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Red Sea - Sea Life

On these pages we have included some of our favourite pictures. We have tried to group animals together to show tsome of the things you might meet along the way whilst in the Red Sea.

Underwater photography has become a very important part of our diving and these pages are always changing as our pictures are improving. We hope that the move away from a compact camera to DSLR will produce a marked difference.

Anyway, please enjoy our pictures. If you have any comments, then contact us...

Fish

anemonefish, scorpionfish and rays and sharks

Echinoderms

starfish, featherstars, sea urchins and sea cucumbers

Worms and Molluscs

worms, octopus, cuttlefish, squid, slugs and clams

Click to go to the Red Sea fish page

Click to go to the Red Sea echinoderms page

Click to go to the Red Sea worm and molluscs  page

   

 

 

Whaleshark video

Featherstar video

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

June 2010

The recent weather has been good for diving, light winds and/or northerlys which means that the vis has improved. The plankton bloom is going fast and the water is getting warmer.

After a couple of years of failed attempts (weather!), we finally managed to dive the Mixon Hole this weekend, not once but twice and it was fantastic, we had no idea that there was such diverse topography just off our shores.

We were dropped in on the northern ledge which we touched at about 5m. The vis was 10-15m and the colours were breathtaking. Outbreaks of kelp and other species, all manner of greens and browns against a backdrop of vivid green water being illuminated by the sun and a clear blue sky. Then we looked behind us and only a few metres away from us was the edge. We descended over the edge and followed a wall down to about 10m. The wall was made up of soft mud/clay and was home to lots of edible crab. Then a sloping bank continued downward. Even at 20m we could easily tell when clouds passed overhead. On the second dive we encounted a Gurnard and lobster as well as many more breathtaking views of the wall and ridge above us. At one point there is an overhang which is spectacular.

We are looking forward to getting back there with the cameras as soon as we can.

Thank you to Mulberry Divers for the most excellent diving.

 

 

 

 

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