Misool, Indonesia

Stingerless jellies in a marine lake. We accessed the lake by wading through a tunnel that opens into a saltwater pool. With no predators in the lake, they no longer need their stingers. They float en masse, following the sunlight around the lake to feed their onboard algae friends who make energy for them – i.e. they don’t need to hunt fish. Photo by Diana on SV Allora.
Afrikii anchored, photo by Diana on SV Allora

Misool is a big island in the south-east part of Raja Ampat’s 2 million square hectare marine park. In the south east part of Misool, fingers of small islands pepper the Ceram Sea. Towering karsts, with their crisp outlined limestone cliffs, mark the starting point of amazing coral formations that are fish nurseries for the oceans.

We anchored in several of the scattered islands, some with no name on the map. Dropping anchor in 30m (very deep?!), tying bow and stern lines to cliff walls to prevent us from swinging onto a reef in a squall–we learned some new skills (wear gloves when scaling limestone to set a chain loop to tie onto, use chain because any line will easily get cut on the knife-like edges of rock).

The diving is endless, exploring edges of reef where everything is different from one place to the next based on current, temp and sunlight. My favourite sites are narrow tapered islands that capture the adventure of fish capitalizing on the ripping current that bifurcates at the point. Huge bait balls of small fish form here and you can just pin yourself in one spot and watch schooling trevallies, a couple of tuna and swirling eagle rays dive in and out feeding.

Nature is so amazing. In jarring contrast, we have the US disaster–the US government’s real-time evolution from flawed to fascist. Historian Heather Cox Richardson reminds us of something journalist Ron Suskind wrote in the NYT in 2004. He had the new world order explained to him by a senior advisor of George W Bush– saying that people like Suskind live in a reality based community where they believed people could find solutions based on their observations and careful study of discernible reality. But such a worldview was obsolete. That’s not the way the world really works anymore…”We [the US government administration] are a empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality–judiciously, as you will–we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors…and you…all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”

Heather Cox Richardson points out that members of the current US administration hope to shape not only perceptions but reality itselfand they are discovering that reality is fucking stubborn (my emphasis added 🙂

I believe the laws of nature still apply to this US administration, and those laws state that 7 billion people aren’t going to stand idle while they attempt to take us backwards where human rights don’t matter and clean water and air don’t matter. These are dark times ahead but as history shows, karma’s a bitch that will bite.

Just gonna pin this here. As Bernie and AOC said, we don’t have their money or their power but we have the numbers.
Sea anomone protecting the clown fish will roll up after eating–remember to work together and find time to rest and digest
This nudibranch is the size of my thumb. They are little but they are tough.They have amazing traits like ingesting stingers and toxins of other species to use against predators or ingesting algae to harness solar-power-producing properties (check out this podcast). Search images of them for design inspo!
Reality-based-community and proud #resist #elbowsup This world with worth saving

Thanks to Kate on IG @sv_polaris for directing me to Heather Cox Richardson 🙂

9 responses to “Misool, Indonesia”

  1. Ann,
    Love love love reading your posts, particularly this one as I kill time freezing in my car at the end of March doomscrolling thru Heather Richardson Clark and nytimes articles. Dreams of what may are actually captured by your photos.

    xoxo,
    Kyla


    1. Miss you, we’re home for a visit this summer 😎 Patio weather! (Yo! Turn up the heat in the car!)

  2. Umm, Heather Cox Richardson, not Heather Richardson Clark, who is a girl a grew up with.

    My name recall is deteriorating quickly.

    Kyla


  3. You look so happy Ann … I love reading about all your adventures

    1. So great to hear from you, yes we’re having an amazing adventure…it is so beautiful here

  4. Deborah Palloway Avatar
    Deborah Palloway

    Great times, scary times. So delightful to read your post and see the pix, especially you two! But our reality is getting pretty unreal these days. We have to stand for our beliefs and fight the evil.

    love you both xxx❤️

  5. ostrichmustardcallisto6518 Avatar
    ostrichmustardcallisto6518

    Hi Ann,

    Just getting around to reading your posts, since we’re heading to many of the places you’ve already been. I support your political perspective and feel that only people who have never traveled can support the current US government. I am an avid HCR fan as well.

    1. Ian left lots of notes on NoForeignLand about anchorages and where to find the New Secret Jellyfish Lake 😎

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About Us

Yo! It’s Ann and Ian on our 1984 Wauquiez Amphitrite. Photos & blog by Ann, keeping us afloat and moving forward by Ian.

Of interest

Great podcast from Outside Magazine about military parajumper training in breath holding

See this story of Cook Islanders shipwrecked on Minerva Reef in 60s (film coming soon)