Scuba Diving with Bizarre Fish in the Lembeh Strait, Indonesia

in Worldmappin2 days ago

image.png
Hairy frogfish on the hunt

Lembeh, Indonesia, is a world-renowned diving destination located in North Sulawesi. To get there, we flew from Bali into Sam Ratulangi International Airport (MDC) in Manado, the capital of North Sulawesi. From Manado, it's about a 90-minute drive to the port town of Bitung, followed by a short boat ride to Lembeh Island. Then it was on to our dive resort, NAD Lembeh. We are planning on diving all day, every day, and even some at night!

Lembeh is best known for the Lembeh Strait, a mecca for muck diving enthusiasts. The black volcanic sand and nutrient-rich waters create a unique ecosystem home to some of the world’s most bizarre and fascinating marine life, including pygmy seahorses, hairy frogfish, blue-ringed octopuses, and flamboyant cuttlefish.

image.png

Lightning eyes of a porcupine fish

image.png

Blenny in a bottle

Take a walk, or swim, on the wild side. Bizarre fish pop up on every dive here in the Lembeh Strait, Indonesia. While staying and diving out of NAD Lembeh resort and with the help of our amazing critter finder and guide Nathan we saw a plethora of fun fish. Here is a sample of the craziness.

image.png

Hairy Frogfish, Antennarius striatus

Frogfish are some of my favorite fish to look for. I can find a few species in Hawaii but for the rare hairy frogfish, Lembeh is the place to look. We were lucky enough to find two of these bizarre looking fish during our stay. Both were moving along the black sand and bobbing their lures up and down trying to trick prey into coming close enough to gobble up. Their mouth extends forward enabling them to swallow prey nearly as large as they are.

image.png
Male Ribbon Eel

image.png
Ribbon Eel, Rhinomuraena quaesita

Another big mission this trip was to find a blue ribbon eel. The adult males are blue, while the adult females are yellow. Juveniles are black and for a long time were classified as a different species. They resemble an ancient Chinese dragon with a long thin body and high dorsal fins. We ended seeing four or five of these blue ribbon eels, Rhinomuraena quaesita, making Lembeh the top place for them so far.

image.png
Backlit Sea Horse silhouette

image.png
Sea Horse

image.png
Backlit Ghost Pipefish

One family of fish to keep an eye out for while muck diving in Indonesia are sea horses and pipefish.

image.png
Pink Pygmy Sea Horse

image.png
Ornate Ghost Pipefish

    There are many different species from Thorny Seahorses to tiny camouflaged pygmy sea horses, to the newly discovered Lembeh Sea Dragon, to wild colored Ornate Pipefish. Because of the number of species you can encounter it is possible to find sea horses or pipefish in any environment in the Lembeh Strait. But it does take a highly trained eye to find some of the smaller species like the Lembeh sea dragon and pygmy sea horses.

image.png
The Lembeh Seadragon (Lembeh Pygmy Pipedragon, Kyonemichthys rumengani) is a recently dicovered species that has been seen for the first time in Lembeh Strait in 2006.

image.png
Ambon scorpionfish (Pteroidichthys amboinensis)

image.png
Flying Gurnard

image.png
Zebra Batfish

image.png
Juvneile Spadefish

There are fish here in Lembeh that you might not recognize as fish. But even the somewhat recognizable fish are out of this world. Ambon scorpionfish and flying gurnards walk across the sandy bottom, clownfish dart in and out of their beautiful anemone homes, and juvenile batfish trail behind huge fins compared to their bodies.

image.png
Here's lookin' at you, kid

image.png
Juvenile Lionfish

image.png

Hope you enjoyed visiting this other world with me. I always tell people that snorkeling is like your doorway to a whole new world....scuba diving is like your doorway. You can really spend time underwater, and find things that few others will ever see.

Sort:  
Congratulations, your post has been added to The WorldMapPin Map! 🎉



You can check out this post and your own profile on the map. Be part of the Worldmappin Community and join our Discord Channel to get in touch with other travelers, ask questions or just be updated on our latest features.

Discord Server.This post has been manually curated by @steemflow from Indiaunited community. Join us on our

Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens. HP delegators and IUC token holders also get upto 20% additional vote weight.

Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.

image.png

100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @steemflow by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.

Wow! That's incredible! I'm obsessed with the colors and patterns of those fishes. They're like something out of a sci-fi movie. And you perfectly captured each one of them. Thanks for sharing this amazing experience with us. You're definitely inspiring me to plan a scuba diving trip to Indonesia.

Indonesia is now my favorite place in the world to go diving. The biodiversity of weird and amazing creatures is just mind-boggling. Do it!

Really beautiful!

very interesting trip. Even though I am from Indonesia, I have never been to this province @dtam

Travel Digest #2475.



Become part of our travel community:

Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Your post has been manually curated by the @worldmappin team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!