Ringdove Rock
DEPTH: 15-70 FEET (5-21 M)
LEVEL: NOVICE TO INTERMEDIATE
Ring Dove
Rock is a fertile garden of a sea mount hidden in
a sandy area in 55 feet of
water. Spiraling up and around the formation you'll
swim over a sloping bottom well covered by gorgonians
and healthy sea fans. There are many rocky coral heads
that stand up off the bottom, whose bases and sides
are undercut and honeycombed. Lurking in these coral
condos are lobsters, shy juvenile angelfishes, and
small moray eels.
Coming around the far side of the
pinnacle you'll see the thick cloud of sergeant majors
always feeding in the current over the top of the rock.
Two sand canyons cut through the summit. Crinoids,
beautiful encrusting sponges, and lacy gorgonians line
their walls. The sandy bottom is pockmarked by the
dens of yellowhead jawfish, as well as furrowed by
the slow meandering paths of burrowing red heart urchins,
upon whose bellies can be found the tiny white heart
urchin crab.
Overall this is a very busy reef,
with clouds of plankton-eaters foraging in the water
column above the rock, parrotfishes and trumpetfish
roaming through the velvety gorgonians, and the bottom
lit with splashes of color from iridescent purple tunicates
and bright golden zoanthids on red rope sponge. Gangs
of butterflyfishes often follow divers around, waiting
for them to inadvertently chase sergeant majors away
from the purple egg patches they were guarding. The
butterflyfishes then charge in as a group and feast
on sergeant major caviar. The butterflyfishes are so
fearless while they gorge that photographers can place
the extension tube framers of their Nikonos cameras
right into the melee and get great close-up shots of
the fish. Rock beauties, slender filefishes and well-fed
lizardfishes round out the population.
Text extracted from Diving
British Virgin Islands
|