Singapore and remote Indonesia
This trip had two distinct parts: Singapore and snorkeling.
For us Singapore is a place to catch up with friends and to eat the city’s delicacies. We enjoyed several meals with longtime Singaporean friends eating our favorites and theirs. Some of the specialties we were happy to return to: mantis shrimp, sambal stingray, chicken rice, laksa, bak-kut-teh, Nonya cuisine, fresh soursop juice, the whisky culture, and the tea culture.
Snorkeling took us to two remote Indonesian islands – Alor and Sumbawa – with very different types of snorkeling. Alor was beautiful underwater and concentrated on small critters (see Alor). Many of my photos focus on the very cool and weird fish we saw. The specialty around Sumbawa was “muck” diving where the sea floor was mud and/or stones. In some cases, the muck background made the colors or shapes of the fish stand out. Both of these kinds of snorkeling were new for us.
It’s incredibly difficult to share with you all the colors and shapes activity that we see underwater? Every time we snorkel, I thank the marine inhabitants for letting me peek into their lives. So what I depict here are some of those peeks – pun intended.
We may have missed many of the small critters if they weren’t pointed out by the dive guides. At depths of 10-15 ft (3-5 m) they were difficult to spot even if they weren’t camouflaged, ranging from 1-6 in (2.5-15 cm). To most of us floating on the surface they looked like rocks or leaves, except for the nudis (nudibranchs) whose colors stood out.
On this trip I saw all of my favorite fish: honeycomb grouper, sweetlips, longnose filefish, and Mandarin fish. Also saw reef sharks and a nursery area of baby sharks. I won’t usually post repeat photos. If I have a good photo of an octopus, shark, turtle or my favorites, they won’t be repeated in this posting of the blog.












