Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
- bedlam
- Posts: 1541
- Joined: Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:16 pm
- Name: Carl
- Location: Fremantle, Western Australia (GMT +8)
Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
I set off to see the outer reefs of the Barrier Reef to the north east of the Australian continent. Its an over-night journey to the Coral Sea heading out from Cairns. The story is that the bleaching and ocean acidification have been hammering the Barrier Reef and I wanted to see if before a national treasure was gone forever. Osprey Reef itself is like a series of mountain ranges under the water. It's foreboding face to face and with 1000m deep walls this is not the place to drop your torch. Its also home to an incredible range of critters.
I took the new Seiko Prospex Solar Diver SNE437P1. I loved the case on the Seiko Solar Chrono that came out a while back but was not enamoured of the extra clutter on the dial for a chrono that can't be used underwater. The Solar Diver has the same case (43mm wide, 12mm high, 50mm LTL, 20mm lugs) and a really clean dial. It also has a wart on the crystal, which I stopped seeing after a while but don't particularly think adds anything useful. That small annoyance pales to insignificance when you come to the bezel though - what an absolute corker. It reminds me of the MM300's, damped and positive. It feels terrific and is a genuine surprise on a watch costing only a couple of bills.
The other big ticks on this watch are readability and wearability. Both are perfect and this is an easy daily wear. Seiko has been doing solar movements since 1997 but Citizen is king of that hill for most people. I will see how the movement goes over time to see if it has the reliability of an Eco-drive.
I wore the Seiko on a rubber NATO from Alex Moss. These are brilliant and I can't believe it took me this long to try one. He will cut them to whatever length you need. The rubber is the right thickness to be durable but pass through between the watch head and strap pins easily. Alex sent curved pins with the strap if you need them so even if you have a watch with lug holes close to the case you should still be ok.
Water temps are around 26-27C. Possible depths are insane but we didn't go below 40m as we were on nitrox. Visibility is around 20-30m.
Now, for some pics;
A typical wall at Osprey...35m above and 1000m below
Barracuda
Notice the Nautilus GPS system on my buddies tank. Great to have with the currents that were around.
Clam
Cuttlefish escaping at speed
Forget sharks, this is the most fearless thing in the ocean. The Humbug is an inch square of "I do not give a shit who you think you are"
Huge Potato Cod
Grey Sharks...we had quite a few, and at close range!
Caught this guy asleep...I felt like a stalker :-)
Seeya next time!
I took the new Seiko Prospex Solar Diver SNE437P1. I loved the case on the Seiko Solar Chrono that came out a while back but was not enamoured of the extra clutter on the dial for a chrono that can't be used underwater. The Solar Diver has the same case (43mm wide, 12mm high, 50mm LTL, 20mm lugs) and a really clean dial. It also has a wart on the crystal, which I stopped seeing after a while but don't particularly think adds anything useful. That small annoyance pales to insignificance when you come to the bezel though - what an absolute corker. It reminds me of the MM300's, damped and positive. It feels terrific and is a genuine surprise on a watch costing only a couple of bills.
The other big ticks on this watch are readability and wearability. Both are perfect and this is an easy daily wear. Seiko has been doing solar movements since 1997 but Citizen is king of that hill for most people. I will see how the movement goes over time to see if it has the reliability of an Eco-drive.
I wore the Seiko on a rubber NATO from Alex Moss. These are brilliant and I can't believe it took me this long to try one. He will cut them to whatever length you need. The rubber is the right thickness to be durable but pass through between the watch head and strap pins easily. Alex sent curved pins with the strap if you need them so even if you have a watch with lug holes close to the case you should still be ok.
Water temps are around 26-27C. Possible depths are insane but we didn't go below 40m as we were on nitrox. Visibility is around 20-30m.
Now, for some pics;
A typical wall at Osprey...35m above and 1000m below
Barracuda
Notice the Nautilus GPS system on my buddies tank. Great to have with the currents that were around.
Clam
Cuttlefish escaping at speed
Forget sharks, this is the most fearless thing in the ocean. The Humbug is an inch square of "I do not give a shit who you think you are"
Huge Potato Cod
Grey Sharks...we had quite a few, and at close range!
Caught this guy asleep...I felt like a stalker :-)
Seeya next time!
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Amazing!
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
damn that looks awesome. i can't believe it's been 2 yrs since i last dove.
- rockmastermike
- Feedback Virtuoso
- Posts: 20579
- Joined: Tue May 18, 2010 5:13 pm
- Name: WDE
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
tremendous - thanks for sharing
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Awesome - thank you!
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Brilliant pictures. Thanks for sharing these.
- 59yukon01
- 1.21 gigawatts?!
- Posts: 10509
- Joined: Mon Jan 19, 2015 8:49 am
- Name: David
- Location: Louisville, KY
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Just awesome pictures!
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Absolutely stunning! Looks ridiculously fun. Very jealous
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
putting the d back in dwc
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
cool pics...
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
fantastic, Carl!
we always enjoy seeing your aquatic adventures in Oz! thanks for sharing and great Seiko!
we always enjoy seeing your aquatic adventures in Oz! thanks for sharing and great Seiko!
‘I don’t worry about a thing, 'cause I know nothing’s gonna be alright’ Mose Allison
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Great pics! Thanks for sharing.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Live fast, die young, and leave a good looking corpse.
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Great pics! Thanks for sharing.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Live fast, die young, and leave a good looking corpse.
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
The elusive Dorkfish...
"Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things." - George Carlin
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Damn - I REALLY miss diving in clear water. During the day. Without a ton of gear ;((
Your pictures are amazing. Love the eel and barracuda
Your pictures are amazing. Love the eel and barracuda
VR/
Paul
SI VI PACEM, PARA BELLUM
Paul
SI VI PACEM, PARA BELLUM
- bedlam
- Posts: 1541
- Joined: Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:16 pm
- Name: Carl
- Location: Fremantle, Western Australia (GMT +8)
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Thanks
I have a couple of mates who like to dive dry-suits and I just don't get it. Unless the conditions require it, why would you want all that gear and extra weight???? Give me a wettie and BC with integrated weights any day :-)
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Great photos. That looks amazing, thanks for posting.
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Awesome!! Thanks for sharing these beautifully photos
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Awesome pictures. Thanks for sharing them ,especially the cuttlefish. I visited Cairns may years ago on our way out to Lizard Island.
Re: Diving Osprey Reef in Ozzieland
Awesome stuff – definitely gonna check out Moss' straps. They look great.
Also, what camera did you use for these images? Really great.
Also, what camera did you use for these images? Really great.