I sensed some excitement in Daniel's voice, as we got ready for our afternoon dive. The boat moved off and left the dolphins behind. We began our dive and followed Daniel as we swam vigorously into the current. After 25 minutes of hard swimming I had yet to take a single photo. Lynn looked over to me and gave me a non-verbal sigh as we were tiring fast. Just as we were about to give up with exhaustio, Daniel pointed upwards to show us two dolphins that were swimming towards us.
The two dolphins circled us a couple of times to check us out. When they were happy with what they saw, they disappeared briefly to alert the pod. All of a sudden, 30-40 dolphins surrounded us. The sentinels, as we learned later, scout ahead and warn the pod of danger. This time, they just went to get the gang to come and play.
I was taking video, spinning backwards as three dolphins did circles around me. The excitement grew as dolphins filled the water, darting in all directions. As I captured some amazing video, Lynn was happily taking stills and captured some emmorable close-ups including one of Daniel playing catch using a clump of seaweed. The dolphins tossed the ball between them as they circled Daniel's outstretched hand.
It was quite an experience, as the dolphins seemed to really enjoy our company. They swam and frolicked around us like playful kids, swimming in twos and threes making elegant patterns.
The 25 minutes of hard swimming and the 20 minutes of furious filming were starting to exhaust me. Still wanting more, I checked my dive computer, air gauge, camera battery and remaining video storage. Everything looked fine but Daniel motioned that enough was enough.
|