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Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

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Clockwise from top left: A school of bullseye swirl over a resting wobbegong<br />

shark at Fish Rock. An octopus busily hunts for its next meal at the Julian<br />

Rocks Marine Reserve. A zebra shark passes overhead at Julian Rocks<br />

Marine Reserve. A loggerhead turtle circles Fish Rock.<br />

here, a sponge-lined grotto stuffed with bullseye,<br />

fortunately contains a face-forward wobbegong who<br />

glares moodily at me as I photograph him.<br />

The next morning the boat heads for Northwest<br />

Solitary Island, a tiny spit of land only 18 miles from<br />

the mainland. We moor in a shallow bay called Lion’s<br />

Den, where mantas were sighted the day before our<br />

arrival. Our first dive is manta-free, though certainly<br />

pretty enough. The site is an easy 40-foot depth with<br />

lots of hard and soft coral, busy schools of bullseye and<br />

butterflyfish, and some truly beautiful green turtles.<br />

Still — and I know it sounds petulant — I feel a little<br />

ripped off: only a few gray nurse sharks up north and<br />

weather-limited dive sites here. We want some mantas.<br />

Thankfully, the universe agrees. We are halfway<br />

through our second dive when the first manta shows<br />

up; before long, we have seen five different ones. The<br />

next three hours are total bedlam. A manta (or two<br />

or three) is within sight at any given time. Soon we’ve<br />

memorized them by size and coloration, and I have<br />

chosen a favorite — a large melanistic beauty, with a<br />

fractured wingtip, that follows me around like a puppy.<br />

We make good use of all the extra air in the hold, only<br />

calling it a day when the sun is low in the sky and every<br />

80 | FALL <strong>2016</strong>

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