Category: Wreck Diving

  • Red-Eye Medusa Jellyfish

    Red-Eye Medusa Jellyfish

    Finding a Red-Eye Medusa Jellyfish (Polyorchis pencillatus) on the El Rey wreck in San Diego, California.

  • Updated Post: USS Hogan Wreck

    Updated Post: USS Hogan Wreck

    New photos from the USS Hogan Wreck south of San Diego, California.

  • Photo of the Week: Black Sea Nettle Jellyfish on the USS Hogan Wreck

    Photo of the Week: Black Sea Nettle Jellyfish on the USS Hogan Wreck

    Regular readers are by now aware of my obsession with the black sea nettle jellyfish. I worked a dive charter a few weeks ago and spotted my first black sea nettle of the summer from the confines of the boat. It was all over–from that moment on, I lived and breathed black sea nettles. (Seriously:…

  • Throwback Thursday: Technical Wreck Training and USS Palawan

    Throwback Thursday: Technical Wreck Training and USS Palawan

    Wreck diving is the ultimate in underwater exploration. I’m ashamed to admit that I wasn’t into wrecks, at first. I didn’t see the point. They weren’t as pretty as real reefs, and it’s not like I was going to go inside a wreck, like, ever. And then I got some tech diving training, and it…

  • Photo of the Week: A Wolf Eel on the USS Hogan Wreck

    Photo of the Week: A Wolf Eel on the USS Hogan Wreck

    The USS Hogan wreck is pretty much the perfect San Diego dive site–the conditions are usually excellent, the sea life is abundant, and the depth and distance from port are such that the site has an air of exclusivity to it. It’s also so rife with wolf eels that it almost–note I said almost–renders them…

  • The Purple-Striped Jellyfish/Sea Nettle (Chrysaora colorata)

    The Purple-Striped Jellyfish/Sea Nettle (Chrysaora colorata)

    There were ripping currents on the deep wrecks this past weekend, and with the currents came a whole slew of jellyfish and tunicates. I’m mildly obsessive about the Black Sea Nettle bloom we sometimes get in San Diego in the summers, and I’m well-known as a nudibranch zealot, so it should come as no surprise…

  • Go get the new issue of Scuba Diving Magazine now!

    Go get the new issue of Scuba Diving Magazine now!

    Hey everybody! My photo inside the HMCS Yukon was just published in the May 2014 issue of Scuba Diving Magazine. It’s on newsstands (and available digitally) now! Please go check it out! :)

  • How to Remove Backscatter: The Fastest Way to Improve Your Underwater Photos

    How to Remove Backscatter: The Fastest Way to Improve Your Underwater Photos

    Last week, I had the pleasure of speaking about technical diving and underwater photography to the Whalers Dive Club in Canoga Park, California. It was a great crowd, and the attendees were every speaker’s dream: they both laughed at my jokes and asked engaged, thoughtful questions! One of the questions that stood out, and that…

  • The Missile Tower Wreck (165′), San Diego

    The Missile Tower Wreck (165′), San Diego

    The Missile Tower in San Diego, formerly used by the U.S. Navy to test-launch Trident submarine missiles, now rests in 165 feet of water near the Mexican Border as an artificial reef.

  • Getting Riggy on Eureka

    Getting Riggy on Eureka

    The silence of my rebreather allows me to hear every hydraulic hiss, every crash as steel collides with steel, the sounds of industry happening above the surface. I catch myself wondering whether the fish are anchovy or sardine, realizing that I have been contemplating the question for several minutes, lazily resolving the taxonomical conundrum with…