@@barbarabeesley7451 they feed on the sea fans /gorgonians..you always see them on those. 2 eyes , antennas and yes a mouth...i guess u can say they have a face. They are beautiful marine snails/gastropods.
HEY! Long time no Dive! How ya been?? I haven't went diving in a bit. Been traveling too much. I think I have time but have to get things going again. Been back to AMI?
@@MrColdhell Hi..no unfortunately i have not been back to AMI to dive that site. The water is still murky from the sand renourishment project. Mostly going to South FL or the Keys.
I will be on the North end of Anna Maria the first week of November. I have a 4 and 6 year old, and I would like to take them snorkeling somewhere that we can either walk or drive to. Because they are young, I don’t think they have the attention span for a tour, and it doesn’t need to be amazing snorkeling. Mostly I just want to let them try it. Is there anywhere you would recommend?
Maybe try Coquina Beach couple miles south of that spot( has some rubble right off the beach) or Siesta - Crescent beach in Sarasota(some rock formations there with tropical fish). Hopefully there won't be any red tide. Best for snorkelling in FL is Bahia Honda State Park in the Keys, always good visibility and shallow water to observe sealife.
Take the trolley south to the Gulf Drive Cafe and walk north until you come upon the first two story house. Small rock piles 25' to 50' offshore in less than 10' of water. October through mid November water clarity is pretty good.
@@FloridaDCSVideos is the L-shaped rubble pile near the boat channel (south end of the beach) better, or the other piles a little further out in the Gulf from the sand more around the middle of the beach?
@@CHSpaintballer2 Only good area is 300 yards straight out from 31st street on Holmes Beach, that's where the reef is. But the sand renourishment they did messed up the visibility badly, so not sure if it's divable lately. It's been a couple yrs since I dove that reef.
Video was shot about a month before Irma. I just linked my Vimeo acc to RU-vid in December. Haven't dove it after the storm; heard it got moved 200 feet from its original spot.
Miles Davis No..there's usually very little visibilty...you can always never see the seafloor/reef from the surface. Last weekend I dove this site again and the vis was 10 feet or less. The county did a sand replenishment project and there's still a lot of silt sitting on the reef..it's sad because there's a lot of life on this little reef.
Haven't seen any more at Spanish Rocks and was surprised to see one that far north; need to stay on top and keep going after them (I hear they are edible if you remove the spines).