Getting Spoiled on Spoilsport
Contributed by Tim Hochgrebe
So it is really true, you do get warm
towels after each dive on a Mike Ball liveaboard …This is a
trip report of a recent 6 day Spoilsport expedition from Townsville to the Great
Barrier Reef, Coral Sea and the wreck of the SS Yongala. My expectations were
high. The reputation of Mike Ball’s liveaboards promised a week of diving
indulgence. And I can’t say that I was disappointed.
It
is always an awkward moment when you step on a boat to meet the crew and fellow
divers with whom you will have to share a very small space for almost a whole
week. Well … on Spoilsport that very small space is not that small. The
other thing I immediately noticed was that the crew was colour coordinated and
when we arrived they were dressed in white Mike Ball shirts. And as if by some
magic every time one of them changed into a different shirt during the week
all other staff simultaneously appeared wearing the same new colour. From the
start I was very impressed by the smooth team work of the nine crew - not on
many boats will you see the captain helping to dry dishes in the galley. Everybody
from deckhand to trip director was always helpful and never too tired for a
friendly smile.
Spoilsport takes a maximum of 28 guests, however on this
trip we were extremely lucky and there was only 9 of us. The other 19 might
have been scared away by cyclone Fritz who brushed Far North Queensland only
a week before. The remaining guest, a Spanish, British and an American couple,
two single Canadians and me were in good spirits and quickly got to know each
other. For the three couples it was their first liveaboard and they were a bit
anxious on how to survive the rocking of the boat while trying to sleep. It
turned out that we had one of the flattest seas ever for the whole week and
not a single person got sick. This was a good thing considering the lush food
we were presented with whenever we came up from a dive.
This brings me to what we were all here to do: the diving. The itinerary was
to do a days worth of diving on the Outer Barrier Reef, two full days in the
Coral Sea, another day on the Barrier Reef and a day and a half on the wreck
of Yongala on our way back to Townsville. Sounded like a great plan!
Mike Ball promises unlimited diving, hence the coordination
of dives is slightly different to other liveaboards I have been on. Upon arrival
at a new dive site AJ, the trip director, delivered a very detailed dive brief
on the dive deck after which the dive was declared open and everybody was free
to do as many dives as they felt like – of course within the limits of
their dive computer and without “reverse profiling”. For most of
us that meant one dive before a fully cooked breakfast (of course there was
fruit, cereals and yoghurts before the first dive if you could not face the
idea of early morning diving on an empty stomach) and another dive before lunch,
then moving to a different site for another open dive deck in the afternoon
to do one or two more dives and on most days the possibility of a night dive.
I did far too many dives to describe each site and it would make this trip report
a very long story, but there are a few experiences I really have to highlight
as they will stay with me for a long time to come.
On
the first couple of days the thing that struck me the most was the amount of
huge gorgonian fans we saw on each and every dive site we visited, whether it
was on Bowl Reef (GBR) or on Flinders Reef in the Coral Sea. It was only appropriate
that one of the dive sites on Flinders Reef was named Fan Fair. It was at Fan Fair we watched a huge barracuda with his mouth and gills wide
open just hanging there, being cleaned. At Two Up a large bommie on Flinders
Reef we found the most amazing variety and sizes of soft coral trees in all
colours.
That night in the middle of the Coral Sea, miles away from anything, we watched
the sunset from a patch of sand sticking out of the water with nothing else
on it than a remotely operated weather station. In true Mike Ball fashion we
all held a glass of champagne as the sun set in the ocean. It was turtle hatching
time that afternoon as well and we had to endure to see a few tiny little green
turtles making their way into the ocean only to be instantly devoured by a hungry
giant trevally mob splashing about in knee deep water, waiting for their dinner
to walk straight into their mouths … a very disturbing experience. I felt
helpless but also amazed to witness Charles Darwin’s “Survival of
the Fittest” theory in action.
A trip to the Coral Sea would not be complete without visiting a bottomless
dive site, the Cod Wall, where the ocean opens up inviting you to dive as deep
as you feel like … quite tempting to just keep going when you can clearly
see the surface from 40 metres and deeper. Large pelagics can be seen quite
often cruising along the steep wall of sites like this, and we managed to spot
a few Grey Reef Sharks as well as a Silvertip Shark.
The afternoon of that second day in the Coral Sea was reserved for another Mike
Ball specialty, the world famous Scuba Zoo. No expenses were spared to put three
permanent huge shark cages on the bottom of the ocean to ease the nerves of
some nervous shark watchers. I felt pretty silly lying on top of the cage with
my camera filming about 35 Grey Reef Sharks coming in … they knew their
part of the show. It wasn’t until just before the lid of the big bin of
fish heads on a string was lifted, that we were all told to move into the cages.
The whole feeding frenzy that followed would have only lasted for a minute or
two but it was quite a sight. Everybody was buzzing … In all honesty I
have to say I prefer to observe sharks in their natural habitat, this felt more
like going to the circus. A few fellow travellers agreed, but others thought
it was the best thing ever.
Back
to the Barrier Reef the next day we had some spectacular dives at Wheeler Reef,
schools of Barracuda, loads of Giant Clams, all the reef fish you would expect
and a Green Turtle cruising past. An encounter I will certainly never forget
was when me and my by then trusted buddy Vickie swam along a huge “herd”
of “grazing” Bumphead Parrotfish. There must have been more than
20 of these monsters, crunching every little piece of live coral in sight. Against
the sunlight at times all you could see was a huge dust cloud of broken coral
bits … and where they had been, there was nothing left standing. We watched
this spectacle for at least 15 minutes and what we saw made me feel a little
bit easier for a few times where I had unintentionally broken off a small piece
of coral.
The weather had been good to us all week and things were looking good for diving
the SS Yongala wreck over the next two days. I won’t go into the history
of the wreck too much, because that will be covered in another article on underwater.com.au
very soon. This ex-passenger ship has been on the bottom of the ocean in about
30 metres of water for almost 100 years and really is more an artificial reef
by now, but you can still make out a fair few features of the ship when you
are down there. There are no reefs anywhere near the Yongala and winds and currents
are often strong. Even on what seemed like a perfect day we still had to battle
our way down the mooring line against some quite strong currents.
Once down there it is possible to hide from the currents and the dive really
starts. My god, they didn’t promise too much … each time we made
our way down that line we were immediately surrounded by a myriad of marine
creatures, and most of them were BIG. There were giant trevallies hunting schools
of millions of baitfish. The apparently resident shovelnose rays were racing
up and down the top of the wreck, which is fully covered in soft and hard coral,
ascidians and loads of other critters. And of course there was VW, a very appropriately
named Queensland Grouper of about that size. Since there is nothing else to
dive in this area, timing of your dive time becomes quite important as there
can be
3-5 vessels diving the wreck at one time … hard to decide which line to
come up on to make it back to YOUR boat. The Yongala also makes for an absolute
magic night dive with loads of crabs, shells and shrimps and of course the occasional
very BIG fish face appearing in your torch beam.
Sadly after two early morning dives on day 6 of our
trip it was time to say goodbye to all the fish and the emotionally very tough
job of rinsing and drying your gear made us all realise the trip had come to
an end … but the bar was still open!
I was amazed
that even after being stuck on a boat together for almost a week, everyone was
keen to catch up for a meal and a fair few beers at the local Irish pub in Townsville
only a few hours after leaving Spoilsport and no, the crew was not colour coordinated
(or coordinated at all ..) that night.
All in all a very worthwhile
expedition indeed and if any of my fellow guests on board or crew get to read
this, thank you for making this trip a most memorable experience. I will be
back!
Photos and story by Tim Hochgrebe - underwater.com.au