BlueViews - The
BlueVoice Blog
Introduction
June
24, 2007 - BlueVoice Among Dolphins - Week 1
By Hardy Jones
“North of Grand Bahama on the Little Bahama Banks there’s
a place I’ve been going for more than twenty years and
up there you’ll find dolphins that you can spend hours
with. They’re just incredibly friendly and curious.”
Those were the words of treasure diver Bob Marx in 1978
and they propelled me into a new universe of adventure, discovery
and just plain mind-blowing encounters with dolphins in the
sea 40 miles north of Grand Bahama Island. So as I sit here
today waiting to clear customs at West End I can say “North
of Grand Bahama Island there’s a place I’ve been
going for more than 29 years and I have found Atlantic spotted
dolphins that I could spend not hours but weeks and months
with. They have been incredibly friendly and curious.” I’ve
come to know many of them personally and have known one of
these dolphins for 28 of the 29 years.
Day 1: In a few minutes we’ll head north for the dolphin
grounds. Traveling with me (aboard the Shearwater) is Michael
Wiese – the filmmaker who was my partner in making
the first film of dolphins in the open sea back in 1978.
Michael had promised his 14-year-old daughter, Julia that
he’d one day bring her out to meet the dolphins and
now the time has come.
There are eight BlueVoice members aboard as well as Deborah
Cutting, my wife and BV director of marketing, who put the
complicated logistics of this whole venture together.
Within three hours I spot a pair of frigate birds, often
a good indicator of dolphins, and sure enough there are several,
feeding and playing in the water below. We spend the next
five hours with them. At first the dolphins just swim past
us. We’re not bothering them but neither are we interesting
them. This changes late in the day as the sun moves toward
the horizon and the warm, saturated colors that filmmakers
call “magic light” emerge. Now the dolphins are
playing games like pass the seaweed. Our group has learned
that dolphins can sometimes be interested by seaweed so every
piece of Sargassum in the area is grabbed and presented to
the dolphins, who to the delight of everyone, swim over and
take the offerings of the divers. In several cases the dolphins
complete the circuit – take the sea weed, pass it from
their rostrum to pectoral fin, to tail fin, to another dolphin.
The circuit is judged complete when that dolphin returns
the seaweed to the person who had offered it.
Our fellow passengers, many of whom are true novices when
it comes to being at sea and for whom this is certainly their
first experience with dolphins in the wild, are thrilled
but have no clue that this is not an every day occurrence.
Day 2: we have short encounters with dolphins in the morning
but then nothing so we move down to the sugar wreck, truly
one of the loveliest “small” dives in the world.
Strewn across the bottom in only fifteen feet of water are
the remains of a steel Molasses carrier that sank in the
1870s, The wreck is a riot of colorful fish, phalanxes of
barracuda, sting rays, parrot fish, hordes of yellow grunts,
blue runners and countless other fish. The water was running
strong off the banks in what the Bahamians call an “off
mon” current. Visibility was low in the green water
but often it is crystal clear when the “on mon” current
Last night I played “Dolphin Adventure” for
the passengers and crew. There were hoots of laughter at
my long 70s hair-style. I felt sadness for all the years
that have passed and the innocence of those days. And
I marveled at how many times I’ve come out to these
remote shallow banks to be with the spotted dolphins. But
I feel that so much more is behind me than ahead of me.
My relationship with these dolphins is still a thing of
wonderful innocence.
Day 4 - Wednesday. We had lots of ins-and-outs with the
dolphins today. Spotters in the morning. Bottlenose later
and then spotters again. No prolonged contact but lots of
opportunities for people to take pictures. A massive
hammerhead was found with a group of mothers and calves.
When our eight divers entered the water the hammerhead headed
off. It passed the Shearwater and I was awed by its size.
It looked like a whale shark. What was it doing? Stalking
one of the calves? It certainly took off when the divers
entered the scene.
Wendy’s report of the hammerhead incident. During
mid- afternoon Wendy sighted a great hammerhead, estimated
by several at being 13 – 14 feet in length and having
a huge girth, being held over the bottom by four bottlenose
dolphins, two fully mature and two younger and smaller. The
dolphins were swimming over the hammerhead and somehow controlling
a beast many times their size and weight. The divers’ appearance
broke the relationship. The shark proceeded away from the
dolphins and humans. On the periphery of that group there
were two other larger dolphins. The dolphins seemed completely
in control.
Day 5: weather rough, cloudy and choppy. Rained often. Plenty
of white caps. Too strong to go to the WSR. Several people
snorkeled. But it was an uncomfortable day. We headed for
Florida early and en route John spotted some false killer
whales. The seas were quite rough but we stayed with them
for a quarter of an hour.This is not a rare species but it
is unusual to see them because they are deep water animals.
I love imagining what goes on out in the Gulf Stream but
we normally cross at night so we don’t see some of
the big marine mammals out there.
Day 6: We cleared customs at 9am. This was a wonderful group
of people and I hope we will continue to be in touch.
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