Post Palau Ponderings

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A beautiful beach on Ulong Island – where Survivor Palau and Survivor Micronesia were filmed.

 I returned last week from a 10 day trip to Palau. It was Mr G’s and my first visit to this diver mecca. We enjoyed three days on land at the beginning of the trip, diving two of those days with Sam’s Tours, and doing a land excursion on the other. We then met up with some of the usual suspects for a week aboard the Palau Tropic Dancer live aboard.

The island nation of Palau is located about 500 miles east of the Philippine Islands, at about the same latitude, and despite being close neighbours (geographically speaking) these islands are very different, in many ways. And whereas the Philippines were, for me, mostly about the wonderful macro life, Palau is more about big animals and interesting reef formations.

We started venturing to Southeast Asia to dive about eight years ago. Over those years, in all the locations we’ve been diving, we’ve noticed an alarming dearth of sharks. Healthy coral reefs need apex predators. Sadly, it appears that most of them have been captured and finned (while still alive!) to feed an enormous and seemingly insatiable Asian market for (perplexingly prestigious) shark fin soup. There are some signs that there is finally some much needed change occurring in consumer habits regarding this product. It remains to seen if is too late for worldwide decimated shark stocks to recover.

In fact, in many locations where I have been diving, there are very few bigger than your fist fish left at all.

On my ten or so trips to Southeast Asia (over eight years), diving in as many different locations, I’ve seen not more than a couple of dozen sharks, in total. That is tragic. So it was heartwarming to dive the reefs of Palau and see sharks. On. Every. Single. Dive. We spotted white tips, black tips, gray reef sharks and several leopard sharks.

Getting pictures of sharks is not so easy (with the Leopard Shark, a bottom lounger, being the easiest to get close to of the ones I listed above). Despite popular folklore, most species of sharks are reclusive animals, and are very wary of humans. Unfortunately that doesn’t help them if long-lined, or netted, or dynamite fished…

So sharky dives were one of the big highlights for me of this trip. Another was the hauntingly beautiful Jellyfish Lake, in which a pocket of the ocean became land-locked at some point in history, and the jellies evolved into non-stingers. This was a snorkel excursion, and spending an hour or so floating in a salty lake with literally millions of these poetic creatures was lovely.

Palau is also very fishy, and again, it was so wonderful to see large schools of fish – jacks, and snappers, and crescent-tails, and barracuda, and grunts, and even a herd of bumphead parrotfish. The conservation culture of Palau (that recognizes the value of tourism, and seems to embrace it) seems to really be helping to keep a healthy diversity of animals on the reefs and in the blue. Like I said above, you don’t see a lot of fish anymore in a lot of locations in this part of the world.

Oh, and turtles. Lotsa turtles. And gargantuan giant clams. And flatworms. But not so many nudibranchs, or varieties of anemone fish. If you follow my fluff, er, stuff, you’ll know I am a bit obsessed about anemone fish ;^)

The reefs themselves are reasonably colourful and diverse (although not as pretty as other places I’ve been – Fiji, Raja Ampat, Komodo etc), and we saw a lot of very large sea fans. Given the amount of divers in the water (it is a very popular dive destination – kind of like the Cozumel of the Pacific), it was amazing to me that most of the fans did not have signs of diver damage. One of these days I’ll rant, er, blog about some of the appalling dive practices we witnessed while there (and yes, I took pictures). It is mind-boggling how careless some divers can be.

Chandelier Cave, a very shallow dive, was cool too. The archipelago of Palau (comprised of hundreds of islands and islets) was formed from limestone, and so is very porous and easily eroded. We did several dives featuring blue holes, tunnels and caves. We also dove some pretty vertiginous walls. It was all good.

And there there was Blue Corner – a revered dive site, often cited in ‘Top Ten Dives in the World’ lists. Hit it right, and it is magic. Hit it wrong and it can be hair-raising. We did it both ways. Maybe I’ll write more about the ‘dive from hell’ in a future instalment.

And finally, Palau is about interesting and poignant history. We did a full day tour of Peleliu Island – the scene of one of the major land engagements between the Japanese and the US. I took a lot of pix and plan to blog about it in the coming weeks to share the experience. We had an extra day after we got off the live aboard before flying home, and so we hired a local guide to take us on a cultural tour of Koror, the main island of Palau. It was very enlightening.

And I’ve got pix. Lots of pix, most of which I have yet to process. So for now, I’ll leave it with these teasers:

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Just call me Sir. A gorgeous, huge, fairly friendly Napoleon Wrasse at Blue Corner.

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Wreck of a Japanese Jake Seaplane, in shallow water near the main island of Kuror.

About Judy G Diver

Born and raised on the west coast of Canada, I have always felt a strong connection to the sea. But for many years, I stayed on the surface, afraid of what lurked down deep. When I was in my early 30's, with three young children (aka the P's), my husband (aka Mr G) signed us up for a SCUBA certification course, as a surprise. Although I had my fears, my stubbornness prevailed, and somehow I made it through four murky, frigid, cold water dives in Vancouver to successfully pass the course. Soon after we went diving off the west coast of Mexico, in the Sea of Cortez, where my eyes were opened to the beauty and other-worldliness of the life down under. And the rest, as they say, is history. I currently have well over 2000 dives under the belt, and I have been fortunate to travel and dive in Indonesia, Thailand, Australia, Fiji, Palau, Philippines, Galapagos, Costa Rica, Hawaii, California, Egypt, Mexico, several islands in the Caribbean, and here in British Columbia. In addition to this blog and my personal website (Awoosh.com/Directory), which is linked at the top of the blog, my stuff has been published in a variety of magazines and websites, including a regular monthly feature for Scubadiving Magazine for several years. All links to this work can be found in this blog.
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