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Santa Barbara Island is a tiny speck about halfway between Channel Islands and Santa Catalina Is. It is generally warmer water and divers can enjoy better visibility, than the northern Channel Islands. Those conditions however also require diving deeper as the shallower urchins tend to have less quality. One of the main features on the lee side of the island is a sea lion population that resides in an area known as the seal slide. The rocks have been worn smooth over time as the sea lions enter the water on the incline. When they are absent the slide is a dominant feature, in the anchorage. The noise is deafening when they are present, there incessant barking sounds like Old Blue, the bloodhound that ran himself to death, chasing the scent of Paul Newman after one of his escapes.Some of you older folks might remember the motion picture Cool Hand Luke who was locked up on the chain gang in the deep south.Well magnify that sound times a hundred and thats what the sea lions sound like times a thousand. If that was not enough when the wind is right the smell is nauseating,
When diving in the area the sea lions are curious, playful, mischievous and annoying. They are unavoidable. I have had them pull on my hose, charge me at full speed, just to pull up at the last moment, and I could of swore I heard laughter, when I reacted. They bite on my fins, and one stole a fish I had on the end of my spear. At night they are all under and around the boat and there antics create trails of phosphorus illumination. The patterns of the trails are beautiful and awe inspiring. I finally quit giving them any eye contact at all, they would eventually tire of harassing me, if I did not look at them, but every once in a while it was difficult not to play with the pups who were the most excited by our presence, and just adorable. I even quit that after a mother cow charged me baring her teeth. Maybe twice my size, that event shook me up like no other, during my 25 year commercial diving career. Giant Black Sea Bass, moray eels and Garibaldi seem to be more prevalent than in the northern Channel Islands as well.
The National Park Service has a presence there. One year that single Park Ranger came out and boarded us for a License and compliance check. My impression was that he was just lonely and wanted someone to talk to. He half hardheartedly checked us for regulations compliance and I noticed he was not wearing any socks, which endeared him to me immediately. He said he stays in an old Quonset hut for an extended period of time, and he was not trying to make it look glamorous or romantic. I think it was the highlight of his week to come out and check us out.
There is more bottom around the 1 mile square Island than dry land, on the island itself. It is also a little of a gamble diving there, because if your not finding urchins, no where else to go unless you hauled enough fuel to get to St. Nicolas Is. Another drawback is the ride home is generally into the prevailing weather, which can make for a long miserable voyage if it picks up too much
So I decided to make a voyage out to SB Island on my vessel Longfin. I knew of an area I could pick some good quality sea urchins and they should be ripe about that time. Johnny Goomer RIP the diver, that I had on the boat agreed, and we had heard that one of the boats we communicated with regularly was heading out there as well. Now Johnny was a good natured soul, built very slight but his forearms had the hardened appearance that turning wrenches on seized up bolts over the years would create. He had spent 10 years in Federal Prison for agreeing to crew a vessel that was engaged in ferrying out to a cargo vessel and returning to shore with contraband. Then the worst sin of all ...getting caught. Johnny had started out working in the processing plant, cracking urchins at first, then moving around to other duties at the plant. He seized on an opportunity to try diving on the Hey Jude with John Gilsinger, and he was in.
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That island saved our lives. We were running to San Diego from San Nicholas Island on the 45 foot Mudshark in 20ft plus breaking seas in gale force winds. We had broached twice and water was coming up through the floorboards when the Captain climbed down and told me to take the helm as he tried to find the problem. I put on my wetsuit and climbed the flybridge. I broached her twice before we reached Santa Barbara Island. The captain found that an urchin glove had plugged the bilge pump just in time to save the day.
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