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Cape Town Nudibranch finds

Cape Town Nudibranch finds

Cape Town Nudibranch finds on our nudibranch hunting trips can provide some nice critters to photograph.

But to find most of them you would need to go very slow. A very good idea is too dive often as well. This will ensure that your sighting possibilities will increase, hopefully.

Dive Inn Cape Town also offer Specialised Nudibranch hunting scuba dives. So book us and we can try and show you the small stuff that you miss. You can check most of our photos out on FaceBook or Instagram.

At the moment we are still able to get between 10 and 20 different species of Nudibranchs per dive. Nudibranchs is also known as sea slugs but we will not go to deep into the different species of slugs which can be found all over.

As in previous blogs we did mention about over 80 different species we can find in Cape Town waters. However every now and then a species pop out we do not know. Like the Opera house, which have been seen every now and then. We were lucky to have spotted one in January last.

A new species we have been seeing is not named yet. But for now we just call it an Orange Corambe sp.

Cape Town Nudibranch finds

Unknown

Hopefully in the near future we have it described by a scientist. It is orange, quite small and live on Bryozoans or that’s here we have been spotting them. (chaperia spp)

 

Then of course we find Nudibranchs which have not been seen in a long long time.

We had some great Eubranchus and Doto’s in Cape Town Nudibranch finds. It is a shame that most of these unusual finds are so small. This probably is good in a way as then we can find them on a nudibranch hunting trip.

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Great Cape Town Diving

Great Cape Town Diving

Great Cape Town Diving

Fingerfin

Great Cape Town Diving

Great Cape Town Diving. The forecast for the past weekend dives did not look good but we decided to go ahead with planned dives and dive and make a call from there.

The results, an extremely low tide due to full moon on our first launch extremely high again by the 3rd and last launch. The temperature of 14 degrees on all 4 dives and viz from 1- 10 meters made it well it really good. Sometimes the big predicted swell did effect the diving with some surge but that was not hectic at all and some good photographs were the proof of it. Rockeater wreck, Pietermaritzburg wreck and Partridge point was dived.
Then Sunday morning early, very early a group of us entered the dark waters at Windmill beach. The sun was hinting of coming up over the mountains on the other side of False bay and the full moon disappeared behind the mountains on the Atlantic side. The first bit was not good with 1 meter viz due to the surge but once outside the channel it cleaned out beautifully. With the sun coming out 20 minutes later it cleaned up even better and we ended a good dive with breakfast at Boulders. The restaurant is overlooking the ocean and we had a good view of the bay with penguins on the rocks as well. We also noticed that the South Easter (Cape Doctor) was picking up and probably messing with the dive conditions for the rest of the day.

Great Cape Town Diving