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Our Environmental Mission

Bubbles Below Goes Green for Blue Water's Future


“In the end, we conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught.” – Baba Dioum, Senegalese Naturalist

turtle underwater ocean

Sustainable Diving Practices


We are committed to sustaining the character and the reef residents of our many dive sites. One of the ways to do so was to put in day-use moorings.  However, we do not have moorings everywhere, as that would be obtrusive. If there is no mooring present, it’s either a free descent without a line or we swim down the anchor placing it where it will cause no damage.

Another way in which we show our commitment to sustainable diving practices is by not hitting the same site daily, allowing marine life to relax from the presence of divers. We emphasize and appreciate the natural curiosity of divers and reef residents without chasing behavior.

Lowering Our Footprint


We are doing our part to not create any damage to the environments, in or out of the water by teaching divers to not touch anything not made by man.  We do work party dives to repair and replace damaged moorings to keep groups in the specified areas, as well as remove trash and debris from the sea and land.

We want this to be here for many many generations and ask we all pick up a little more than we brought in…

 

Conservation & Scientific Diving


We at Bubbles Below have played a direct roll in conserving while learning about our beautiful waters and the creatures that inhabit them through moorings and drift dives, historical conservation, and scientific diving studies.

scuba diver ocean underwater

Historical Conservation


With the two hurricanes hitting 10 years apart, a porthole from the Pele, a shipwreck at the General Store, turned up.  Previous owner Ken Bail secured it to a cement slab after we initially found it. Since then the porthole has been returned as a Historical Monument to the Captain and the shipwrecked Pele, which sunk in a storm on March 22, 1895. Accomplishing this has helped divers to learn and recognize the historical and culturally rich maritime history of Kauai.

scuba diver seal underwater

Moorings and Drift Dives


After Hurricane Iniki in 1992, Previous owner Linda Marsh Bail had seen enough reef damage to become a founding member of TORCH, which was the organization responsible for bringing in day-use moorings to our dive sites. We were the dive company who organized the initial placement of pins and directives of the State of Hawaii. Bubbles Below still maintains moorings and continues to work with the State of Hawaii in placing and maintaining those moorings.

Even before Hurricane Iniki, Linda was compelled to “move” down the reef line. Bubbles Below divers of the 80s probably remember our learning curve on how to drift dive safely. There were no standards on it back then. Yep, even safety sausages were a rarity. The advantage of drift diving to the reef is zero disruption of the bottom. We do lots of drifts and will teach you how to enjoy this type of diving safely.  Today we not only have a vast amount of experience but current owners Clay and Blondy encourage the drift specialty course with our very skilled dive master instructors.

 

Scientific Diving Studies on Coral


Snowflake coral has been represented as an invasive octocoral, which is found throughout the Pacific.  The diversity and amount of coral coverage on the shipwrecks had been taken over by snowflake coral. It appeared that once-live coral was now smothered by snowflake octocoral. This reduces the food source for the coral feeding fish, as there is no known predator for octocoral.

In Hawaii, the Division of Aquatic Resources has been funded by the Federal government to perform ongoing assessments to determine if we are under threat of a snowflake coral takeover, as is evidenced in the above story. Participation in this study has taken us to Kaula Rock, circumnavigating Ni’ihau underwater as well as Lehua Crater and many areas of Kauai.

What is perhaps of great significance is that during our last temperature study, it was found that Kauai is the only island in the main Hawaiian Islands to actually vary in temperature at depths below 200 feet throughout the year. The other islands do not, and Maui, Molokai, Lanai, and Oahu are having an invasion of snowflake covering as much as 90% of black coral below the depths of 200 feet, while Kauai does not have this problem. The current belief held by Tony Montgomery (Chairman of DAR – Division of Aquatic Resources) is that carijoa cannot withstand the change in temperature, so in Kauai/Ni’ihau waters during the winter temperatures and at depth the growth rate is greatly mitigated or reversed.

With the State of Hawaii cut-backs, research is dwindled to nonexistent. Fortunately, we still have the University of Hawaii, which has graduate students performing research. We also have the Institute of Marine Biology, which is also associated with the University of Hawaii where important researchers like Greta Abey work.

You can also read about our Black Coral Study by Daniel Wagner here!