25 Jan 2021
Another full day of diving with KHD again. After freezing through the first 2 days of diving (adding my hood wasn’t enough to keep me warm), Kevin, my guide, brought a 2nd suit for me to use, and I ended up wearing two full 5mm wetsuits for the rest of the trip. Sure, I looked like a marshmallow, it took me forever to suit up and I needed to add several extra pounds so I could actually sink, but I was finally warm!
Dive #9 – Air Station
Lots of rare critters on this dive!
Hawaiian red lionfish:
And another (yes, he was hanging in the vertical position):
And a couple more! These guys don’t get very big- these two were 6-7″:
Close-up:
Psychedelic wrasses! The orange-headed guy is the male and all the red-tailed ones are his harem:
Bird wrasse:
Bird wrasse (male)- not the best picture, but this was the first and only blue one I had seen!
Saddle wrasse (a very common endemic fish):
Frogfish!!
Lizardfish:
Hidden lizardfish:
Oh look, another whitemouth eel:
Potter’s angelfish:
Rock-mover wrasse- remember that weird leafy fish that flitted around and was really hard to photograph? This is what he grows up to be:
Ah, judgemental ring-tail wrasse, we meet again:
Blackside hawkfish:
Octopus + Manybar goatfish:
Octopus:
Dive #10 – Carousel
Hey, look! Another parrotfish eating the coral!
Arc-eye hawkfish:
Pyramid butterflyfish:
Trumpetfish:
A group sergeants (mostly Indo-Pacific, but I think that guy on the right is a Hawaiian) and a Hawaiian cleaner wrasse:
Fun fact: while the Indo-pacific and Hawaiian sergeants are 2 distinct species, they can interbreed. Not sure if the offspring are fertile.
Eels eating (the picture is cloudy because of all the blood in the water):
FLAME ANGELFISH!
These guys are so pretty, but are so skittish! It took me many tries to get a picture of one not completely hidden in the coral:
Success!
Cornetfish:
White-mouth eel:
Yellow tang:
These guys are everywhere, but this might be the first picture I intentionally took of one
Eightline wrasse (I don’t remember seeing this guy before this trip):
Bullethead parrotfish:
So often when I see soldierfish, they are peering out like this from a hiding place in the coral:
Thompson’s butterflyfish:
Ugh, I only saw a handful of these Goldrim surgeonfish, but none of the pictures were in focus 🙁
Belted wrasse (male)- a cool endemic species I don’t remember seeing previously!
Black triggerfish:
This guy had a really cool blue pattern on his head! According to my fish book, that happens when the fish is aroused. Pretty sure I killed that mood. Their sides turn orange and they display bluish lines along their sides when agitated. Pretty sure that’s what this guy is doing:
Yet another Bullethead parrotfish munching on coral:
Agile chromis, trying to hide:
Ringtail wrasses just look so mean!
This would have been a great shot of an Ornate butterflyfish until he stuck his head behind that coral:
Octopus!
on the move
a second octopus!
isn’t she pretty?!
and now they’re making baby octopuses
This Arc-eye hawkfish kept leaping off his perch in the split second between when I pressed the trigger and when the camera snapped a picture- I’ve got a good half-dozen pictures of him swimming away, but I like how you can see the cool orange striping on his “chest” in this one:
This octopus was half red, half white:
but I couldn’t get a good angle on him:
Dive #11 – Garden Eel Cove
The seas were quite surge-y, and the garden eels we usually see at this site had all tucked into their holes. Still, there were exciting other critters to be seen!
Spotted coral blenny:
Look at his “eyebrows”!
Oval butterflyfish face:
Serious saddle wrasse side-eye:
Flame angelfish!
Potter’s angelfish:
Bluefin trevally:
Bluestripe snapper:
Another school of sergeants, mostly Indo-Pacific, but I think there’s a Hawaiian in there again!
Ornate wrasse:
Whitemouth eel:
Bird wrasse + small friend?
Octopus!
Remember the Yellowtail coris? This is the juvenile version of that guy:
A sneaky eel:
Whitley’s boxfish:
Caught this Bigscale soldierfish before he could hide:
Square-spot goatfish:
Spot-fin squirrelfish:
Peacock grouper:
Yellowmargin eel:
The endemic Redbarred hawkfish:
And yet another Ringtail wrasse hanging out at the mooring:
I was getting ready to end my dive when I spotted this Sleek unicornfish turn from dark:
to light
Dive #12 – Garden Eel Cove (with manta!)
Just one manta tonight, Akari:
But I got a few good mouth shots!