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Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Eun Mei Chau is the smallest of the three islands in Hong Kong's In chau Tong and one of the most deserted islands in Hong Kong. The geographical location is very close to Shatoujiao in Shenzhen's Yantian District.

What does "Eun Mei" mean? Du Niang said: "Beautiful women have slender and curved beautiful eyebrows."

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Saturday, July 13, 2019 The temperature is 33 degrees, it is sweltering, and the southwest wind is windy.

The dive site we chose is in the Great Bay, which is much smaller than the outside surge.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Listen to the organizer Eian said, whenever the southwest wind, will be the Pearl River estuary of the turbid water blowing into the Hong Kong Sea, so Hong Kong diving is very afraid of the southwest wind, especially the big southwest wind after heavy rain in the upper reaches of the Pearl River, unfortunately, today's southwest wind is 4-5 level.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Departing from Hong Kong's Huangshi Pier at 8:50 a.m., it felt sweltering and the wind and waves were not big.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

That is, today is water, and the underwater visibility is less than 1 meter. At 11:22, the second class, me, Cassie a group, after the launch of the three people, immediately disappeared, you can see the underwater today's bad.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Obey the rules of the sneak companion, look for a minute to go to the water after not seeing, 3 people have been 50 meters apart...

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Changing the strategy, getting closer to the "water stone" and diving again, let Cassie always grab my secondary head and ensure that one person will not be lost.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Nowadays, I don't complain about water, it is good to dive at night, only to shoot macro, it seems that it does not have much impact.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

The depth of about 1 meter on the edge of the "water stone" is the ecologically rich area here, with a large variety of stone corals and very dense. Flower cover crabs, castrated pig knife fish schools, mud whale small storms, cuttlefish, octopus, sponges, sand sea urchins, countless devil sea urchins, Jiang Yao shells...

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

The deepest dive is 4.3 meters, the average is 3.2 meters, at least 2 times on the water to find a diving partner, the underwater time is 61 minutes, and the whole process is 73 minutes.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

The water temperature is 26-28 degrees, very comfortable temperature.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

The species of stony corals here is rich and dense.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

This is the castrated pig knife (my fisherman's name), the Hong Kong Fisheries and Agriculture Department called the rouge knife, and the Chinese fish book called single fin fish.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Maybe the TG-5's diving shell has been useless for too long, not on the silicone ..., in short, into the water. There is water in the shell, and the effect of shooting is quite special.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

These seem to be fleshy flat-brained corals, which are very different from those in Southeast Asia, which grow in groups and can grow up to more than 1 meter and resemble pagodas.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

In fact, I really don't have much interest in corals, because they are quite difficult to identify, and there are always many people who are protecting or protecting them every day. Unfortunately, the corals don't seem to be increasing, but are decreasing rapidly, as if we had a problem there? In addition, human scientists seem to exaggerate the role of coral reefs and ignore the role of other marine organisms, such as starfish (including crown of thorns), sea urchins, sponges...

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

Hong Kong has divened many times, and hong Kong's cross peony coral is always incomplete, like a peony with only a few petals, what is the reason?

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

If you don't complain, there's always something to be gained, and the most successful part of this dive is when you photograph octopus that constantly change colors.

Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong

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Dive Diary (236th Dive): Exploring Emei Chau, Hong Kong