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Mornington Pier 2020 

Colin Grant
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Another return dive under Mornington Pier, Victoria, Australia. After being updated in 2016 (new pylons, a lower landing and a retaining), it resembled a quarry under there, with not much fish life.
I'm happy to report the fish are in greater numbers than in 2018. (It's still rather dark under there, though - take a torch!)
Watch in 1080 HD!
(Check out my 2013 and 2018 RU-vid clips for a comparisons of "'how it used to be"...).
Water temp 16 deg C, (not yet summer), viz 10 - 12 metres (..not too bad!), deepest depth -8 metres (at the end of the pier), dive time 45 minutes).
Filmed on a GoPro, using a magenta filter and the occasional macro filter, with a Mavic Air drone for good measure.

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17 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 32   
@steveruschin5191
@steveruschin5191 Год назад
Videos like yours help older ex divers still appreciate the beauty below the surface…thanks heaps
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 11 месяцев назад
thanks Steve. I'm older, but not an ex-diver ... yet! :)
@diggerrob6356
@diggerrob6356 10 месяцев назад
I did my qualifying ocean SCUBA dive not far from there on the 5th April 1960. I was 14 years old, now 77. I’ve been diving under the Mornington pier many times and I also thank you for the memories. My Grandmother lived in Mornington and ran a Habidashery shop down towards the bottom end of Main Street. I used to go there for holidays every year from age 8 and have memories of Mornington that are priceless. Your footage is a bit like a big aquarium really.
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 10 месяцев назад
I'm always up for a dive buddy, if you're still keen!
@NasTimeAdventures
@NasTimeAdventures Год назад
Wow. That was great. I've dived at Portsea which was quite interesting but never here. Thanks for sharing.
@csgproductions
@csgproductions Год назад
thanks Nat. (Mornington's a long way from the outback though! ) 😀
@coopersfishingadventures
@coopersfishingadventures 10 месяцев назад
3:03 WAS THAT A KINGFISH?! Awesome video as well mate, so interesting.
@paul-up5jy
@paul-up5jy 6 месяцев назад
No A Butter Fish.
@SWhite-hp5xq
@SWhite-hp5xq 2 года назад
Cheers for sharing mate
@jasonflannery4741
@jasonflannery4741 3 года назад
Get a bag a help get rid of those purple point seastars. Nice vid 2..
@gregjohnson1123
@gregjohnson1123 2 года назад
nice music ,......................................................................................................................................im awake now
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 2 года назад
Hah! I was thinking of using something like Billy Ray Cyrus' Achy Breaky Heart. But for the good of mankind, I just couldn't do it.
@matthewparker4101
@matthewparker4101 3 года назад
well done Colin
@nic9tube
@nic9tube 3 года назад
nice vid could you do this at another pier like portsea or blairgowrie
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 3 года назад
Hi. I've already done Portsea Pier and Blairgowrie. They're on RU-vid. Here's Portsea: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-eSbA3pg-TDU.html And here's Blairgowrie: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CPF-N5OnzE4.html Thanks for watching! Cheers!
@nic9tube
@nic9tube 3 года назад
@@csgproductions thanks mate I will check them out
@shaneking6019
@shaneking6019 2 года назад
Very cool vid 👍
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 2 года назад
Thanks Shane!
@AVportau
@AVportau 2 года назад
are those starfish native to the bay? seems to be a lot of them.
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 2 года назад
Hi AV. The (yellow) starfish are an absolute pest in Port Phillip Bay. They're called Northern Pacific Seastars. They were was first confirmed in Victoria in the mid 1990s. They were believed to have been introduced into Australia through ships' ballast water from Japan. These starfish have detrimental effects on native marine organisms, mainly because they are voracious predators that eat a wide range of native marine life. They can have a major impact on populations of native shellfish, which are important components of the Port Phillip marine food chain. They have been recorded feeding on a variety of native animals including shellfish, worms, sea urchins and other seastars. Spawning occurs during winter when water temperatures are around 10 to 12°C. Females are capable of producing up to 20 million eggs each. Once alternative food sources have been exhausted they can become cannibalistic. But the good news - I was down there a few months back, and hardly a Northern Pacific Seastar in sight! A number of dive clubs have 'clean up' dives, where divers collect and remove these pesky critters. (It's a fun day of diving and for a very good cause! Sorry for the long winded response - but you did ask!
@AVportau
@AVportau 2 года назад
@@csgproductions thanks for your reply... i asked coz i grew up in Geelong. snorkeled most of Corio Bay, and around Stingaree Bay, as well as around from Pt Henry to Queenscliff. fave spot was floating around the shoreline reefs of Indented Head at low tide. very cool as a kid to see such sea life in 2 - 6ft of water. did a bit off the rocks outside the heads, particularly around the Cheviot Beach to Portsea surf beach area... awesome but gotta pick the day coz it is a surf area. if you use Google Earth then check out around Cheviot Beach 04/2019 on the timeline. it was so flat and clear one day just like in the google shot and visibilty was 50m+... most memorable time. there were a few starfish then in the 70's and 80's, but i don't remember seeing the pointed curly tipped arm ones... took people a long time to realise ballast water is a problem.... but i'd never seen as many as in your vid. good to hear groups grab what they can.... cheers.
@tireeroach
@tireeroach 2 года назад
Just wondering what camera you used. Good video
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 2 года назад
Hi Tiree. I use a GoPro Hero 8 Black. 4k and 50 fps. That's it. Oh, and the occasional lighting underwater ! Cheers - Colin
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 2 года назад
...actually, that one was done on a GoPro Hero3+ Black. Filmed in 1080 HD at 25 fps. And a Mavic Air drone (also 1080 HD @ 25 fps) - CG
@devono7230
@devono7230 3 года назад
Wow. I had no idea all that life was under there. I never catch anything.
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 3 года назад
That's because they're all hiding under the pier! They know! A few years back, the pier was under construction, with pedestrian/fishing access blocked at half way down the pier. No fishing access - but divers could still go. Under the back half of the pier was like being in an aquarium! It was amazing! thanks for watching. - Colin
@yangmingzheng2483
@yangmingzheng2483 3 года назад
非常的棒!
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 3 года назад
谢谢!
@Getfuxked
@Getfuxked 3 года назад
I think that knife in 5:57 is my knife because I went fishing last year and I I lost my fishing knife and I was looking for it for ages hahah
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 3 года назад
Hi Blake. Chances are the knife is still there, waiting for you. Go get it!!
@suzanneroney2679
@suzanneroney2679 3 года назад
A few starfish around, Colin. Are they a pest? Loved the shopping trolley!
@csgproductions
@csgproductions 3 года назад
Thanks Suz. The starfish are an absolute pest in Port Phillip Bay. They're called Northern Pacific Seastars. They were was first confirmed in Victoria in the mid 1990s, with the first adult Northern Pacific Seastar caught off Point Cook. They were believed to have been introduced into Australia through ships' ballast water from Japan. These starfish have detrimental effects on native marine organisms, mainly because they are voracious predators that eat a wide range of native marine life. They can have a major impact on populations of native shellfish, which are important components of the Port Phillip marine food chain. They have been recorded feeding on a variety of native animals including shellfish (bivalve and gastropod molluscs, barnacles, crabs, other crustaceans), worms, sea urchins, other seastars. Spawning occurs during winter when water temperatures are around 10 to 12°C. Females are capable of producing up to 20 million eggs each. Once alternative food sources have been exhausted they can become cannibalistic. (so...too much information?) The shopping trolley is also a pest. Believed to have originated from Coles...
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