Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Drones Die, Kim Dives, and the Hermit Sings the Blues.

   Since we have last met around the old laptop,  Sandra and I have been scrounging for a good, blog-worthy story.  We have a few tidbits to relate to you, but first, in the spirit of our sometimes neighbor Bradley Smith, a joke. 

Dive-reticulitis?   Inconceivable.
   Brad teaches college physics at the Skagit Valley Home for the Bewildered.  He tells us that to set the proper mood, he starts off each lecture with a joke. Considering his high powered intellect, these jokes are routinely sophomoric and, to be acceptable in the classroom, devoid of racy themes.  Fortunately for us, in addition to all his other accomplishments, Brad is an excellent cook.  Unfortunately for us, he frequently begins the dinner routine by telling us one of the jokes that he inflicts upon his students.  After our excursion to Mahukona (Pyramid Butterfly, Rock Damsel, et al.) Sandra came up with a joke worthy of Physics 101, and in that spirit, I present this to you. 

   As we were approaching the Pyramid Butterflies, about fifteen minutes into our swim, Sandra spotted a a lone reticulated butterflyfish.  Like many species of butterflies, the reticulated is usually seen as a mated pair.
Dwatted Dwone.
  This troubled her and she thought about it day after day.  At last, she decided that the mate had succumbed
to dive-reticulitis.  Ba-dum.

    Sandra presented that little bit of humor to me on our drive to City of Refuge about a week ago.  At the picnic table, as we were donning our dive suits, we met what we initially assumed was a handsome young
couple from San Diego.  The girl was a cute little pixie, so naturally I had to chat her up.  As it turned out, this boy and girl combo were associated with an adverting firm and were at City of Refuge filming an ad for a water-borne drone produced in China. The drone was radio controlled and could take pictures of things both under water and on top of the water.  We had noted a couple scantily clad beauties on paddle boards just off the two step entry (hardly a common occurrence) and it turned out that the drone was attempting to film them while the divers filmed the drone.
A drone's eye view.  Things were never like this back in San Diego.

   One might be reminded of Howard Wallowitz with his satellite-controlled car attempting to look up Penny's skirt.

   The guy wandered off to assist in the production and the girl remained.  According to her, she had scored a trip to Kona for the purpose of watching the stuff.  Just think, if I was a cute twenty something girl , maybe
I could score a free trip to Kona. 


    While you are trying to get your mind around that bit of aberrant sociology, I will tell you that the Chinese had sent this crew two drones.  One had ceased to function the day before and the second bit the dust while Sandra was putting on her dive skin.  Hence, the picture you see here are members of the team contemplating the second non-functional drone.
Howard can't wait to get her on a paddleboard!


    We looked really hard for a blog worthy fish.  We found some boulders way out on the north cusp, but try as we might, we could not roust out a rock damsel.  But the water was cool and clear and there were lots of other fish.  Not to mention the handsome young advertising team from San Diego.

   Last Friday we went swimming with the church ladies.  We had been threatened with another non-swimmer, a newbie of a certain age at the Methodist church, but she had decided to go on the Fairwinds, the cruising catamaran that takes swimmers and non-swimmers alike for a dip at the Captain Cook monument down in Kealakekua Bay.  This worked out well for Sandra, who has developed a healthy fear of non-swimmers.  And the new non-participant was afforded the opportunity to get rid of a portion of her extra money.  So things worked out well for one and all.

   The water was cool and just a bit cloudy.  Out by the fourth swim buoy, I spotted an octopus about nine feet down.  The water was just cloudy enough, and the octopus was so cryptically colored, that Kim and
Kim Davison.  The next Jacqueline Cousteau.
Sunny were unable to see him. Sandra, now an accomplished diver, was able to descend for a fine look at this handsome cephalopod.

   After several frustrating minutes of diving and pointing to no avail,  I swam off in search of something shallower. As I returned to the group, Sandra and Kim were talking gaily.  In my absence, Sandra had taught Kim to dive.  No more missing out on octopi for Ms, Davison!   In the case of Sandra, it was see one, do one, teach one.  She was so proud that she had me take Kim's picture in mid-descent. 

   Yesterday, mostly to get away from the stifling house, Ms. Gray and your humble correspondent wandered down to Kahalu'u.  We are in a period of what the news is calling King tides.  This has been going on for a couple weeks now, with tides in excess of two feet.  This won't sound like much to those in temperate latitudes, but when augmented by offshore winds, it has been enough to cause flooding both in Honolulu and on the windward side of this very emerald isle.  These floods have created a brown water situation and it took some fast talkin' on my part to convince Sandra that it was safe to swim.
Gotta be a hermit crab!

   The water at Kahalu'u was high, higher than we expected, and as cloudy as I have ever seen.  But it wasn't too warm and it cleared a little when we got away from the entry.  There was a good bunch of fish, including both red labrid and dragon wrasse.  Towards the end of the swim, we spotted a beautifully encrusted triton shell sitting on the coral about three feet down.  Hermit crab!  Even better, through the adjacent fenestration we could see some really large legs, a washed out orange in color, I thought they must belong to a lobster or a larger crab. 


   We directed our attention first to the the hermit, diving down and positioning the shell to coax him out for a free peek. As has been my luck of late, he just would not come out except when his triton shell was face down.  There was just enough current in the vicinity of the rescue shelter to make this experience frustrating.
  I never got a good look with my eyes.  Perhaps as a consequence of the current, but more likely secondary to operator error, I took a bunch of inferior pictures.  But luckily, there were a couple good ones where we
Hazlett's Hermit Crab Peeks Out From His Triton
captured the little fellow poking his nose out from under the edge of the shell.  In the pictures his legs look black, but I am writing that off to the lack of light in the shade of the shell.  three is no doubt that his eye stalks are rufous terminating with a white band.  So I'm calling it a Hazlett's hermit crab in a Hawaiian hairy triton.

   As for the large crab or lobster, after I finished with the hermit I dove down, held on and looked from the upside down perspective under the coral head.  A raccoon butterflyfish looked back at me, but there were no arthropods.  Perhaps you'll see a lobster the next time you go swimming.  Or better yet, maybe you will buy one or two at the market and serve them with butter and lemon.  And a cool, crisp pinot grigio.  Yeah.  That's the ticket.

jeff

   

  

    

  

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Juvenile Barred Filefish, Disaster Strikes and a Fish Story

   Yesterday Sandra dropped me off at the pier for an hour in the afternoon, while she enjoyed the friendly confines of the air conditioned  mall.  It was a super high tide and a Sunday afternoon with a host of locals cavorting in the warm, turbid water.

    I saw nothing on the way out and by the time I neared the pier on my return I was wondering how I was
Barred Filefish Juvenile  Kailua Kona 2017
going to waste the next half hour. Luckily,  near the first swim buoy I spotted a juvenile barred filefish, the black fish with the pin point white spots.  As I was admiring him, and hauling out the camera, two kids swam over.  It was a boy and a girl in the ten to twelve range, the girl being the older sister, but just barely.  Before spotting your humble correspondent, they had been annoying an older brother who was attempting to fish.  He would throw his lure in the water and they would grab it and throw it back.

    It's a sad thing in this day and age, but a single adult, no matter how well intentioned, must consider the implications of befriending children. What a shame. I talked to them a little, but didn't ask their names, somehow figuring that might cross the line.  For the purposes of the the blog let's call them Kimo and  Jen.

    The girl was wearing swim goggles and the boy a mask.  Neither had flippers, but when you grow up swimming like a fish, perhaps they aren't so necessary. I asked if they would like to see a cool fish and when they assented we watched from the surface while the keiki filefish swam out from under the coral overhang.
Kimo   "That's a damn big eel!"
 We we all got a good look.   Kimo was surprised that a fish as big as this was still a baby.  Suffice it to say, the barred filefish is a big fish and the keikis are
commensurately large. From the standpoint of getting the kids interested, one has to admit that with the filefish shape, the fine black spots and its butterscotch tail, this is a pretty cool fish.

    The kids swam a short distance then turned together and gave me a wave.  I asked if they would like to have their picture taken for the blog and they waved eagerly.  I spent the next five minutes trying for a picture.  The filefish was just cooperative enough to make it a challenge.

   When I was done with the filefish,  I swam out beside the pier.  Near the end of the small coral reef there was a large peppered moray eel.  The kids were about fifteen feet away and looking at me, so I beckoned them over.  They swam faster that I could wearing fins. I showed them the pictus and Kimo allowed that it was, indeed, a damn big eel.

A Lovely colony of Hydras, Kailua Pier August 2017
   By this time I was having fun, so I swam back by the pier, where Kimo and Jen were hopping in and out onto the pier like a couple of otters.  There, looking in a spot that had supported the colony in the past, I found a nice clump of hydras.  I explained that they look like a bunch of tiny Christmas trees and both of the
kids were able to dive down and enjoy these beauties.  I managed one last photo opportunity, getting Kimo and Jen to dive the hydras and point.  What delightful keikis!

    Time was about up so I swam to shore, noting a dead male boxfish on the way. Alas poor Boxfish.  I knew him Horatio.  A fish of infinite jest and a host of significant angles.

    Back at the ranch, Sandra plopped the camera in to soak while I hung my swimming outfit to dry.  Inside, I took the camera from its bath and was caring for the lens, carefully sucking up each drop with the ragged edge of a paper towel.  It took just a moment, one or two sucked drops, as it were, for me to realize that
What's Missing in this Picture?
something was desperately wrong.  The ring that surrounds the lens was missing and I was able to look right in to the lens assembly.

   We hunted in the camera bag, in the trunk of the car and in the pockets of my suit, all to no avail.  With Sandra's encouragement we drove back to the pier.  I had some vague recollection that when I pulled the camera from its bag I heard a ping, like something metal hitting the asphalt. We looked all around, near the cubbies, around the shower and in the dressing room.  The ring was nowhere to be found. 

    The following morning I went for an early swim, hoping that I might find the ring in the vicinity of the first swim buoy, the first place I had pulled the camera from my pocket.  Of course, it wasn't there.  Not only that, but the juvenile filefish had moved on.  After a thorough search, I began examining the other areas I had swum the previous afternoon.  Not too far along, I ran across a longjaw squirrelfish that had been hooked, probably the night before, and broke the line by
Longnose Squirrelfish and a Web of Monofilament, Kailua Kona 2017
wrapping around the coral.  The coral near the fish, with a web of criss-crossing monofilament  line, was reminiscent of the inside of busted piano.  I dove down and cleared some of the line, but failed to free the fish. 

   I also took a couple pictures of the fish in its predicament.  These were taken with my old buddy, the Canon D10.  I had hoped to use the Canon to take a picture of the lens trim ring on the sand near the first swim buoy.  Now I was pressing it into battle for real fish photography.  An hour or two earlier, the nice man at Olympus echoed their website; the camera can be used without the trim ring and they plan to have more replacement trim rings for sale by November.  Apparently, this part which appears to protect the space around the lens is non-essential.  This is lucky, since both the T3 and the T4 shed this so-called trim ring faster than a growing hermit crab changes shells.  

    This idea of non-essential parts reminds me of a bird watching trip to Ecuador 20 years ago.  As there was a coup going on, the government had closed the airport, so our options were limited.  Thus, at the Hotel Intercontinental we had  rented a VW Fox, made in Brazil.  Early in our adventure, we encountered a mudslide covering our path.  We had birds to see, so my good friend
The Cock of the  Rock says, " Hey Miguelito.  Via con Dios"
Mikey plowed right through.  A bit further on there was a tractor with a scoop parked by the side of the road.  The tractor proved to be a harbinger of things to come, specifically more mud slides.  As we exited the third of these exciting driving obstacles, we noted that the car was dragging something.  It proved to be the front stabilizer bar.  Mike asserted that  (like the lens trim ring on my Olympus T3) the stabilizer bar on the Fox was extra and unnecessary parts.  Being a resourceful anesthesiologist, I attempted to secure the dragging bar with a roll of one inch cloth tape.  For a little while the car thus looked a bit like a narwhal.  However, when we plowed through the next mudslide the other end of the stabilizer bar was torn free.  I assume that unnecessary part is still in the depths of the Andean mud, somewhere on the old road to Santo Domingo.

    Mike was right, though, and we were able to complete our circuit of western Ecuador sans stabilizer bar.  Eventually we got the Fox back to Quito where we traded it in for an Isuzu Trooper, which we took into the Oriente.  There we survived the rest of the military coup and saw many wonderful birds including the Andean
Usain Bolt.  Some guys have all the luck.
Cock of the Rock at a lek: seven orange birds, each the size of an NFL football, bouncing up and down on a branch.  This on a misty morning hard by the Cascada San Rafael.  Those were the days. 

Mike is gone now.  I'm hoping that he's ripping through mudslides and avoiding the Federales up in heaven.  With any luck, he's out bird watching right now with St. Peter along for the ride.

   A bit further out, on the far edge of the same coral, I saw the trailing two thirds of an enormous undulated moray.   He was a gorgeous specimen with a chocolate ground and a fine white undulated pattern. And I'm reasonably certain that this was the largest undulated moray eel I have ever seen.  My thought at the time was that his body was bigger around than my thigh.  That I am a spindly white man, who's thighs in no way approximate those of Usain Bolt  (the fastest man on earth, now recently retired) may lend
Undulated Moray courtesy of Maui. net. 
credence to my assertion.  Regardless, this was a truly big eel. 

    I swam further out, not finding the trim ring or any other unnecessary parts.  On the way back, I checked in on my friend the hooked squirrelfish.  To my surprise, during my brief peregrination he had vanished.  I dove down, attempting to discover where our friend had gotten off to and came face to face with the ginormous undulated, who was welcoming enough to grace me with a real close look at his shiny, sharp fangs.  It is our understanding here at Snorkelkids that the undulated is one of the few moray eels that really wants to bite you.  In fact, I know a man who was bitten, more or less unprovoked, by an undulated moray eel.  The fact that he was a well known asshole probably had little to do with it, unless you're a big fan of karma, in which case he had it comin'.  Regardless, I was in no mood to test out my standing with Vishnu and his ilk, so I backed off carefully, without attempting a picture.

   Well.  You got an uplifting story about the keikis, a tale of tragedy worthy of the bard himself, and a heck 
Notice How Vishnu Still has All Twenty of His Fingers. Good Karma!
of a fish story.  I'm trusting that our friend the eel enjoyed his fish dinner and is none the worse for having to shoot some line and a hook out the other end.  Them eels is tough.  I hope you are too and we'll see ya out there on the reef.

jeff


Friday, August 4, 2017

Batting For a High Average at Mahukona

    Yesterday we were lured yet again to the northern Kohala coast by our friend Peter, this time with the promise of a family of Rock Damselfish, which my lovely wife refers to as the Rock Island Damsel.  What follows is an account of the outing.  As you will see, the fish watching was superb, but due to conditions, the subject fish and my human frailty, only one of several species was captured by the camera (as wielded by yours truly) in a fashion suitable for this glossy
Pyramid Butterflyfish in Their Rocky Lair
magazine.  Well, all right, its only a blog and it isn't going to make it to your coffee table, but even by those low standards the pictures are inadequate.  To make up for this, I am going to throw in a couple photos submitted by our loyal readers.

    Sandra and I got an early start and met Peter at 9 AM.  (Marla was home cleaning the estate in anticipation of their imminent departure to go watch the eclipse on the mainland.)   The wave predictor had promised completely flat conditions, but there was a modest surge.  A particularly vigorous splash attempted to wash my sweetie's fins prematurely into the soup, but she snagged them and we were soon, all three of us, swimming out of the bay.

   As we hit the deep water, Peter stopped us to admonish that the threadfin jacks were still around, so we should be alert for them, as if we weren't already.  On we swam into a mild but definite current.  After about ten minutes of this, Sandra was the first to spot the pyramid butterflyfish.  We had been hearing about this school from our friends for a while, and it did not disappoint.  A 15 minute swim from the ladder around to the south should bring you to a school of 40 pyramids, some of them over deep water, but many swimming in and out
The Home of the Rock Damsel
of rocky hideaways.  As you can see, it was a gorgeous display.  Gotta love those papal colors.   

   I suppose that this is as good a time as any to note that the swim south of the little bay at Mahukona is not carpeted with fascinating coral formations.  Much of what we swam over, and the spot we were headed for, was bare rock, possibly due to coral death over the last two decades.

   Soon enough we were swimming onward again into that pesky current.  Another ten minutes of hard work and we reached the spot where Peter had found the familia rock damsel.  A few words of explanation are merited here.  First, this is an extremely uncommon fish.  It only lives in the shallow surge zone.  You may recall that in past years, when we saw the five stripe wrasse for example, we have boasted
Rock Damsel, possibly out of the water
that we own the shallows.  Well, despite all my hubris, not to mention hours puttering around in the shallows, I had not seen a rock damsel.  Even John Hoover, no slouch to be sure, says, "They inhabit the shallow surge zone...and because of their habitat are seldom noticed." ...especially by divers, who could not possibly go into this particular habitat.   I was a bit surprised to discover these fish living in a habitat that we do not commonly search;  a collection of large boulders right at the shoreline.   Mostly when I am in the surge zone, I am on the edge of a steep lava drop off  which descends from a very shallow sloping lava flat.  Here we had large boulders forming a small inlet.  Perhaps these boulders were the rocks mentioned in the name.

   Peter guided us into the tiny cove formed by boulders against which the modest swell, even on this relatively mild day, made an exciting surge.  As you can see, there was virtually no coral in this area.  Sandra and I saw at least three individuals and at least one had a definite stripe.  Unlike the few pictures you see in field guides, the rock damsels were black, which contrasted with the significantly larger and  gray Pacific
My best effort at the rock damsel.  Can you see the stripe?
Gregories which were also present.  Although one rarely sees a picture of these fish without two stripes, we only saw one stripe.  And on at least one fish, no stripes.  And the stripe we saw was visible only when the light hit it just right.  But the shape of the fish was distinctive, which may be helpful in the future. Suffice it to say, floating rapidly back and forth with the surge, while negotiating the rocks is not ideal conditions for picture taking.  photography was further complicated by the fish, who, as noted above, were small, almost black and active.  Hence, along with my efforts I'm including  a picture taken by some other photographer so you can appreciate this highly uncommon fish.

   What, you may ask, led Peter to this particular spot.  My answer is, simply, "Hell if I know."  It was not anywhere near the place where he puts in and involves a swim through current to get there.  I couldn't see anything special about this collection of boulders and the conditions made swimming into this enclosure a little
Shortnose Wrasse 2013  Orange in front, Blue behind
dangerous.  And this was a mild surf day.  Lastly, when he poked his nose into this far flung bunch of rocks, Peter did a heck of a job noticing these small active fish with the fine white stripe.  

   We played dodge that rock for about five minutes until we all agreed that we had clearly seen the fish and that we had taken our best shot at a photograph.  As we headed out, Peter tantalized us with another pearl.  He had recently seen an Ewa blenny in about fifteen feet of Kohala crystal (yes Virginia, the water out there was really clear.) and 40 feet seaward of the rocky coast.

   Once again, and I do apologize, I must interrupt my narrative.  The Ewa (pronunced ev-uh, although until rather recently I pronounced it eee wah) blenny is curiously named for Ewa  Beach, a no account beach community just west of the channel leading in to Pearl Harbor.  Thus, Ewa Beach is west of the village that has served as the capital of Hawaii since about 1830, when it was a town of a couple thousand souls, four or five recognizable boulevards and Queen Ka'ahumanu was calling the shots.  In
Peter on the bottom looking for the shortnose wrasse. 
Honolulu, and sometimes elsewhere in the land of the hula, ewa means "to the west"  just like mauka means "toward the mountain".  No one seems to have any idea why this species of blenny is named for Ewa Beach.

   Two species of fanged blenny make it into a Hawaiian fish field guide, Gosline's and Ewa.  But  they haven't been there for ever.  Gar Goodson, the author of  The Many Splendored Fishes of Hawaii did not include them.   That small paperback was all I could find to teach myself the names of the fish way back in 1979.  Dr.Tinker's book, the true bible for ichthyologists of that era,  might have been available to me in a university library, but not in an average bookstore.  And it had no colorful pictures.  While his drawings were a landmark for amateur fish identification in Hawaii, Goodson's book led me down the path of some spectacular mis-identifications.  As Gar didn't deal with these tiny blennies, the blame must fall on the great Jack Randall, who put his name to the dead fish guide just as I was starting to make fish lists in Kona. I looked at his pictures and, perhaps because the fish were small
2012...Green and Brown Bird Wrasse Juveniles Masquerade as Fanged Blennies
and I was willing to fudge, I decided these small green and brown fish at Kahaluu and elsewhere must be Gosline's and Ewa blennies. Amazingly, I kept on fudging for the next 25 years.  Unlike bird watching, a sport in which one is usually mentored, and one that is frequently carried out by supportive groups, fish watching for me was totally self taught; no one was there to to tell me I was making a dramatic error in identification.

   Gosline's fang blenny is green and the Ewa blenny is brown.  Says so in the dead fish book.  The pictures are right next to one another and suggest that the fish are the same size.  It wasn't until 2008 that John Hoover authored the Ultimate Guide...  If I had looked closely, I would have noticed that he included a juvenile bird wrasse, which is what those green and brown fish at K Bay actually are.  So year or so ago John
An Honest to God Ewa Blenny
Hoover was contemplating making a fish identification app aimed at snorkelers and he asked me to help him delineate which fish an average snorkeler might see, as opposed to a diver.  I gave him my list and he pointed out that he was surprised I was seeing Ewa blenny and curious worm fish, as these species are found only occasionally by divers and deeper than what he would consider snorkeling depth.  Kind soul that I am, I forwarded him a picture of both green and brown "blennies" taken at Kahalu'u.  Imagine the extent of my shame when he appraised me that these were juvenile bird wrasse.   The shame went on, as what I was calling curious wormfish (which is also a rare fish of the depths) was, in fact, Gosline's fang blenny.  So in that fell swoop I lost two life fish and a large portion of my confidence.  Sucks to be me.   Only seeing an Ewa blenny for real this time, could restore a modicum of my self esteem.  And what was the likelihood of that?

   Now let us return to the Kohala shore, 150 yards south of Mahukona, with the salty shame of the Ewa blenny burning in the still un-heeled wounds of my psyche.  I was tagging behind Peter and Sandra and
looking down in about 15 feet when I saw two fish, auburn in front and bright blue behind, the coloration of
Purple Linkia courtesy of Gail DeLuke says, "Go Huskies!"
Potter's angel, which I momentarily thought these two must be.  But they were the wrong shape; they were long and skinny.  A quick dive and I ascertained that it was two shortnose wrasse adults.  Earlier in the year I saw a baby shortnose, but these were the first adults of this gorgeous fish that I had seen in a while.  I called to Sandra and Peter and dove again to take a picture.  By the time I got down to eight feet, I had lost the wrasses, but right in front of me, perhaps ten feet away was an Ewa blenny.  It was big and brown with blue stripes and a relatively tall dorsal fin running the length of its body.  Hoping that the camera might focus on this actually very small fish some distance away I took two quick snaps.  The camera did not get the fish clearly, but it is indelibly etched in my minds eye.

"Miss Scarlet, You stay away from dem dwarf morays!"
   Well, if two life fish in ten minutes time doesn't cheer you up, you need to be on Prozac.  The swim back was fairly uneventful, but our host lingered in the middle of the small bay for a few minutes after Sandra and I had showered off.  When Peter joined us ashore, he said that he had been tracking a dwarf moray.  We used to see this uncommon species way down south at Ho'okena  (from my mammy's lap, think her name was Layna) but the small fragment of coral reef that supported dwarf moray has been degenerating into dead coral and sand.  Hence, I haven't seen him in a couple years. 

   We hit for a really high average at Mahukona yesterday, but we already have something on the wish list for next time.


jeff

Pass the Dog Biscuits and the Rainier Beer!   Courtesy of Chuck Hill


Wednesday, August 2, 2017

The Return of the Prodigal Bloody Hermit Crab

    Yesterday Sandra and I went swimming on the Ironman side of the pier.   There was a modest breeze and
Bloody Hermit Crab / Episcopal Miter 2012, Kailua Pier
the water was more than just a little choppy.  Coupled with a bit of swell, it was enough to give you motion sickness, if you were so inclined. We had our swim without seeing much of interest, but on a hot day it was really peasant being in the cool, albeit choppy water.
We completed our swim by crossing under the floating line next to the pier.  Right away we saw the milletseed butterfly that has bee hanging out in that vicinity.  And then, just as we were starting to head in, I saw a beautiful miter shell sitting on the bottom.  Without skipping a beat, my heart sung with joy.  This was a five inch long shell in fine condition.  The mollusc who ordinarily inhabits the shell, I suppose we might call
Bloody Hermit Crab, D. sanguinocarpus  Kailua Pier 2014
him the miter snail, chooses to live in the sand below forty feet. The only way that shell got there was by dint of a substantial  amount of effort on behalf of a hermit crab; a crab capable of lugging that substantial shell from the depths to the coral rubble by the pier.   












    I picked up the shell and looked inside. There was a furry leg blocking the entrance.  The hermit crab inside never came out, but there is no doubt that it was  a bloody hermit crab, Dardanus sanguinocarpus.  Sandra and I are not the biggest experts on hermit crabs in Hawaii, but we have a fair share of experience
Episcopal Miter with Bloody Hermit Crab Inside July 2017
with this species.  I have pictures, which I am sharing with you here, of the bloody hermit crab hauling a long miter shell in the vicinity of the pier dating back five years.  In our experience it is obvious that different species of hermits, given a choice, will choose a certain species of shell.  Of the half dozen or so bloody hermit crabs that I have seen, at least two others were lugging this enormous Episcopal miter shell.  All the others, one at the pier and two or three at Kahalu'u, were living in much more manageable triton shells.  We have never seen any other hermit hauling around a large miter.  As you can see from the pictures, the choice seems misguided.  Sort of like asking big ol' cumbersome Russia to interfere in our presidential election.  And who would be  that foolish?

   To the best of my knowledge, based on photographs and fish lists, I have not seen a bloody hermit crab since 2014.  Suffice it to say, we are always looking.  So lets have a toast to this rare animal who, once
Bloody Hermit Crab In a Triton Shell  December 2013
again,  has found its way into the shallows of the Kailua Bay.  Confusion to the enemy!

jeff