This series of posts is about an 11-day liveaboard trip throughout the Galápagos Islands aboard the Deep Blue with the Master Liveaboard Fleet. Having shot several thousand images, I thought to share a few more here than on my other social channels, but be sure to check out my Instagram, TikTok, Youtube and Twitter for more. This part is about diving at Roca Redonda and Cape Douglas. Have a look at the other posts in this series.
Overnight we made our way to our next destination: Roca Redonda, a small flat-topped volcanic island about 25km northwest of Isabela Island, the largest island in the Galápagos Archipelago. The main attraction here are the submarine fumaroles which release bubbles indicating this volcano is still active. Geoff told us – as almost everywhere in the Galápagos – we could also spot large schools of fish, hammerhead sharks and eagle rays IF the visibility was alright. As it turned out, that ‘if’ didn’t come true, and I think we had the worst visibility of our entire trip here. We could barely see a few meters, I would estimate between 1 and 3 m on average – and on top of that, Geoff had already warned us that this particular dive would be one of the most challenging of the trip.
Due to a strong surge at the entrance part coupled with strong potential currents, we needed to make sure to stay together and immediately descend upon the backroll entrance from the panga. If, for whatever reason, a diver couldn’t descend immediately, he/she would likely be carried away immediately and would have to abort the dive on the spot. Luckily we all made it down, but due to the strong surge, this whole dive was more a crawling dive among rocks than anything else. In about 15m, we were able to spot the fumaroles releasing the bubbles. Around them, the rocks had white deposits all over them. Unfortunately, my camera was playing up, and I couldn’t focus for whatever reason and thus couldn’t take any pictures in the first half of the dive. On top of that, the visibility was so incredibly bad that all cameras were pretty much useless.
The end of the dive was pretty cool, though: besides the worst visibility on this trip, this dive also offered what was probably the strongest current we had. Although I couldn’t see much of where we were drifting, the last few minutes, including the safety stop, were spent drifting quite fast through the murky waters before surfacing. I really enjoyed this drift but was thinking to myself: I hope this is planned as I could barely make out anything (turned out, it was planned :-)).
After our dive, we moved on to Cape Douglas for two main reasons: to observe the marine iguanas and to find a red-lipped batfish. Marine iguanas are reptiles and thus cannot control their body temperature. In order to warm up, they have to spend time in the sun, and once warm enough, they start foraging on algae in the cold water (around 14-16 degrees here)! We had to be there at the right time, between 11 and 2, to be able t observe them in the water. Apparently, that is the only window when they get in there, and if we were too late, we’d miss them. Luckily we made it in time and could see hundreds of heads sticking out of the water’s surface just meters from the rocky shore.
The idea for this dive was to be dropped in buddy couples from the panga a few meters away from each other to avoid eight people disturbing a single iguana. We drove a few meters from the Deep Blue and dive buddy couple by dive buddy couple bankrolled into the shallow water in the intertidal zone. The depth averaged around 3-5 m, and it only took a few seconds until we found the first marine iguana feeding on red algae. Not to bother them too much, we weren’t allowed to use any lights or strobes, and it was also recommended not to get too close and scare them off. To me, this made sense, and honestly (besides the lights) is part of ethical photography in the first place. Study the subject and don’t do anything to hurt/distress it while trying to take the images.
It was an amazing dive, and I think I even said the best so far. It is hard to compare the diving at the different sites we had done in the past days as they were all so different and all offered so much in their own way. But the freedom we were given on this dive – to just dive in buddy pairs and take as much time as we want (well, as long as it was below 60 minutes) – and the fact that we were surrounded by these incredible unique animals was just mind-blowing. I get incredibly cold very quickly, but on this dive, it didn’t bother me, my adrenalin and excitement were just too hyped up.
Besides all the marine iguanas around us, there were also a few hunting flightless cormorants – incredibly agile birds that have adapted to be incredibly good swimmers. The muscles in their wings have basically wandered down into their legs, making them strong swimmers that have been spotted in more than 40m depth! They are so fast underwater that it was hard to take photos, and it seemed impossible to predict where they’d be swimming next. The ones I observed swam from rock to rock, diving all around them and into any crack they could find. it was an insane spectacle to observe, and what a reminder again of how cool nature is!
The third and last dive for the day was dedicated to finding the red-lipped batfish, one of the most bizarre fish on the planet. The dive site is near to where we were a few hours earlier, but this time, we would have to go much deeper – between 20 and 30 m – to find these maybe 10-15 cm large fish on the sand. They have highly modified fins enabling them to walk over the sand basically. They can still swim, though but are mostly encountered “standing” in their fins on the sea floor, looking pretty.
It didn’t take very long, and after about six or seven minutes, I spotted the first one on the sand. Luckily, they were a few around, and the whole group didn’t have to cram themselves around one individual, not only stressing the animal but also making a photo or video work very difficult, if not impossible. I got a few very cool portrait shots, including a few where one of the individuals was swimming right towards me. I just hovered still, fins slightly touching the sea bottom and didn’t breathe (no advice here!) so it would come closer. This was the first dive of the entire liveaboard cruise thus far where I had opted to use the 105mm Nikkor lens here at Cape Douglas instead of the wide-angle, and it was definitely the right decision. I really enjoyed shooting macro and always do, but of course, there is always the “danger” of missing the big charismatic stuff. But when I do have the macro on me actually never think that way and have lot os fun just shooting all the critters and small life that way too often gets so easily overlooked.
Hey Tom, eine spannende Artikel Serie zum Tauchen auf den Galapagos Inseln – das ist für viele Taucher sicherlich ein Traum 🙂
Schade (oder zum Glück für die Unterwasserwelt?!) sind die Inseln so weit weg und die Anreise sicherlich beschwerlich bzw. der Aufenthalt kostspielig. Ich kann dich auf jeden Fall nur beglückwünschen für diese Erlebnisse! Richtiges Haitauchen steht bei mir immer noch auf der Bucketlist (in der Straße von Tiran habe ich Hammerhaie knapp verpasst – zu scheu die Tiere…) aber zumindest konnte ich jetzt im Dezember auf Gomera meinen ersten Hai unter Wasser beobachten (einen Engelhai). Nachdem ich dort vor 8 Jahren schonmal getaucht bin, hatte ich eher weniger Erwartungen und war nun total überrascht über den Fischreichtum – große Fischschwärme inkl. Barrakudas, Stachelrochen, Muränen… Ansonsten werde ich mich erstmal wieder vermehrt der Ostsee widmen, welche, wenn auch wenig spektakulär, durchaus reizvoll sein kann. Deine Unterwasserfotos haben mir auch wieder Lust gemacht, mich dem Thema Unterwasserfotografie in diesem Jahr verstärkt zu widmen.
Liebe Grüße,
Patrick
Hi Patrick, vielen Dank fuer dein Kommentar! Ich sehe es wie du: die Abgelegenheit der Inseln ist defintiv gut fuer die Unterwasserwelt (und natuerlich auch an Land), allerdings steigt auch dort der Tourimsus stetig an und es bleibt abzuwarten inwieweit der Spagat zwischen mehr Touristen und Naturschutz funktionieren wird..
Ein Engelhai – sehr, sehr cool! Habe ich selber nicht nicht das Glueck gehabt 🙂 Freut mich sehr deine Lust auf Unterwasserfotografie wieder etwas angestachelt zu haben – je mehr von uns, desto besser! Und klar, interessante Tauchgaenge kann man ueberall haben, definitiv auch in der Ostsee (wenn auch weniger bunt :))
Beste Gruesse,
Tom
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Tom Vierus is an award-winning photographer, filmmaker, and marine biologist based in Suva, Fiji Islands. This blog is dedicated to his assignments and to sharing some behind-the-scenes footage.
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