San Diego Sights for Scuba Divers' Eyes
by Elizabeth Miller
At the southern-most tip of the USA is
beautiful San Diego, California -- my home town and a
playground for every water sport from skiing, sailing and
surfing to fishing, snorkeling and scuba diving.
As a scuba diver you'll find an exciting variety of marine
life in Wreck Alley, in various kelp forests and in La Jolla's
massive underwater park.
The park combines La Jolla Submarine Canyon and Scripps
Canyon, an underwater treasure of marine life including some of
the more bizarre creatures among us.
The valley of this huge canyon system is about 1600 feet
down. Its steep walls rise into two
branches just made for convenient scuba diving access from the
beach at either the La Jolla Cove or La Jolla Shores.
At the La Jolla Shores side you can start at the foot of
Valicitos Street and swim to the buoys that mark the canyon's
upper reaches. Better be pretty skilled at swimming in surf.
Otherwise, take a scuba diving charter boat out of Mission
Bay.
By the time you've descended to about 30 feet you'll be at
the Scripps Canyon rim and its precipitous, narrow walls that
plunge ever deeper toward the abyss. Be very careful here
because the dropoff is nearly vertical at some points, often
involving overhanging walls.
Visibility is good but variable due to upwellings and
occasional strong currents. Winter water temperature is in the
50s; summer water gets up to the high 60s and sometimes low
70s.
Scuba divers and scientists alike have made the La Jolla and
Scripps Canyons one of the most-studied undersea environments
in the world. You can see the prestigious Scripps Institution
of Oceanography and pier from any point along the La Jolla
coastline. La Jolla Canyon's fan valley was the site of the
world's first deep oceanic drillings, where core samples were
retrieved from thousands of feet below the sea floor in
1961.
15 minutes south of La Jolla is Wreck Alley, about a mile
off Mission Beach. Here you can explore artificial reefs
created by eight sunken ships and a couple of unlikely
structures that got there by both accident and intent.
The latest addition is the 366-foot Canadian destroyer
Yukon, which was intentionally sunk here in about 100 feet of
water during the year 2000. The Yukon still has years to go
before it can compete with its older companions as a showpiece
of densely populated cover.
The Ruby E, a 170-foot Coast Guard cutter resting in about
70 feet of water, was covered bow to stern with brilliantly
colored Corynactis Californica anemones only a few years ago.
But being one of the most beautiful sights for scuba divers'
eyes brought so much scuba diving traffic that some of the life
has disappeared. Yet you can still drift through the wheelhouse
and be absolutely dazzled by thick growths in a stunning array
of colors. Be sure to bring a light.
Then there's the kelp cutter Del Rey and several smaller
wrecks, all with much more growth than the others because of
lighter scuba diving traffic.
Now if you want to feel like you're on an underwater
highway, be sure to visit the Ingraham Street Bridge at about
60 feet down. It was demolished and dumped here in the '50s or
'60s to make way for a new bridge in Mission Bay Aquatic Park.
Now with some 50 years of cover it has become more like a
natural reef with abundant growths of kelp, fans and algae,
great colonies of filter feeders and all the marine life that
comes to nibble.
Finally, there's NOSC Tower, thanks to a 20-foot wave that
dealt a fatal blow in the dark of one 1988 winter night. For
three decades the NOSC Tower had served as a research platform
off Mission Beach for the Naval Electronics Lab and the Naval
Ocean Systems Center. Now it's a twisted mass of steel covered
with anemones, mussels and star for fabulous scuba diving in a
world of stunning color. Bring a light for the show and a sharp
knife for the fishing line and rope that you're likely to
find.
Bring your camera too, of course, for a great photography
dive. Visibility averages 15-25 feet and by the way, hunting is
not wanted here.
You can reach this great scuba location on such Mission Bay
charter boats as Blue Escape (619-223-3483), Dive Connection
(619-523-9282) and DiveQuest (800-303-3483).
About the Author
Copyright MBPCO 2006 and Beyond. Elizabeth Miller is a
professional freelance copywriter for Miller Direct, and a
general partner in Miller Bridges Partners. Here's where you'll
see more about scuba
diving
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