Trip Reports
Trip Report : Shaking off Winter – Springing in to Spring
0About a month ago, Deralie suggested we book some spaces on the October Liveaboard trip out to the Poor Knights Islands and for a month I have been looking forward to it a lot.
A few weeks ago, I found out that both Anna and Andrew would be on board.
Then Pip and Trevor were coming.
And then last week, the final space was taken by Marty.
The trip list was full of awesome people that I love diving with!
And then we worked out that one year ago, I certified Deralie as a PADI Advanced Open Water diver and since then she has completed her Rescue Diver course, TDI Introduction to Tech and Advanced Nitrox and Decompression Procedures as well as started her Divemaster.
It has been a slow winter for scuba diving for me. I have done very little teaching and very little diving.
This weekend was going to be a shakedown weekend for me before I launch myself fully in to all that the New Zealand summer brings – in terms of spending the next 4 months on and off the boats and being in and out of the water.
We spent the weekend cruising – with our faces in the walls, looking for all sort of little critters and big fat nudibranchs.
Dive One : Middle Arch
The sun was in the bay. It was calm and beautiful.
I had a shocker of a dive with my camera. I couldn’t get the photographs that I wanted!!
I spent quite a lot of the dive wriggling around in my gear and thinking about my breathing. I could feel the weight that I put on over the winter. I made a mental note – GO TO THE GYM!
Dive One Data || Depth: 16.7m | Time: 56 mins | Temp: 15 degrees | Visibility: 10m | EANx: 33%
Dive Two : Magic Wall
During my surface interval, I grabbed Andrew and pleaded for help.
We looked through my photographs and my camera setup and made a couple of modifications so I was pleased to head over the side of the boat and make for the sand. Deralie and I decided that we would settle on the sand at the base of the wall, make sure we were all set up and then head off from there.
Magic Wall is truly magic.
…. especially when camera settings, strobe settings and a photographer who knows what they are doing all come together!!
We had to avoid the Photography course which cruised past us kicking up a bit of sand and getting a wee bit close to the wall.
Didn’t stop us from coming across fat nudibranchs, blue flat worms, diadema’s and beautiful gorgonian fans.
Top it all off, we practiced SMB releases at the end of the dive. And they were good!
Dive Two Data || Depth: 16.5m | Time: 60 mins | Temp: 15 degrees | Visibility: 15m | EANx: 33%
Dive Three : the wall opposite Blue Maomao Arch, in Labrid Channel, near Fraggle Rock
I’ve dived this location a couple of times – both times with students on an Advanced Open Water Night Dive.
Deralie and Marty and I decided to dive the wall/bay instead of the archway as there was quite a lot of water movement and we thought it would be more peaceful. Just goes to show that I am not always right after all!!
It was a little bit shit – BUT … I found some lovely Elysia sp. AND AND AND AND a Janolus sp. (a nocturnal nudibranch).
Due to the surge, the photos are pretty bad. For those two reasons alone though, it was an okay night dive. It was worth getting in!
Dive Three Data || Depth: 16m | Time: 38 mins | Temp: 15 degrees | EANx: 24%
Dive Four : Serpent Rock
Sunday morning and Deralie and I had planned a 45m dive with a 25 minute bottom time.
Before we got geared up and in the water, I changed the dive plan. Even after the shake down dives yesterday, I didn’t feel fit/good/up to a decompression dive.
We have a pretty good rule – Anyone can call a dive at any time (and this includes calling it before you get in the water).
Dive Four Data || Depth: 20.6m | Time: 49 mins | Temp: 15 degrees | Visibility: 10m
Dive Five : HMNZS Waikato (Stern section)
We were going hunting – hunting for Jasons mirabilis nudibranchs.
Deralie, Pip and Big Ed and I headed down the line and around the port side of the helicopter hangar.
I got all excited! I was so sure that I had seen one – I signalled to Deralie and then realised I was quite narked and wasn’t looking at a nudibranch at all. Whoops!
It was a lovely dive. Warmer than I expected with tons and tons and tons of anemones.
We headed back up the line up to our safety stop. Ed and Deralie and I were hanging on the line when I thought “hang on, where’s Pip”. Signalled to the others, searched for bubbles on the wreck – nothing. I was clear of decompression obligations and had completed my safety stop so I headed up to check with the boat. I asked Ed to stay with Deralie who still had a couple of minutes left.
When I got to the surface and yelled to Bruce – phew! Pippy was on the boat! I headed back down to 5m, let the team know and we surfaced all together.
Dive Five Data || Depth: 25.7m | Time: 52 mins | Temp: 14 degrees | Visibility: 8m
Trip Report : Diving the Rainbow Warrior
0It was pouring with rain when we left Auckland and it only seemed to get worse as we headed towards Paihia.
I had been looking forward to this weekend in what seemed like forever. The weather was not going to get me down.
This was the fourth time I had planned to dive the Rainbow Warrior and I was hell bent on doing it!
The Rainbow Warrior is a special wreck.
From Wikipedia – Sinking of the Rainbow Warrior:
The sinking of theRainbow Warrior, codenamed Opération Satanique,[1] was an operation by the “action” branch of the French foreign intelligence services, theDirection Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (DGSE), carried out on July 10, 1985. It aimed to sink the flagship of the Greenpeace fleet, the Rainbow Warrior in the port of Auckland, New Zealand, to prevent her from interfering in a nuclear test in Moruroa.
Fernando Pereira, a photographer, drowned on the sinking ship. Two French agents were arrested by the New Zealand Police on passport fraud and immigration charges. They were charged with arson, conspiracy to commit arson, willful damage, and murder. As part of a plea bargain, they pleaded guilty to manslaughter and were sentenced to ten years, of which they served just over two.
The scandal resulted in the resignation of the French Defence Minister Charles Hernu.
We headed out from Matauri Bay with Paihia Dive.
Myself and my dive buddies almost filled their RIB (rigid inflatable boat) but we are used to working like this, so we shuffled our gear together as close as possible and still managed to fit at least another 5-7 divers who were doing their Advanced Open Water course.
I have to say I was really impressed with how the crew handled us – and our gear – would totally recommend the team from Dive Paihia!!
Dropping down on to the stern – two things caught me by surprise.
The Rainbow Warrior was smaller than I expected. I knew she was colourful but the amount of colour blew me away.
I spent an hour on her on my first dive (backgas of 21% and a 42% in a stage cylinder) with my 60mm macro lens.
The second dive was a little shorter.
I’d go back again for sure but next time with a wide angle lens.
Images from by buddies:
- Me, Ian and Alice heading to the bridge – HMNZS Canterbury / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
- me photographing my buddy on the HMNZS Canterbury / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
- me on the Rainbow Warrior / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
Dive One Data || Depth: 25.2m | Time: 60 mins | Temp: 22 degrees |
Dive Two Data || Depth: 23.8m | Time: 36 mins | Temp: 22 degrees |
More photographs (wide angle) and a trip report; Martin Wallis Photography – Diving the Rainbow Warrior

Diving the Rainbow Warrior - Martin Wallis







