Jennifer's Journal

11/13/2009
Jennifer Lash, sunset at sea

Last June’s Finding Coral Expedition was a once in a lifetime experience to fly a submarine through ink-black waters, my headlights lighting up a deep sea world blooming with life that no one had ever seen before and will likely never see again. The one man subs we dived in gave me and the other members of the science team the mobility to explore seven dive sites where we found at least 16 different kinds of coral, ranging from small orange cup corals to red tree corals one meter high.

06/24/2009
Jennifer Lash and Primnoa coral

Thank you.

The Finding Coral Expedition has now concluded and I am happy to say it was a great success. We documented over 14 species of coral, ranging from small orange cup corals to meter high red tree corals.

06/22/2009
Finding Coral Expedition group photo

Now I can talk about the weather. Since we left the dock on June 8th we have had nothing but calms seas and (almost) clear skies. I am not normally a superstitious person but when living on a ship, I don’t like to test my luck.

06/20/2009
Basketstar

Yesterday I dove to 900 feet in Dixon Entrance. Lance Morgan, the pilot of the other Deepworker and I landed on the bottom simultaneously and started making our way across the flats to a nearby wall. We flew over a silt bottom that slowly turned to cobble and then boulders. Through the misty water, I glimpsed a patch of pink gently swaying the current and as I made my way over to it, a beautiful Primnoa coral came into view. Then another, and another, and another. They just kept on going.

06/17/2009
Gorgonian-Chaetognath

Remember that feeling you got when you were a kid, and on Christmas morning you looked under the tree and found the very present you had asked Santa to bring you? That is the feeling that everyone on the Finding Coral Expedition experienced yesterday while diving in Juan Perez Sound in Haida Gwaii.

06/13/2009
Jeff Heaton

The subs are descending into Mid-Morseby Gully and we are gathered in the navigation room waiting to hear what they see at the bottom.

Planning a dive is easy, making sure it actually happens as planned is a whole other ball game. If the weather is not right we might have to delay the dive. If the subs have a mechanical malfunction, we all go on standby. If the communications are not working when you are underwater, you have to abort the dive. The beginning of a dive is exciting and tense as we keep our fingers crossed and pray to our own gods that everything will go as planned and the divers will get to the bottom.

06/12/2009
Viking Moon

It is 6:00 a.m. and there is a trawler approaching the Cape Flattery. It is approaching our starboard bow and travelling at a speed of about eight knots. Are they trying to scare us or are they just curious? It is hard to tell.

06/11/2009
Trophy Sponge from Goose Trough

There are some experiences that words cannot explain. When you fall in love for the first (or second) time, when you give birth to a child, and when you sit at the bottom on the sea at 750 feet, entertained by the creatures that live there.

06/10/2009
Jen gets launched in Mitchell Bay

Today is our first research dive. We will be diving on one of the four glass sponge reefs that are currently protected from bottom trawling. We chose this site because in the past, when this area was open to trawling, the fishermen caught deep sea corals here.

06/09/2009
Jennifer FCE launch

It’s 6:30 in the morning and I am having coffee in the wheel house of the Cape Flattery with the First Mate Karl Olson. He is telling me about his flow harmony. Karl has many years of cruising this coast under his belt and at first I thought I was misunderstanding some old nautical term from this salty dog. In fact, he was talking about his inner energy and state of mind. This is defiantly a West Coast boat.