Thursday 26 May 2011

DIVING AT DISHDABA















Excerpt from Chapter 2 Red Sea Adventure
Travels with My Hat


...My childhood dream was no longer a dream. Or a deadline. Pulling on a mask and snorkel, I followed Morris out into the bay where I looked down on an underwater Eden.

Corals covered every inch of the reef. Some were soft pink and yellow ‘flower’ corals, feathery tentacles waving as they sifted in plankton from around their colony. Others were hard, limestone corals—mosaic, organ-pipe, brain and grass coral -- interspersed with lacy orange and red gorgonian sea fans. Still others like the fawn, blue-tipped staghorn coral were the size of small sedans.

Moreover, the abundance of fish was marvellous. Extraordinary! Now I understood why Jacques Cousteau was so enthusiastic about the Red Sea where divers and marine biologists have recorded some 1,200 species. In the first minutes, I identified white, black and bright yellow butterfly fish, red banner fish, goatfish, bream, a rainbow-coloured wrasse, a surgeonfish and a cheeky triggerfish - a species that knows no fear (one of these little fellows had nipped me while I was snorkelling off Rangiora, the great atoll in the Tuamotu Archipelago).

A wall of soft corals dropped 10m (32 ft) to a narrow plateau bristling with pink and mauve elk-horn coral where I spotted a red hawkfish resting in the branches of an orange sea fan, and a regal angel fish hovering near a cluster of lemon-coloured anemones. Green and mauve parrotfish were grinding the coral polyps with pharyngeal teeth and a school of eight squid, my favourite marine creature, jetted through the water like a team of Red Arrows.

When I swam after them, they flushed brown, then yellow and green, and the last animal squirted a puff of sepia-coloured ink. Coming up for air, I was brushed by a soft turquoise-trimmed nudi-branch which Egyptians know as a badia for its undulating movements which resemble those of a belly dancer.

Morris and the other boys managed to spear plenty of fish, but there was no wood to build a fire so we could cook them. Mas’udi writes of the Red Sea coast as being barren more than a thousand years ago, so unlike in the Pacific Ocean, there was no driftwood washed up on the tide-line. Ruth and I each had a tin of Chinese corned beef and a packet of biscuits brought from Hurghada, but they would not stretch far when shared between six of us. The boys had brought nothing at all...



Underwater images by Erik Bjurstrom
Photo Christine Osborne, Dishdaba 1964



6 comments:

  1. fascinating stuff. And I love the images. I've just found a lot of images of Venice, and put them on my blog. I know they're not in the same league as the ones here, but it was marvellous to see them - almost like seeing them for the first time. I must look back at more of my digital images!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you very much. Encouraging. I'm onto the final chapter of TRAVELS WITH MY HAT.

    And you should sort through your best photos and upload them to your own delightful blog.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Can't wait for this book to be published.
    What a wonderful world there once was under the sea, now - well at least we can read about its abundance and in part how it is no more. Lovely descriptive images of those wonderful fish, but why in the name of Allah kill them, especially since they could not be eaten. Shame.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Lovely colourful and evocative descriptions. Readers may wonder, who was Morris - not a very Arab name, neh? The stunning photo of the author tells us it was 1964

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you for your comment Jules. This is simply an excerpt from the book. If you wish to learn who Morris was -- you may have to buy it. But I can say now, Morris was an Anglo-Egyptian medical student from Alexandria.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thank you for yr comment Cobweb.I think many of us stand guilty of killing wildlife before our consciousness was stirred. The Duke of Edinburgh shot tigers, as I recall, only to later become President of the WWF. In the sixties, and in our situation, yes, the boys were shooting fish which we tried to eat raw because we had no food. I believe you may find a blog on this site about spearfishing.

    ReplyDelete

Blog Archive