I was in Permuteran to dive two very different locations. The first was Menjangan Island, also known as the island of the deer. To get there, we had to abide by a whole bunch of rules. I like multi-coloured signs like this and I especially liked the rather paternalistic exhortation to make sure all your diving equipment was attached securely to your body.
While the diving at Menjangan Island wasn’t quite as spectacular as the other places I’d dived for this trip, it was very relaxing as there weren’t any challenging currents. The water was beautifully blue as usual and while there weren’t as many pelagics, there was still the odd gem or two. This yellow-spotted trevally was one of them.
Here also was the second time in my diving career I saw a school of squid in broad daylight. The last time I saw a school of squid, it was my first dive. It took more than a hundred dives to see them again.
Closer to the reef were plenty of longfin batfish. Here, they seemed almost excessively friendly, changing quickly from their day colours…
… to night colours as they came in close, as they did when wanting to be cleaned.
For some really odd reason, one of them swam right up to me, as if it was expecting me to do the cleaning honours for it.
There were plenty of parrotfish around. I’m surprised how little photographed these fish are. I think it’s something to do with how shy they are and how they just don’t stay put in one place.
There were others like this grouper that I can’t find in my fish ID book…
… and more familiar ones like this Indian doublebar goatfish hovering over some coral.
Some of the fish came in schools, like the two-spot snappers in their brownish grey raiment.
Others were more solitary, like one of my all-time favourites, the juvenile harlequin sweetlips. I can’t get enough of its unique polka dot pattern.
Some fish lived in crevices, like this yellowbarred jawfish emerging in search of prey.
Others like this fire dartfish seemed to simply hover in one place posing for the camera.
There were other fish that lived in crevices, and some of these you won’t want to get too close to. This fimbriated moray eel is one good example.
Some were small and really difficult to get close to, like the goby. I can’t tell for sure whether this is a common ghostgoby.
I think this is a large (!) whip goby but as usual, I can’t be sure.
Other fish are much more easily identified, like these panda clownfish, also known as Clark’s anemonefish. They were so at home among the stinging anemones…
… as was this anemone shrimp.
Rather camera-shy was this hermit crab, which hid its face swiftly under its shell as the camera clicked.
And then the ones that didn’t seem shy at all – the nudibranchs. I saw a white flabellina that seemed to mimic the coral it was on.
There were others that were even more unidentifiable, like this strange blue one with an orange and white strip outlined by deep blue running down the middle.
I tried to take some nudibranch portraits, some not quite coming out as I’d like as the flash refused to fire.
And others came out much better, with a pensive, slightly lonesome feel that seems quite at odds with the experience of being a nudibranch, perhaps.