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  • SCUBA Videos

    Due to some technical difficulties and a very slow internet connection, we won’t be able to post our pictures until the next time we get internet. But here are some videos of our SCUBA trip that the divemaster took.

    Sharks with us at the end:

    Lots of sharks.

    Spotted eagle rays over an eel garden. The things sticking up out of the ground that pull back into their burrows when the rays pass are the little eels.

    Rays swimming through a cloud of fish.

    Sharks and big fish over a pile of rocks.

    More sharks. And us at the end. In the back. Matt is apparently bored by the sharks and examining rocks.

    Did I mention we saw some sharks?


  • Giant Tortoise Breeding Center

    Today we went to the Giant Tortoise Breeding Center to see the baby tortoises.

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    They have really long necks.

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    There was one pen that had a clutch from this month! They were still really small.

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    This guy hasn’t even got eating down yet.

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    That’s it, use your foot!

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    Eating is hard work. Time to rest in the shade.

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    Cut it out, Yurtle!

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    Yurtle the tortoise doesn’t even rhyme!

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    We also saw some of the really big ones. There was no one else around when we were there so we could sit and hear all the munching of the babies and the adults.

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    They have long necks too. image

    They also had big feet.

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    And big toenails.

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    This is an Espanola tortoise brought in from the San Diego Zoo. There were only 2 other males of his kind when they brought him in, so the breeding program was in trouble. But he is quite the lady’s man and is now the father of 80% of his subspecies.

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    There were also pens for the iguanas.

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    We saw lots of lava lizards while wandering around.

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    And lots of weird plants. This one looks like a fern, but it has flowers.

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    This is another cactus flower.

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    This is the inside of a dead cactus.

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    There was also  a wasp that followed us around. Here is an old nest:

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    And here he is trying to camouflage on the backpack.

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    This is a spider.

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    The birds are still quite relaxed around people. This is a mockingbird that was squawking at Matt while he was taking Kerri’s picture.

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    Here is a cactus finch on the ground.

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    And here is a ground finch on a cactus.

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    He flew down off of his flower to investigate us.

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    It kept hopping closer and closer, with pollen still all over it’s nose. Then it pecked Kerri’s toe. Hard! It moved away after Kerri jumped back. Matt was not sure what she expected but assumed a bird hops over you are likely to get pecked.

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  • Tortuga Bay

    After SCUBA we hiked out to Tortuga Bay. It is a 45 minute hike. 30 minutes out to the beach, and then 15 more minutes to get to the bay. The beach was very pretty with extremely fine white sand.

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    It has many crabs.

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    And little shrimpy things in the tide pools.

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    And crab tracks.

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    This is the hole of a ghost crab. They make tiny balls of sand outside of his hole. But they disappear into their holes really fast.

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    There were also these tracks.

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    Which belong to the marine iguanas.

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    They do not camouflage very well in the pale sand. But they are hard to see on the lava rocks.

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    The bay at the end was also very pretty.

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  • Diving North Seymour

    More diving today.

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    The sand at the bottom was covered in garden eels..

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    They stick their heads out of the sand, but quickly retract back into the sand whenever anything passes overtop.

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    Their little faces are almost cute, for an eel.

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    There were many starfish.

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    Many, many starfish.

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    And blue starfish.

     

     

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    There was also lots of fish including more puffer fish.

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    And more puffer fish. Oh and also lots of sharks. image

    We also saw nudibranchs. They are a mollusks who lose their shell as they grow and they take on really weird shapes and colours.

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    And giant sand dollars.

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    There were also a large number of parrot fish everywhere.

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    We also saw some Galapagos barracuda which are much smaller than the big ones around Mexico. These ones were only about a foot long.

     

    At one point in time a spotted eagle ray came really close to where we were resting on the ocean floor. It swam right overtop of us and was only about a metre away.

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    Oh an I believe I mentioned sharks earlier. The ones above were Galapagos sharks. These ones are white tipped reef sharks as you can tell by their fin tips.

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    White tipped sharks

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    And black tipped sharks.

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    The second dive had a really strong current at the end and we did our safety stop as a drift. I don’t think I could even swim nearly as fast as the current was pulling us along. Here’s me relaxing during the 5 minute safety stop.

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    These last four pictures were taken by the dive master. We couldn’t take pictures of ourselves, and we didn’t go that close to the sleeping sharks.

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  • Laguna Las Ninfas

    We were exhausted after SCUBA, so we tried to go to a beach where we could crash and watch the wildlife. Unfortunately we confused the “swimming” symbol on the map with the “beach” symbol. But we decided it was good enough.

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    There actually wasn’t much wildlife either. There are supposed to be baby sharks and rays in the lagoon, and the water was certainly clear enough to watch them, but we didn’t see any.

    There weren’t even very many birds. This is ghost bird. Now you see him.

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    Now you don’t!

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    Here he is again.

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    This is crabby one claw.

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    And that’s pretty much all we saw!