Close to six years later, on another little island in the
middle of nowhere, David is still one of the most happy-go-lucky, sincere and
driven guys I’ve ever met… and he’s also still chasing sharks for life. Except
this time, instead of helping me clarify whether something is Kosher for
Passover with our Galapagueño host, we’re parking in a slightly cheeky position
in downtown Hobart. We spend the next two hours catching up over cider and beer
and smoked salmon… and really terribly taken selfies.
Hobart becomes my home base for a few days. I hike up
through glistening veils of fog on Mt. Wellington’s forested slopes as my
friend Dan teaches me differences between primitive and more evolved ferns and
points out cockatoo totems, and we watch translucent alien flatworms shoot
across soft, leaf-littered earth. I drive to Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary, where
Tasmanian Devils hold their heads high and proud as they carry prized chicken
carcasses around their enclosures. They’re raised here as one of several backup
populations in Tasmania, ensuring their species’ survival despite the Facial
Tumor Disease so prevalent and so easily spread amongst the territory’s
dwindling wild population. I hand feed monster papa kangaroos and bitty baby
kangaroos as they lounge like kings in the sanctuary. Back in the city, I lie
back on playgrounds under the night sky and watch clouds move at superspeed
over my head.
And, David takes me diving for the first time in six years.
The Huon River runs so dark with tannin carried from
Tasmania’s buttongrass highlands that it stains the sun’s rays beneath the
ocean’s surface where it empties into the Pacific. The unassuming reef at Nine
Pins Point hides surprising treasures: a monster blue-purple eel lurks amongst
the rocks and coral. An orange anemone covered in electric blue stripes appears
more to be a mass of fish eggs than a single organism. And a single, small
golden fan anchors to a rock six meters down, the water’s reduced light
allowing this understated gem of a coral to survive in the shallows, opposed to
its usual happy place at 35 or 40 meters’ depth.
Three days later I drop into the water once again out of
Eaglehawk Neck, a slender spit of land connecting Tasmania’s mainland to a
world of plunging dolerite sea cliffs and spindly, teetering stacks. The wind
that day whips in so furiously that whitecaps form in the opposite direction of
oncoming swell, spraying over our small boat as we motor out of the harbor. The
thousands of black swans teeming in tidal bays yesterday have disappeared from
sight.
Chaos turns to calm as we sink into the water in a small,
sheltered cove where we’ve dropped anchor. So much grass and kelp blanket the
sea floor that its hard to tell if I’m moving, or if the floor is moving, or if
it’s simply the water’s rhythmic oscillation. The sea dragon, when we find it, appears
as an ethereal work of art. He’s over a foot long, a red giant compared to the
seahorses I’ve seen elsewhere. His spotted body turns to green under the belly,
and broad, fanning yellow and crimson dorsal fins extend from its back. His
slender tail carries pearly eggs as his trumpet-shaped snout reaches far in
front of him, tiny mouth opening to collect microscopic krill as he flutters
his way unhurriedly amongst the weed.
The next day we head southward to Cape Huay, where a colony
of New Zealand fur seals lounge and
fight and play amongst a chunky pile of rocks cradled in the interchange between
the swell’s spray and dark plunging cliffs. The 7-mm wetsuits we wrestled on
before leaving the dive center cut the water’s chill as the water’s roll pulls
us up and down and weed dances around us. Seals twist through the water and
loop around each other, passing through our bubbles as they dip downward amongst
us.
On our way back we drop down to explore the peninsula’s walls. A maze of passages and shallow caverns twists beneath the waves, betraying millions of years of battering against soft rock. Light leaves the water as caves close above us, and walls blanketed in yellow-orange sea pens give way to yawning shadows. Back in the light, cuttlefish lurk beneath narrow shelves, camouflaged against the sand, stubby tentacles curled close. Wrasse teem against the walls, something related to Dori fins its way past me, and I return to breezy open air with a smile.
On our way back we drop down to explore the peninsula’s walls. A maze of passages and shallow caverns twists beneath the waves, betraying millions of years of battering against soft rock. Light leaves the water as caves close above us, and walls blanketed in yellow-orange sea pens give way to yawning shadows. Back in the light, cuttlefish lurk beneath narrow shelves, camouflaged against the sand, stubby tentacles curled close. Wrasse teem against the walls, something related to Dori fins its way past me, and I return to breezy open air with a smile.
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