Back to School

Well, hello from Santa Barbara! I've finished my two weeks of orientation and started real classes. This quarter I'm taking Ecology of Managed Ecosystems, Earth System Science, Business and the Environment, and Intro to Environmental Policy Analysis. Sounds exciting, no? As complicated as the course titles may seem (and really, when do they not?) everything seems pretty manageable right now. It'll most likely change, seeing as I'm only two days in, but it's all good these days.

I'm living in university housing with three other first-year girls, two of which are in the same major program as me, and the other a psychology PhD. We all have very similar interests and lifestyles, so it's pretty nice here.



I've also joined the rest of the university population in owning and riding a bike. It's a pretty lavender beach cruiser with a little white basket in the front. I feel like I should have flowers or a small dog in there, but it's just been my water bottle and bike lock so far. Maybe I'll catch a squirrel or something. That would be cool too.

So that's about all that's going on here. Two weeks of orientation and settling into the apartment, exploring the area, hunting down the elusive Trader Joe's and the associated adventures with Google Maps, and trying to learn the names of my 97 other classmates, each with varying degrees of success.

Labor Day Scuba

My friend Mark came to visit this past weekend. Having been dive buddies in LA, Polynesia, and Cayman (that's the first time I've said the island's name on this blog, by the way - a momentous occasion to be sure), we decided to jump in and try out my strobe in California water for the first time and see if we could find anything interesting.


As it turns out, we had an excellent set of three dives along the outside of the Monterey Breakwater. This is a sunflower star, a many-armed type of sea star. This particular one was just sitting around taking it easy (it being Labor Day Weekend and all), but these guys can move really fast when they need to.


Speaking of slow, this is a rainbow star. These guys move at your more typical snail's pace (or slower - you might be surprised to learn how fast snails can move).

 

A Rainbow Nudibranch. We saw a few of these, and all were approximately 8-10 inches long, which is much bigger than the 2 inches of most nudibranchs we had seen in previous classes and dives.

  

Throughout our dive we had to keep watching where we were going because there were a bunch of sea nettles like this one floating around us. Neither of us were stung, fortunately, but we definitely had good incentive to keep our heads on a swivel. Fun fact: Just as geese come in gaggles and lions come in prides, so too do jellies come in smacks. Yes. We swam through a smack of jellies.

  

A shrimp on a bat star, which is incidentally the answer to my guess-the-animal quiz regarding the photo at the top of this webpage. Bat stars have porous scales over the outside of their bodies, through which they stick their gills to get a little more air. Because it's stuffy underwater.

  

This is an opalescent sea slug. We saw quite a few of these crawling across the sandy bottom. This species is the more common nudibranch size of 2 inches, but it certainly makes up for that in style.

  

This is a Sea Lemon Sea Slug. Whereas most of the previous pictures were taken in the kelp and sandy floor just offshore of land and out a little way from the jetty, this photo was taken on the rock jetty itself, where we found a few sea lemons scattered about.

  

This is one of my favorite photos from the dive because of what I didn't notice when I first took it. It was only when I uploaded the dive pictures onto my computer that I realized there was a shrimp sitting on the crab's head. Since then I have taken to calling this the "family portrait" because of the way it, the crab, and the neighboring anemone are all arranged and looking at the camera, plus the "shopping mall portrait studio" quality of the lighting. It's all wonderfully hokey and I like it.

Bonus Point Giveaway!

By the way, bonus points are available to whoever correctly guesses what the thing in the photo at the top of the webpage might be. Submit your answers in the comments section. Need not be present to win.