Blonde Rock
DEPTH: 10-65 FEET (3-1 8 M)
LEVEL: ADVANCED
Located
between Dead Chest and Salt Islands, Blonde Rock offers
good visibility, lots of big fishes, fascinating topography,
a taste of adventure, and photo opportunities galore.
Blonde Rock is a set of two pinnacles, out in the middle
of nowhere, that rise from 60 feet to within 15 feet
of the surface. Occasionally current-swept and the
only topographic feature of any significance in the
Salt Island Passage, Blonde Rock is a natural magnet
attracting all kinds of marine life including turtles,
schools of jacks, cobia, barracuda and even the occasional
shark. The twin fire coral-encrusted peaks (hence the "blonde" designation)
rise from a gorgonian-covered plateau at 35 to 40 feet.
All the way around this sheer-walled plateau is an
amazing system of undercuts, ledges, canyons, tunnels
and companion rocks. With a flashlight, the brilliant
colors of the sponges, coralline algae and cup coral
will leap out at you. The craggy upper lip of the wall
is adorned with sea fans, deep-water gorgonians and
a strange green-stalked colonial hydroid. After fully
exploring the extensive undercut and the bowl itself,
with its school of brilliant yellow French grunts,
climb out of the back of the bowl and stop at the pit
right at the edge. A small cave in the back of the
pit hosts a perpetually spiraling school of glassy
sweepers.
Seen here: blackbar soldierfish,
schools of chub, horse-eye and bar jacks, creole
wrasse, tomtates, coneys, parrotfishes, angelfishes,
triggerfishes, pelagics, glasseye snapper, graysby,
large crabs.
Text extracted from Diving
British Virgin Islands
Photo © Bonnie
Pelnar
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