stingrays

Picture from FoxNews.com

I am sure that most readers have visited the Bahamas, whether by boat or plane. But how many readers have gone to the Abaco Island in the Bahamas?

What caught my eye and made me write a blog was an article on FoxNews.com on the Abaco and the subtitle was: Feed the Rays with Your Toes! OH MY GOODNESS, I never laughed so hard. The article says, In Green Turtle Cay, book a snorkeling trip with Brendal’s Dive Center (242-365-4411; $75 including beach barbecue) and feed sting rays with your toes. Toes still intact, walk around charming New Plymouth with its gingerbread homes, picket fences, and Miss Emily’s Blue Bee Bar (242-365-4181), home of the Goombay Smash rum drink that does exactly what its name implies.

I looked at the website of Brendals Dive Center and they do not mention of using your toes to feed the stingrays but they do mention hand feeding. Big difference. They do have a cool 3 day snorkel trip and if you find your way to the Bahamas, take a trip to the Abacos.

Snorkel Reef Trip 1/2 Day
- Adventure Specialty Trips of: Snorkel Reef Trip then Fresh Seafood caught and grilled on the beach with activity of (Hand Feed the Sting Rays) Day.
- Wild Dolphin Encounter (snorkel with or watch from boat) & Snorkel Reef Trip with stop at an island beach at lunchtime.
- Complimentary rum punch served each Adventure Day at lunchtime on the beach!

Golden Rays Mass Migration

by Cathy on November 15, 2008

Did you have the opportunity to see this in the papers and on the internet? I found the link bookmarked so I can always look back at it and then I realized that I did not share this on our blog. All I can say is WOW!! Can you imagine jumping in the water and snorkeling with these beautiful creatures? What a fantastic opportunity to jump in the water with your snorkel gear… a memory to last a lifetime.

Mr. Nick Allen, had this published on Telegraph.co.uk, June 26, 2008. Sandra Critellis, an amature photographer ran across the beautiful Golden Rays and this is her story….

Amateur photographer captures stunning Golden Rays massing off coast of Mexico

Looking like giant leaves floating in the sea thousands of Golden Rays are seen here gathering off the coast of Mexico. The spectacular scene was captured as the magnificent creatures made one of their biannual mass migrations to more agreeable waters. Gliding silently beneath the waves they turned vast areas of blue water to gold off the northern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula.

Sandra Critelli, an amateur photographer, stumbled across the phenomenon while looking for whale sharks. She said: “It was an unreal image, very difficult to describe. The surface of the water was covered by warm and different shades of gold and looked like a bed of autumn leaves gently moved by the wind.

“It’s hard to say exactly how many there were but in the range of a few thousand. We were surrounded by them without seeing the edge of the school and we could see many under the water surface too. I feel very fortunate I was there in the right place at the right time to experienced nature at his best.”

Measuring up to 7ft (2.1 metres) from wing-tip to wing-tip, Golden rays are also more prosaically known as cow nose rays. They have long, pointed pectoral fins that separate into two lobes in front of their high-domed heads and give them a cow-like appearance. Despite having poisonous stingers they are known to be shy and non-threatening when in large schools.

The population in the Gulf of Mexico migrates, in schools of as many as 10,000, clockwise from western Florida to the Yucatan.

One of the most awesome and dangerous adventures that you may have in your lifetime is to snorkel with the rays in Stingray City Grand Cayman. They go flying through the water at break neck speeds and they sneak up on unsuspecting snorkelers slipping across any exposed skin with their warm feathery touch. The snorkeler is lulled into a false sense of security. The rays become less in number as the sun sinks on the horizon and soon after the mighty orb makes its green splash into the distant blue of the ocean the rays disappear. The snorkeler bathed in the euphoric warmth soon begins to notice that the night still holds that warmth from the invisible touch caused by the rays. By then it is too late. The damage caused by the rays has already taken hold. The warmth continues to strengthen. The skin begins to taken on a reddish hue which becomes tender to the touch with the passage of time. The skin continues to redden and the tenderness can intensify to the point where the mere act of putting on a shirt can become unbearable. Ahh but do not believe that the rays of which I speak are those of which Grand Cayman has become famous. The rays I am talking about are the Ultra Violet Rays from the sun.

Ultra Violet rays are waves of electromagnetic radiation which are invisible to the naked human eye but can have adverse and damaging effects to the naked human body. The main source of most of the Ultra Violet (U.V.) rays is attributed to our sun. The effects of the sun’s UV rays on bare skin can range from varying degrees of sunburn, premature aging of the skin all the way to cancer. Limiting exposure times to the sun is the most obvious form of protection against the harmful effects of the sun but because everyone is different, setting time limits for exposure that would suit everyone would be impossible.

Snorkelers are more at risk for the serious forms of sunburn on unprotected skin because of water’s ability to absorb heat. A human loses heat in water 20 times faster than they would in air. Because the water is constantly cooling the body, the snorkeler doesn’t realize they are sunburned until after they have been out of the water for awhile.

The various sunscreens on the market are often used with success out of the water but their use in water can make them less effective as the water may wash them off. It has been also suggested that the chemicals used in various sunscreens can have an adverse effect on the reefs and other marine life as the leech into the water. The best preventative so far for snorkelers is to cover bare skin with rash guards, dive lycra skins, neoprene shorties or even one piece neoprene jump suits.

Rash guards are usually long or short sleeved shirts made of lycra and/or spandex material which provide a suitable barrier against the sun’s harmful rays. They are form fitting and breathable, allowing water and air to circulate along the skin. Dive Skins are one piece and made of the same materials but covering more of the body. Neoprene shorties and jumpsuits (also form fitting) are made of a closed cell 2 to 3 millimeters thick neoprene rubber with a stretchy nylon laminate material both inside and out. The shorty is traditionally short sleeved with the neoprene extending to near the knee in the lower portion of the suit. The jumpsuits are usually long sleeved and long legged. What ever your choice; an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure when it comes to protection against U.V. rays.

Now about our friends, the Southern Stingrays… there are a few incidents in the world that have harmed humans but like any other underwater creatures, we are visiting their home and respect their space.