterday, the visibility got progressively worse as the day went on and today started off about the same. I’m still trying to figure out wide-angle lighting, so these pictures also have a lot of debris in them.
Dive #7 – Hole in the Wall
I spotted so many cool fish on this dive, like this juvenile Yellowtail damselfish was darting in and out of the coral- this was the best shot I could get of him:

(bonus Christmastree worm in the bottom right corner there)
This is an adult Yellowtail damselfish:

Lettuce sea slug:

Stoplight parrotfish with a Honeycomb cowfish photobomb (the cowfish took off, unfortunately, as I hadn’t seen this variety before):

Bicolor damselfish:

Fourspot butterflyfish:

Orangespotted filefish!

Spanish grunt:

Pederson cleaner shrimp:

This Sergeant major wasn’t blue like the other guardians…

but he was still protecting a nest:

All those little purple dots are eggs!!!

My nudibranch laying eggs!

Bluestripe grunt:

Ocean surgeonfish:

Lane snapper:

Doctorfish:

Fourspot butterflyfish:

Bluestriped grunt (top) and Schoolmaster (bottom):

Smooth trunkfish:

Redband parrotfish:

Ocean surgeonfish:

Stoplight parrotfish (terminal phase):

Spotfish butterflyfish:

Blue tang:

Trumpetfish, trying to hide:

another Trumpetfish trying to hide:

Grumpy Blue chromis:

Scrawled cowfish!!!

Spanish hogfish:

Orangespotted filefish:

Gray angelfish:

Most of the dives down here are only 45-50 minutes, with a short (~15 minute) surface interval. As most dives are pretty shallow, it’s not a problem (and there is more of an interval after a deep wreck dive), so when we were 40-45 minutes into this dive and I didn’t see the boat, I thought it was a bit strange, but wasn’t going to argue with more time to take pictures. Then our guide started high-tailing it across the reef so I signaled to one of the people in my group “where’s the boat?” only to be met with a shrug. I spotted our guide at the surface so I ascended as well. Turns out, he took us back to the wrong boat! So we had to do the swim of shame back to our boat 🙁 This was the only dive where I used up more than half my tank.
Dive #8 – North Star
First thing I saw when we dropped drop was this pack of Midnight parrotfish going after whatever was under this rock:

Even a grouper got in on the action!

These were some large parrotfish- almost 2′ long!

Oo, barracuda!

Spiny lobster:

Tiny nudibranch with tiny eggs!

This little guy wasn’t on a purple fan like the rest I had seen:

Smooth trunkfish:

Look at the cool texture on his side!

A pair of Spotfin butterflyfish:

Green moray:

(all those specks behind him are baby fish!)
Juvenile Threespot Damselfish:

Sharpnose puffer:

A couple more little nudibranchs!



Nurse shark resting under a ledge:

Lane snappers:

I don’t know if Florida has pipefish, but there was a bigger Trumpetfish nearby, so I’m going to call this guy a juvenile Trumpetfish:

Guardian Sergeant major:

Blue parrotfish:

Oh, hey, another nudibranch!

I want the little black dots on this lettuce sea slug to be eyes:

I saw something falling through the water- a lettuce sea slug had become dislodged from where it was climbing and ended up on its back, so this is what their undersides look like:

(don’t worry, he righted himself quickly)
A pair of neon gobies:

Top: juvenile Princess parrotfish, right: Blue chromis, bottom: juvenile Striped parrotfish

Ocean surgeonfish:

Blue tang:

Bluestriped grunt:

Schoolmaster:

Graysby?

Dive #9 – French Twist
Spiny lobster:

Blue chromis:

Permits! These guys were HUGE! – a solid 2.5′

A whole pile of Glassy sweepers in this swim-through:

Not a great picture, but I found a French angelfish:

Hello there, Stoplight parrotfish!

Cheese!

Hogfish, in his “I’m swimming” coloration:

These little yellow juvenile Bluehead wrasses were EVERYWHERE! but they’re small and hard for my camera to focus on- finally got a good shot!

Reef shark! We actually saw several sharks on this dive, but all that particulate in the water made it difficult for my camera to focus at a distance.

Ok, this is a bad picture, but I didn’t see many angelfish this trip, and this was the only time I saw this guy, a Queen angelfish:

Dive #10 – Christmastree Cave
Last dive of the trip 🙁 But I found this pretty Banded butterflyfish:

A couple more Pederson Cleaner shrimp:

Aren’t their markings cool?!

Fourspot butterflyfish:

Finally found a Harlequin bass that would cooperate for pictures!

farewell, little guy!

Queen parrotfish, initial phase:

Smooth trunkfish, blowing sand around to uncover food- I had seen several do this, but they always stopped when I got close enough for a picture. Glad to have finally captured it!

Again, look at the cool texture of his skin!

Blue parrotfish! They’ve got some serious beaks!

Sharpnose puffer:

Two tiny flounders!!

I spotted these two because they were circling each other and fighting (or mating, but I’m going for fighting):

Staredown

Seriously strange critters- I love them!

And one final Balloonfish (and Sergeant major)

The end.