It was a crazy Aussie who talked me into trying to stand on a surfboard while
he got in a tinnie and towed me at warp speed across a lagoon in the middle of
the Indian Ocean. Had I been able to stand up, it would have been great for my
ego. But the pictures taken by all my dive mates -- well, they tell the truth.
As it turned out, I wasn’t much of a “skurfer,” as they call it. But I had
ventured to Western Australia to dive, and let me tell you ... it’s got it all
over skurfing.
From Sydney, Australia’s west coast is a five-hour cross-country flight. It’s
the quintessential Wild West, wide open and barely disturbed by humans. Cross the
city limits of any town, and you’ll find no power poles, no billboards, no traffic,
no litter. Emus and kangaroos are the biggest travel hazards. But phones, doctors,
and decent supermarkets are there for your pleasure. And so is good diving ... if you
know where to look. Go too far north, and you’ll swim with oceangoing crocodiles; too far south, and the winter water temperature
plummets. But the water between
Exmouth and Broome is croc-free
and temperate ... and home to Rowley
Shoals.
After spending three days in the
hot and humid quaint old pearling town
of Broome, the other guests and I were
rounded up at our different hotels by
staffer Colleen McKay. She hauled my
dive gear, took us booze shopping
(this is a BYOB boat), and made sure
we had everything else we needed. Then
she drove us to the True North, a 60
ft., steel-hulled powerboat, where she
introduced us to young Captain Craig
Howson. Reared in Broome, he’s a bright, true-blue Aussie who loves his boat and is
full of stories and fond of beer and diving. Once settled in, we headed for our
seven-night, six-day adventure. Rowley Shoals is comprised of three atolls about
180 nautical miles northwest of Broome. I got a fitful sleep during the rough, 14-
hour, dusk-to-dawn ride, but awoke to brilliant morning sun and an azure swimming
pool the size of Manhattan. Welcome to Klerke Reef, the middle atoll.
Now I won’t write much about the True North. You see, after my October journey
she was replaced by a new, 114-foot craft holding up to 30 people. But key crew
members remain, and so do the reefs, some of the best diving anywhere -- and I’ve
been around, believe me.
The first day began when American Holly Tharp (Craig’s sweetheart), giving a
wink and a smile, laid out fresh fruits, yogurt, cereals, toast, and juices. Then
we grabbed snorkel gear and loaded into one of two 12-foot, flat-bottomed, aluminum
tinnies with carpeted benches for a ride to the channel. With the current
ripping, we fell into the water and rode the channel at six knots for seven minutes
along with angels, trumpets, parrots, butterflies, and sharks (mainly white
tips and black tips). The tinnies picked
us up, and we went at it again. Returning
to the boat, we discovered another
breakfast: eggs, pancakes, bacon, ham,
potatoes, and toast with more fruit and
juices. (Holly has become tour director
on the boat, replaced by what Colleen
calls a “qualified chef.”)
Then came the diving. C-cards were
checked. Briefings were brief: it’s this
deep, the current is going this way,
here’s what you’ll see, watch your time
and depth. Australians from the east
coast were nervous -- they knew well of
the American divers who were left on the
Great Barrier Reef -- but the efficient
crew put them at ease. Each diver was
religiously checked in and out of the
water face-to-face with the keeper of
the dive sheet, who logged name, time,
and bar (psi). Take care of yourself, no
babysitting, dive your own profiles (80 cu. ft. alum. tanks) but they’d say “let’s make this 30-60 minutes, let’s everyone
be back on boat by 2.” A down computer meant galley duty for the day -- no argument.
P.S.: if you get bent, you wait for the Australian Navy to come get you.
Eight of the ten guests (Aussies, Kiwis, Japanese, and me, the lone Yank)
were divers. Generally, the plan was to dive the deep outer walls twice in the
morning and then dive the inner slopes during the afternoon and evening. Typically
four, maybe five dives a day, with a night dive.
On the dive “Jimmy Goes To China,” at 80 feet the wall dropped into infinite
depths, most likely where Jimmy had gone. Hard corals at the surface gave way to
a riot of whip, fan, rope, black, and flower corals. Because this wall is openocean
fed, I saw sharks, bump head parrots, oversized groupers, giant trevally,
and spotted sweetlips by the cubic meter. I even swam with a geriatric trio of
human-sized tuna, moving slowly as if their scarred and tattered bodies were
arthritic. Swimthroughs, cracks, valleys, and pockets make these dives a navigational
nightmare but create dreamy topography. In one a coffin-sized cutout an
enormous Queensland Grouper had a spotted puffer in his mouth, half swallowed
and fully inflated. Indeed: a magnificent big-fish dive. (Visibility ran 40’
inside the atolls and 150' outside, with gentle currents.)
Back on board, Holly brought on lunch: handmade dim sum, a fresh veggie salad
with homemade dressing, a chicken stir-fry on a king-sized pillow of noodles,
cookies, and slices of frosted cake.
A terrific snorkel is “The Aquarium” inside Klerke Reef. This untouched
chunk of coral sitting in a bowl of
sugar-white sand is filled with giant
clams, five-fingered jacks (spider),
helmets, thorny oysters, coral clams,
trumpets, augers, cones, and too many
cowries to count. The coral heads
were clouded with puffs of brilliant
fish, and garden eels, octopus, and
tiny squid dwelled nearby. The water?
A constant 82 degrees throughout the
trip.
At the equivalent of the Great Barrier
Reef’s Cod Hole, my buddy and I
were greeted by two spotted groupers,
each of whom easily outweighed us.
Eyeball to lens, I watched a funny
underwater dance as fish and diver tried
to see who could get the closest.
Divemaster Greg Lee Steere came with a
dead bait fish stuffed in his snorkel.
The groupers flocked to him, extricated
the treat carefully, then played tag.
Fish-wise, everywhere there were unique
ones: a skunk anemonefish with a broad
white stripe that runs from head to
tail. Then there were Chinese grouper,
spotted unicorn, Indian steephead parrots,
red emperors, and black and white
snapper. Between dives, I strolled on
deserted Klerke’s Reef past nests of the
Red-tailed Tropic Bird.
Fish at Rowley were different than
other places I’ve been diving. Where
in Caribbean destinations such as
Belize, Roatán, and Cayman you’re
likely to see a large school of a
single type of fish, at Rowley you’d
often see five different kinds of
grouper, including Coral, Potato,
Queensland, Freckled, and White Spot.
While I wasn’t quite as surrounded by
fish as I’ve been in the Galapagos,
the variety of fish life was stunning. So was the quantity, though there
weren’t quite as many fish as there
were in Papua New Guinea, for example.
While larger fish roamed outside the
reef, the inside of the reef seemed to
serve as a giant playpen for juveniles:
I took one photo swimming through a
solid mass of juvenile striped catfish
about an inch long. Invertebrate life was also spectacular, as it tends to be in
places that aren’t dived a lot. There were lots of conch and cowries and many live
shells.
One night before dark the crew anchored buoys with glow sticks attached. We
headed out in tinnies, the glow sticks reflecting off the water like double vision.
When the engines were cut, the silence deafened. I could even hear the
activity on the reef from the surface. Once down, I saw dish-sized basket stars,
open and feeding, perched out on precarious coral cliffs. Potato cods cruised by
like misshapen ghosts, and in the coral shell, covered critters began foraging.
My video light drew inch-long, wormlike creatures that followed the beam to their
deaths into the claws of tiny crabs and grasping polyps of corals.
Day four started early with a three-hour crossing to the isolated northern
atoll, Mermaid Reef, where the coral was healthy and friendly fish seemed surprised
to see us. When mantas swoop back around for a second look or turtles do a
double take over their shoulder, you know they haven’t seen many of us.
While our small vessel provided intimacy hard to replicate on larger vessels,
the new True North will provide big boat amenities. This looks like a tremendous
boat on paper, and I can vouch for the excellent crew. And that diving at Rowley?
Having traveled the world, it rates among the top few in pristine character and
big and unique fish. And where else will a bunch of happy Aussies let you have a
hand at skurfing? Give it a go. And good luck.
— D.A.
Diver’s Compass: For info on the True North, contact North Star
Charters, P.O. Box 654, Broome, Western Australia 6725; phone 618
9192 1829; fax 618 9192 1830; e-mail truenorthwa@bigpond.com; web
address is www.users.bigpond.com/truenorthwa... Cost of trip was
$1645/person (U.S.)...Always snacks available: crackers, cookies,
popcorn, leftovers arranged on plate. Coffee, tea, and soft
drinks available in big ice chests on deck, no diet Coke, BYO
beer and booze; they stopped at a liquor store with you ahead of
time...A hat party allowed us 4 hours to create a hat with materials on boat. We had
fish parts, lights on head, colored pens, you figure ...While I flew from Sydney to
Alice Springs to Darwin to Broome, an easier route is Sydney-Perth-Broome.