Dear Fellow Diver:
I was ready to jump into the 49-degree water at a never-dived site. Our
group of Canadian, American and Dutch divers was aboard the Nautilus Swell, a
99-year-old converted tugboat (although refurbished in 2005 for more than $3 million)
based out of Port Hardy at the northern tip of Vancouver Island. After diving
several spots in the Browning Pass area, we had moved to a virgin kelp-covered
spot that Captain Al had been eyeing. Once I jumped in, I felt like I was
inside a popcorn popper. Thousands of small crabs were moving everywhere, as were
larger crabs, shrimp, nudibranchs and myriad fish. My eyes darted around, trying
to keep up with the activity. I surfaced, whooping and hollering. So good, it was
the only site we repeated, with a bonus of a giant Pacific octopus on the second
dive. When I offered it my hand, it just looked at it and blew water toward me,
totally unconcerned.
One can fly to Vancouver, then catch a small plane to Port Hardy, but after
my buddies and I flew into Vancouver, we spent a day hiking and touring the
aquarium, then rented a van and, after a ferry ride, spent another day driving
up the beautiful eastern coast of Vancouver Island. Spending two nights at the
Orange Tabby B&B, we explored the Port Hardy area (note: the best homemade soups
and fish dinners are at the Sporty Bar and Grill), and I observed many soaring
eagles, a couple of otters and a black bear mother and cub. After paying $10 to
park our vehicle for the week, we boarded the Nautilus Swell at 5:30 p.m.
The Swell, 90 feet long with a 22-footwide
beam, is fitted for 14 guests. Four
bunk rooms are tiny; ok for one person but
I can't imagine two people with heavy clothing
and drysuit underwear sharing the small
closets and two small drawers under the
lower bunk. The larger cabins have double
beds with two large drawers below, a small
closet and a small four-drawer chest. There
were a couple of hooks on the wall. The private
bathrooms were decently sized, with
plenty of hot water. Each cabin had heaters,
and I always cranked mine up to rewarm after a dive. (Mike Lever, who owns this
boat and the Nautilus Explorer, plans
eventually to enlarge the cabins and
refit them with a lower double bed and
a single upper bunk).
For every dive, we boarded the Swell's roomy 38-foot aluminum skiff.
About half is covered, which is good
for rainy days -- we had a few in
early October, with blustery winds,
so I wore my drysuit underwear even
on land. The skiff's uncovered portion
was good for gear rinsing when
it rained. They timed many dives for
slack tides, but occasionally we ran into strong tidal flows because local tides
didn't always match the charts. At Alex Rock, my buddy and I kicked valiantly to
keep the island in sight, but the current was too stiff, so we surfaced early.
Other dive sites were in protected coves, such as Fishbowl. Our only night dive
at Staples Cut highlighted two-foot-long orange sea pens with bright green bioluminescence
appearing when I stroked them. The boat lacked a divemaster, out
due to illness, so we did most dives on our own after thorough briefings from
Captain Al, who joined a few dives to find wolf eels or octopus, and to see what
we liked so much at Critter Corner. Al was very professional and friendly, not
hiding out in the wheelhouse as some captains will. Karl, the tall, cheerful,
always smiling and non-diving first mate, took over many of the surface duties.
Due to the tides, the three daily dives were often two hours apart, especially
on the first couple of days when the diving, which started at 8 a.m., was over
by 4 p.m. I sometimes felt rushed gearing up in my layers of drysuit clothing
but got used to it.
Mark, the new chef, and Meg, the hostess, kept us going with hot cocoa,
cookies and muffins between dives. If there was time, a pre-breakfast was offered
before the dive, then a full breakfast with pancakes or French toast. Lunch might
be tuna melts, tacos or rotini, and homemade soup. Sit-down, family-style dinners
consisted of salad, meat, fish, vegetarian choices and dessert. The food ranged
from very good to excellent, and was tailored to guests' dietary needs. Leftover
cookies and muffins were wrapped and available for snacking, and coffee, tea,
cocoa, sodas and hot water were always available. Wine or beer you paid for.
There's not much common area aboard the Swell. The salon had two tables,
each handling seven people. There was a flat-screen TV and a serving area. Out
back, often nippy in the wind, was a small area for hanging drysuits and three
wicker couches for gearing up. The hot tub on the top deck was a fine place to
warm up or just pre-warm wet gloves and hoods before dives. Nearby, a two-tiered
camera area, somewhat exposed to weather, could handle half a dozen large camera
rigs and several small cameras.
Everyone wore drysuits, and most wore
dry gloves. Any time a diver didn't quite
get a zipper fully zipped or a dry glove
seal secure, it was amazing how fast he or
she came out of the water for help. I started
getting cold after 40 minutes and was out
of the water by 50 minutes; our limit was 60
minutes. Thankfully, most skiff rides were
short, as the air was about the same temperature
as the water.
I saw plenty of small crabs, fish and
nudibranchs on dives. Giant sea stars and
strange-looking anemones were everywhere. The 18-inch-long orange peel nudibranchs
are impressive, as are
their egg masses. The carapace of
the Puget Sound King can be a foot
across. On a Browning Pass dive, I
saw one floating past and tried to
place him back on the wall but I
was interfering with his will; he
just pushed himself off again and
plummeted into the depths.
I could have used a guide at
Dillon Rock in Shushartie Bay.
Captain Al hunted for wolf eels
to show us. My buddy and I wandered
around the rock walls, not
sure where we were supposed to be,
but eventually all the divers ended
up in the same area right when Al
showed up with a four-foot-long
wolf eel. There was also an octopus
with suckers an inch-and-a-half long, and a four-foot lingcod.
Barri Island was another dive where the tide was supposed to go slack, but
it just kept getting stronger. After flying down one side of the island, we hid
in the lee amongst the kelp, and a few sea lions visited. I found a thick stalk
of kelp to secure myself for a safety stop, helpful since air doesn't vent quickly
from a drysuit.
At Hussar Point on the last day, we dove specifically to see the dozens of
hooded nudibranchs that look like an underwater Venus fly trap. I got stuck at
40 feet with an excruciating reverse squeeze; it took me 10 minutes to manage
an ascent. When I boarded the boat, I couldn't hear out of my right ear, which dripped blood. I guessed I had popped an eardrum and my diving was done, but
back home my doctor reported it was a weird blood blister, and my eardrum was
luckily intact.
Being a warm-water diver, I wasn't sure how I would like diving where both
the air and the water are 50 degrees, if you're lucky. However, with the great
food, warm after-dive treats, interesting diving and the heaters in the cabins, I
more than survived; in fact, the Swell's Alaska trip is now on my radar.
-- J.D.
Divers Compass: I booked the seven-day, six-night trip directly
through the Swell for $1,950 . . . Nitrox is available at
additional cost, but it wasn't necessary with time and depth;
steel 100 cu-ft. tanks were available for $32 for the week .
. . The Swell spends winter weekends diving out of Vancouver,
summers in Alaska, and spring and fall in British Columbia. .
. . Our minivan rental was about $700 for the week . . . Don't
forget, you now need a passport to travel to Canada . . .
Website: www.nautilusswell.com