Manta!
There were two public holidays in Singapore during late December – Hari Raya Haji (Dec 20), and Christmas. I decided to use a few days of vacation between them, and take a much-needed break from work. I flew up to Thailand (again… it seems like I’m always there) :-). This time, it was Phuket instead of Bangkok, and the purpose was SCUBA diving – not work.
Arrival in Phuket didn’t go as well as it could have. After waiting in line at immigration for over 30 minutes, they decided to close one of the lines & merge everyone into another line. This was not done with any semblance of order, and we all wound up waiting in line for well over an hour. Things didn’t get any better as we approached the front of the line & the immigration staff brought another family over to cut in front. I thought some people were going to lose it.
Well, eventually we got through that. And, after another 30 minute wait for a taxi – I was off to my vacation! I stayed in a cheap, but nice, hotel on Patong beach for the night & was picked up for diving the next morning.
My dive trip was on a liveaboard dive boat - Somboon 3. A liveaboard trip allows you to get farther away from land & go to dive sites that you couldn’t normally get to if you had to go back to shore at the end of the day. It also allows you to spread the dives out more during the day – giving you more time to rest between dives.

Somboon 3 was a little different than most liveaboards. It stays out at sea almost all the time. Every day, there is a speedboat that takes divers back & forth to the mainland. This allows everyone to choose how long they want to stay on the boat, which is really nice.
The diving was excellent. The water was clear, and it was sunny every day – which gave beautiful colors underwater (at least in the first 20 feet or so… after that, everything’s blue/green). We’d get up every morning and dive just after sunrise. Afterwards, we’d get out of the water & have a big breakfast. Then we’d have 3 more dives throughout the course of the day. On the first day, I did a night dive. It’s interesting diving in total darkness – the only things you can see is what your shining your flashlight on. But, since we were only allowed 4 dives per day, I chose the 4 day dives & skipped the rest of the night dives. There was plenty of interesting stuff to see during the day.
When I arrived in the Similans, I had 2 things in mind: manta rays & whale sharks. I knew that I was not likely to see a whale shark – it’s not the best time of year. But, I really really wanted to see a manta ray. Our best chance was going to be on Sunday, when we left the Similan Islands & sailed an hour north to the island of Koh Bon.
We did our first dive… no mantas (but we did see plenty of other things). On the 2nd dive, I saw one off in the distance. But, it was far away when I saw it & it was swimming away. I really hoped that it wasn’t going to be the only manta I saw that day.
On the 3rd dive, we went back to the same area where we’d seen the manta in the distance. We waited there for about 15 minutes… nothing! So, we started swimming towards a shallower part of the reef. All of a sudden, someone pointed above us. I looked up, and there was one directly above. It was huge! It was at least 10 feet from wingtip to wingtip. It swam/flew past & then turned (it banked, like an airplane does), and came past again. As it flew past, I turned around & there was another one behind us. It flew past & the doubled back again. They just kind of loitered around us – clearly not uncomfortable with our presence. It’s the most amazing thing I’ve seen underwater. They’re incredibly large, but very graceful.

Check out how big it is, compared to the diver in the corner!
As we were finishing our dive, we were about to start our safety stop (where you go to 15 feet for 5 minutes, to get nitrogen out of your blood). As we were doing that, another manta came by! This one came so close that some people had to get out of its way. It also doubled back for another pass by us. Incredible!
Oh, and here’s some manta trivia I learned while reading through a book on the boat. Mantas can jump completely out of the water – getting 10-15 feet in the air. And, pregnant females will jump out of the water & give birth mid air! Nobody’s sure why they do that.
I saw tons of other creatures during my trip to the Similans. We came across a leopard shark that let us get really close for pictures, as well as starfish, lionfish, scorpionfish (I almost put my hand on one of those – that would have been really bad), eels, lobster, and even some tiny sea horses.


I’ve put the best of my pictures from the trip up on my flickr page. Check ‘em out when you get a chance.
Oh, and by the way – Happy New Year to you all. I hope 2008 is good to you.


1 Comments:
Hey CB...
GW here - wanted to wish you a happy new year. I just (hours ago) got back from 2 weeks in Japan. It's 6AM there the day after I left, and I didn't sleep much on the plane, but congrats on seeing the mantas up close. They do move beautifully. If you don't find a whale shark before you come home, they have them in the new Georgia Aquarium (I'm told, been waiting to go until another work trip down there long enough to bring Jennie.) Not the same as seeing them through your own mask, but eh...
I can't even begin to imagine why a manta would choose to breach, much less give birth while doing so.
Must....sleep....
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