Skip to main content

Coral Bay: snorkelling with turtles and manta rays

21 October 2013

We left Exmouth for the second time, bound for Coral Bay, a much recommended location south of the North West Cape and Ningaloo Marine Park. Coral Bay is very remote as it is 152km south of Exmouth and 247 km north of Carnarvon. So you take your pick when you need to go shopping.
At Coral Bay there are two campsites, a smal hotel and a backpacker hostel, plus some accommodation for seasonal workers. That's it!


It's a two minute walk to the beach...and it's stunning. The lighter colour water shows where the shallow water is covering soft sand and the slightly darker area is over coral.
After our snorkelling experience the previous week, it was a little strange to go back into the water and we had several sessions before we felt relaxed. I have also found myself watching and listening to other swimmers far more than I should!
We signed-up for an outer reef snorkelling trip of six hours. The attraction was the possibility of swimming with manta rays and seeing the bigger coral. We were a little hesitant until the nice lady in the office told us that the little aeroplane that we had seen over the bay that morning, was in fact a manta ray spotter. This convinced us that it might be money well spent and so we committed.
The next morning we joined about twenty others on a small boat and were only a few minutes out when we spotted a Lepoard Shark, possibly a metre long.

There were several opportunities to snorkel over the coral near the edge of the reef and well within earshot of the deafening sounds of the ocean breakers on the other side. No wonder ancient mariners struggled to sail through barrier reefs.
We were briefed about snorkelling with manta rays (they don't sting and they can swim quickly) and split into two groups. The basic idea was that the leader (powerful swimming Italian young lady) got into the water close to the rays and swam with very long fins, keeping her arm stretched out above the water to signal that she was staying with them. It was our task to enter the water very quickly and then follow in a rough V formation. If we got left behind, then we regrouped and the boat picked up and repositioned.
Now snorkelling on your own, pottering around a bit of coral is one thing, but trying to keep up with a pair of manta rays is something else! However, it's FANTASTIC to see them and both Dawn and I did have a couple of sessions, over quite quickly as the rays were swimming quickly.
There were two rays which the leader managed to follow for about an hour. My view was of both rays swimming below and almost towards me, one behind the other. As I hooked in behind, the first one performed a full roll, showing about half a dozen keeper fish on the white underside. These rays had a wingspan of about 2 metres, so you can imagine just what a sight they are.
Photos will have to be added at a later date as although we have a full set, they are on a USB stick which I can't load onto the iPad. It might be possible to edit this blog post online at an Internet cafe where I can maybe add the pics.
After the rays, we had some food and then a free snorkel during which we had a sustained view of a turtle, in quite deep water. These are slow swimmers that need to surface to breathe every 30 minutes or so. There are countless other sights to see such as giant clams, myriad colourful fish and beautiful coral. The stars of the show though were the manta rays.


A further wildlife sighting was at the campsite early one morning. Dawn was leaving the toilet block and right there in front of her was a kangaroo complete with joey in her pouch. Both parties stood and stared but as it was an unplanned meeting, neither had brought their camera and so it has gone un-recorded but they each have their memories.

Comments

Margaret Peel said…
Dad Phil and me watching all this on a wet miserable half term Monday. Taking the kids to Edale soon. All very impressed to read about your snorkelling.

Popular posts from this blog

On y va

Hooray. We are off. The ferry was booked a few weeks ago and the pressure was then on to get all sorts of jobs finished on the house and Landy. Major cosmetic work was to cover the grey front doors with paint that matches the rest of the vehicle. On the engine a coolant leak had developed behind the water pump and so the P gasket and adjacent core plug were renewed. Also a cheapy head unit from those Chinese people replaced the old Sony fm radio. Now we have opened up the wonders of Car Play and all that comes with it. Finally the 9th gen iPad with WiFi became a 9th gen iPad with WiFi and ‘cellular’. This means we can use OsmAnd Maps which need no data and get their gps position off the ‘cellular’ chip in the iPad. More on this useful map in subsequent posts. We headed towards Portsmouth for a mid morning ferry via our old neighbours in S-I-V. There we had a great few hours updating each about our families and then proceeded to save the NHS, the country and the world too. I mean why no...

Onwards

You can’t visit a classic car enthusiast without admiring their car and we got our timing right, as it was the monthly club meet on Sunday. This was held at the Hippodrome in Maisons Laffitte, so it was just up the road. The definition of ‘classic’ here is 30 years and so many of the vehicles there looked very familiar to us 😳. TR5 and TR6, MGB, RR, BMW, Maserati, of course the Jensen Interceptor that our host drives, 2CV, Caterham 7, a beautiful Austin Healy 3 litre and then this… This is identical to mine, a Fiat 850 Sport Coupé, that I owned from 1978-81. Seeing it, brought back memories of welding, brazing, stripped driveshaft splines, clutch on the M1 and many miles of amazing touring. We drove around France on a camping road trip for all of September 1978 and the following year did the Ardennes for a month too. Here’s Nige’s Jensen… Maisons Laffitte is a very nice area to the west of Paris centre. The mansion is now owned by a trust I think and is a beautiful building. All we ne...

Burgundy

We thought that after the descent from Col du Galibier, we would be done with cols. They are brilliant to drive but hard work. The narrower the road the harder it is, especially at hairpins. These are almost always steep and so the vehicle speed and engine revs need to be correct before the turn. If it’s a right hand bend then the driving line is obviously on the right part of the corner which is always the steepest. It’s all about teamwork, especially as those bikers love the roads and like to be close to the middle. A Land Rover 110 needs a wide turning circle and so we have to look out sideways and either up above or down below to see what’s coming. After Galibier the road finally descends to the ski area of Valloire and on to Col du Telègraphe, which from the south isn’t much but those ascending from the north will feel the height gain. Then down to the Maurienne valley and we think we are done with hills. However there’s one last surprise as we turn right off the motorway route to...