Poor Knights – March 2014

Cyclone Lusi move over we are coming North!

Not even the weather could dampen our spirits as we prepared for our live aboard trip to the Poor Knights with Oceanblue Adventures.

While some chose to fly north the rest of us piled into the car and headed to Taupo for our first dives on the trip. We collected some tanks from The Dive Shack and while he lamented on cancelling several trips due to the cyclone he described the lake as being ‘as flat as a turd’

Unsure quite what that mean we headed to the point at Acacia Bay for a deep freshwater dive. After a nice deep water entry we descended down the wall and headed out to 30m in the bay. The lake bottom is very silty and there is not a lot to see but the many koura are always entertaining.

Tennis anyone? Koura

Swimming back along the weed line and over some dead trees we saw 100’s of our small native fish and a couple of trout. The exit back on to the rocks was a little challenging thanks to the surface chop – so if you were wondering ‘turds’ are not particularly flat!

Native FishThe Surface!

After a relaxing break the others were ready for a drift down the Waikato River. With only 1 vehicle I didn’t get to join them so we went and checked out the exit point (well upstream from Huka Falls) then I dropped the at the start of the dive by Cherry Island. With a good briefing and the help of Google Maps they jumped in and disappeared around the bend. With luck I would find them again in an hour!

Superwoman - Drift Dive

On cue they surfaced at the exit and after a swim through some eddies they were back on shore having had a terrific new dive experience, lots of trout, tyres and a shopping trolley but also swimming through rapids and surfing the flat rocks. They stopped off at the hot pools but felt a bit conspicuous in full scuba in front of dozens of tourists in togs so headed back downstream.

The next day was spent driving up to Tutukaka with some particularly poor service at one cafe along the way to keep us entertained – after arriving with the wrong drinks the waitress just plonked them on the table saying “Whatever!” Needless to say we didn’t stop there on the way back.

In Tuts we finally caught up with the rest of our divers and managed to load ourselves and our gear onto the boat. We were ready to go diving!

Giant Stride Me!

The trip out was great and we had blue skies for the week – thanks Lusi.
Everyone was buzzing after the first dive, the vis may have only been 15m (but that’s better than here) but the water was warm at 20 degrees and there were a lot of new fish to see – including schools of koheru, pink and blue maomao, the inquisitive Sandager’s wrasse, pigfish and morays.

Pink Maomao Kingis Yellow Moray Sponges

Over the 4 days we managed to complete 14 dives, explored walls, caverns, archways, gardens and the Waikato Wreck. We had a night dive at Blue Maomao Arch to celebrate Ruth’s 100th dive – a great achievement. Grace & Quinton completed their Advanced Open Water Course along the way – enjoying some deeper dives than usual, fine tuning their buoyancy and navigation skills and identifying the many new species they saw and photographed on their dives.

Diver - Underwater Naturalist Night Diver

All too soon we were back at Tuts and it was time to unload and say goodbye to Kevin and the other divers as we made our way home again. We had hoped to sneak in one last dive but Lusi had the last laugh with a pile of seaweed dumped on the shore, lots of surge and no vis. The ‘smurfs’ (aka 2 bus loads of students in blue wetsuits) were also slightly off putting so it was back on to the road for the final leg home.

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