South Padre Island, Texas
Story and photos by Jesse Cancelmo
If
it weren't for its big eyes, I'd never have noticed the scorpionfish
camouflaged against the dense mat of macrobiology that covered the steel
supports of a toppled rig structure off Texas' South Padre Island.
Scorpionfish are mottled-brown and have ugly, leafy skin flaps that make
them look like nondescript, algae-encrusted rocks.
The good news about scorpionfish is they are
not very aggressive. They normally just lie around like they're in some kind
of trance. But the not-so-good news is that they have sharp, venomous dorsal
spines and are masterfully inconspicuous. Luckily, scorpionfish aren't much
more of a threat to divers than are sea urchins. I was taking a
get-in-your-face approach, looking for close-up photo subjects on a
less-than-usual-viz day. Even though runoff from recent flooding had reduced
the park's visibility to less than 25 feet/8 m, it didn't take long to find
the first one, and then a second. Before I knew it I was spotting
scorpionfish in pairs, and even discovered a family of three.
The Padre Island Underwater Park, also called
"The Artificial Reef," is part of the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department's Rigs to Reef Program. It's located just off South Padre Island,
a thin barrier island at the Texas/Mexican border. Besides the plenteous
population of spotted scorpionfish, I also found numerous tiny tuscalated
blennies hiding out in barnacle shells, gatherings of arrow crabs, a medley
of reef tropicals and loads of game fish. A second rig jacket and a nearby
ocean tugboat sunk in 72 feet/22 m of water complements the Park, which is
situated 7.2 miles/11.6 km off the South Padre jetties. The
60-foot-/18-m-long tug sits upright on the bottom, and features two
wheelhouses and an engine room to explore. The newest addition to the park
is a 150-foot-/46-m-long Navy repair barge complete with anchor and chain.
It was sunk on its side last August about a hundred yards east of the
tugboat.
South Padre dive operators use the underwater
park to train divers from entry-level Open Water to specialty courses.
According to American Diving's Tim O'Leary, the barge is an excellent
training site because the top of its long, flat deck is at a depth of only
40 feet/12 m. Operators set up drift and tag lines that connect to the down
lines in a fashion which allows divers to make descents to the barge and
return to the boat without ever leaving the lines. O'Leary even uses the
barge for some of his rebreather course dives, and entry-level wreck
training dives are made on the park's tugboat. The Scuba Shack uses the park
to certify teenagers from the Laguna Madre Boy Scout Camp. Owner John
McIntyre certified 100 scouts there last summer.
The steel framework of South Padre's offshore
rigs forms a sanctuary for an entire food chain of inhabitants, from tiny
hydroids, barnacles, anemones and other clinging creatures to schools of
majestic spadefish and groups of silvery lookdowns. The latter flutter
through the water column, appearing almost angelic with their long, very
fine dorsal filaments. But there is no church choir in the balcony. Instead,
diesel-powered generators resonate overhead in a bass hum.
Eight large platforms are scattered in an
area 42 miles/68 km north of the South Padre jetties in depths of 150 to 220
feet/46 to 67 m. Exceptional summer visibility and the multitudes of fish
make the 4:30 a.m. departure worth it. Little Adam, a popular platform in
this area, hosts hordes of tropicals like angelfish, cocoa damselfish and
butterflyfish. Larger possibilities include jewfish, tarpon, spinner
dolphins and even whale sharks. Scuba Shack's McIntyre explains that the
iron islands are used for advanced dive training because of the deeper
depths.
Seven and One-Half Fathom Reef, one of the
Gulf's few natural reef formations, is an altogether different experience.
This site is located just north of Port Mansfield, about 2 miles/3 km off
the deserted beach that's protected by the State Park program. The reef was
a watering hole for camels, mammoth and mastodons 10,000 years ago. Today
ridges, gullies and rough, rocky overhangs make it a magnet for a diversity
of extraordinary marine life such as purple-mouth morays, sea horses and
toadfish. Other residents include grouper, amberjack, snapper and barracuda.
Divers have also discovered mammoth teeth, bones and different fascinating
fossils on the reeftop.
If I told you there was another site where
three 400-foot-/122-m-long ships lay at a depth of 100 feet/30 m, you'd
probably wonder what event caused such a disaster. The fact is, the ships
were intentionally sunk in the 1970s by the federal government as part of
the Liberty Ship Program. Designed to enhance the fish population in the
Gulf, nine Rigs to Reef structures were added to complete the complex. It's
located about 2.5 hours north of South Padre Island and now known as the
Port Mansfield Liberty Ship Reef. The ships are upright, and their tops
reach a depth of 85 feet/26 m. Some of the gas and oil structures, which
were donated by petroleum companies, top out at 50 feet/15 m. Operators run
advanced wreck training that can include penetration dives on the Liberty
Ships.
South Padre Island touts some of the finest
beaches in the entire Gulf of Mexico. Add a seaside lineup of condos and
luxury hotels, a great choice of eateries, a Central Florida-like climate
and spectacular sunsets, and you'll understand the attraction. South Padre
draws a diverse crowd, from the spring-break college revelers to the more
senior snowbirds and retirees. Boardsailers and fishermen alike claim the
Laguna Madre is one of the best recreational bodies of water found anywhere
in the Lone Star State.
Be sure to visit Sea Turtle Inc., founded by
the longtime resident "Turtle Lady" Ila Loetscher. Volunteers
offer "Meet the Turtle" presentations twice a week. You'll see
leatherbacks, hawksbills and the highly endangered Kemp's Ridley turtles.
Summer water temperatures reach the mid-80s F
(27 C) but it's not uncommon to encounter 5 F (3 C) thermoclines at depth.
Winter gulf temperatures dip to the low 60s F (16 C). Count on the best
visibility during the prime-time months of July through September, when the
Gulf Stream sends eddies of clear-blue water close to shore. The dive season
runs from March through October, but the best diving is from June to
September.
A 2-mile-/3-km-long causeway connects South
Padre to Port Isabel on the mainland. Nearby airports are in Brownsville (30
miles/48 km) and Harlingen (45 miles/72 km). In less than a 30-minute drive
south, visitors can enjoy the much-renowned Gladys Porter Zoo, or cross the
border to Matamoras, Mexico, and experience its cultural attractions, tasty
restaurants and bargain shopping. Two nearby medical facilities have
recompression chambers and trained staffs who can handle diving emergencies.
For more information about training or diving
at South Padre, contact any of the operators listed in the sidebar. Training
offered includes Open Water and specialty courses, Nitrox, rebreathers and
helium-based trimix. For accommodations, contact the South Padre Convention
and Visitor's Bureau at 800-SOPADRE, or check out the Web site www.sopadre.com.
Area Recompression Chambers
Brownsville , Valley Regional Medical Center,
(956) 350-7321
Harlingen , Valley Baptist Medical center,
(956) 389-1940
Dive Operators
American Diving
South Padre Island
(800) 761-2030
www.divesouthpadre.com
Ocean Quest Dive Center
South Padre Island
(956) 761-5003