My summer internship in Hawaii, diving, filming, editing and relaxing in tropical paradise! [All pictures in here are taken by me, unless otherwise specified]

Saturday, July 01, 2006

What do I do here?


Here is the picture of the Blue Striped Butterfly frish from Friday night's dive. The blue stripes are pretty amazingly electric blue and really reflect the light from my flash.

So I realized that I haven't really explained what the intern duties are here, it probably seems to you all that I am just having a grand old time like on vacation. I am having a great time, but its definately not vacation.

The intern duties are very similar to duties other interns around the nation may have, only they are completely different. They are the same in that we are incharge of the menial type tasks that have to get done, but the bossmen don't really want to do. So for the other interns who may be filing, copying or getting coffee, and wrangling cables, logging files, or moving equipment, we are doing that equivalent.

The interns are in charge of packing all the equipment for the dives (tanks, BCD, regulators, wetsuit, fins, mask, snorkel, etc). As well as the camera, extra tape, the playback TV for after the dive and whatever else may be needed. We also set up the equipment on the boat (attaching the SCUBA equipment together, filling the rinse bucket, so on and so forth. At the end of the dive we put it all away and rinse it off and hang up back at the house.

At the house we help edit the video, burn DVD's, make labels, package the DVD's that are being mailed and help deliver the ones to the dive shops for pickup.

So all in all there is alot going on at any given time and we are often spread out on different boats around Kona or at the house helping out, or relaxing when there is time. (Like I am going to do right now!) :o)

Day 4 - June 30th


This was a very busy day for me. I worked both in the morning and the night. My day started off at the Sheraton where I helped with intro to SCUBA lessons (another part of the company). People can sign up for a lesson in the pool where they get to experience SCUBA. Its not a certification, but it gives people the idea of what breathing underwater is like. It was somewhat slow that morning, so we got to do alot of relaxing by the pool.

I met a little friend at the sheraton, a small gecko that climbed up on one of our tanks. He was very cute, green and friendly as he posed for several pictures on the tank and some in the bushes -->

We got back to the house that afternoon and had a few hours to rest. Martina let me know that there was room that night for me to go with her on the Manta Dive at the north site, (the other one is the southern site) so that evening we gathered our gear and set out for Manta Heaven.

We reached the dive site at dusk accompanied by a very beautiful sunset and several other boats. I was surprised by the number of boats and people that dove this spot each night.

As the sun set we got ready to go in and a little bit after dark we plunged into the black water and much to our surprise there was a Manta right by our boat already as if waiting for us. It did a few backflips and turns before we had to head over to what has been dubbed the "Campfire". This is the actual dive site, they set several large, bright lights in a circle of rocks to attract the plankton (manta food: they have to eat 10% of their body weight a day, which is usually around 80-100 lbs of these teenie tiny organisms). Plankton was described to me as the "bugs" of the ocean. They are small and attracted to light, which in turn attracts the Manta Rays. All the divers gather around this circle of light and shine their lights up. That night we had two Mantas come, Sugar Ray and Koie. Koie is unique because she is missing one of her cephalic fins from getting tangled in fishing line.

The Mantas are really difficult to get a photograph of because we are diving at night so there is really not enough light to get a good exposure, but I did take some video with my digital camera, you should be able to access it through this link:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v142/GinnyS/Hawaii/?action=view&current=MVI_4436.flv

The site requires Flash 8 or newer to play the video properly. Go to http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer to get it!

After we watched the Mantas in their graceful swim we swam around the site a little more and spotted several eels as well as a Blue Striped Butterflyfish (of which I got a pretty good picture!) Night diving is really amazing because outside of your small beam of light and that of your buddy's and the other divers you are quickly surrounded by blackness. It can definately be disorienting and a little frightening but overall it is really cool.