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Big Animals Photography Expeditions

2000 Broadway, Suite 1204, San Francisco, CA. 94115, USA
Call Toll Free: 1-877-2CWHALE (1-877-229-4253)
Local 1-415-923-9865  

PRINTABLE INFO

Page 1 - Trip Info
Page 2 - Printable Registration Form

Sardine Run Wild Coast
Sardine Migration - Scuba Diving
& Photography. Durban, South Africa

“There really was a feeding frenzy going on. Alfredo was waving his video camera and screaming underwater from excitement. David Doubilet was carrying two cameras and his assistant chasing after him with two more. Jan, David, researchers were shooting along and I have surfaced seven times to change cameras, film and air tanks - this was what we all wanted.

The wait paid off and indeed, it was preparation for the event to come. Without the wait and the doubt, and the long into the night speculations, the stories by the fire and field cooked meals, the emotion, the drama and the jokes - the Sardine Run will be just another event - however it is not. It is a life cycle of short duration that is worth every moment and deserves to be experienced."

What in the world would possess a fish only 10" long to travel 1,000 miles from Cape Agulhas (just south of Cape Town) due northeast to Durban?

Not one but millions of sardines make this trip through treacherous ocean currents along a rugged coastline while avoiding dodging flocks of birds numerous predators such as game fish, Cape fur seals, thousands of Common and Bottlenose dolphins, sharks, fishing nets and underwater photographers as well.

Why?

Marine science does not have a clear answer to this phenomenon, nor have I any answers, despite the fact that I was 'hunting' them, photographically speaking, for 23 days along the Wild Coast; the Eastern Shore of South Africa.

Every winter from the last week of May through early July (winter in the Southern Hemisphere), this parade of millions of sardine, named "Sardinops sagax" or Pilchards, is taking place along the KwaZulu Natal on the East Coast.

Pilchards, or sardines, are commonly found in enormous shoals on the west coast of California (Monterey canneries), South America, Japan, Australia and, of course, South Africa in the Indian Ocean.

In South Africa, the main spawning grounds are on the Agulhas banks off the Southern Cape coast, where the adults gather for a prolonged breeding season through the spring and early summer. Their eggs are simply released into the water, fertilized and left to drift off in the open ocean. A benign ocean current carries most of the developing larvae westwards and northwards into the productive waters along the West Coast, Atlantic Ocean.

Therefore, the spark and entry of large shoals of Pilchards into the waters of southern KwaZulu Natal during the winter month, remains an unexplained phenomenon!

What is understood so far about the behavior of the South African Pilchard Stock is that the large bulk is found in the cooler water of the Atlantic Ocean off to the west of the Cape. However, each winter a small segment of the stock (small, yet in thousands of tons or millions of individuals) move eastward up the Wild Coast and the Indian Ocean. One apparent reason is that the Pilchard along the Wild Coast are found also in the cooler counter current that penetrates up the east coast as a narrow band between the rugged Wild Coast and the warm, south-flowing Agulhas Current.

The eastern bound shoals of Pilchard pursue a migration of about 1,000 miles northeast from the spawning ground at the Agulhas bank until the current reaches the town of Durban. By Durban, the current turns east, heads out deep into the Indian Ocean's high seas and disappears and the sardine along with it.

Because the shoals of Pilchard become concentrated into a narrow inshore band in the cool water, schools of marauding predators, fishermen, divers, adventure seekers and photographers quickly locate the shoals and the feeding frenzy begins.

Sharks, such as the Bronze Whaler (copper), Dusky and Black Tip, join the game fish such as shad, garrick and geelback. Not be excluded, marine mammals like Humpback whales, Minke, the Cape fur seals, and thousands of Common and hundreds of Bottlenose dolphins are seen in hot pursuit of the reflective mass of pilchards. As the sardines are driven to the surface, Cape gannets, cormorants, terns and gulls, plummet out of the sky to pillage from above.

Close by, the sound of roaring dinghy engines carrying their screaming and excited clients, join the party by "dumping" divers, with or without their cameras, into the water to witness one of Mother Nature's most fantastic and dramatic events underwater.


TRIP ITINERARY & INFORMATION

Airline recommendations:
South African Airways Leaving Atlanta - around $1,600.

Tour price includes:

  • Fourteen days of Sardine Run activities
  • Extra fuel for extend range and hours of operation. (All other vessels return at 2PM and have limited fuel)
  • Accommodation with all meals, boats, and air search
  • Photo coaching
  • All diving services and Macrolight aerial photo opportunities
  • Only six guests (all other vessels take between 8-10 guests)

Not included in Tour Price.

  • Airfare from home to Durban and return
  • Overnight at Durban
  • Meals which aren’t specified above
  • Overweight luggage
  • Drinks and taxes
  • Insurance -recommended you buy your own travel , health and diving insurance
  • Additional costs incurred due to independent travel arrangements

Payment Policy & Deposit:
When we receive your deposit of $3,200, we will send you a comprehensive and detailed Trip Preparation Bulletin about the experience and the destination. All flights and trip costs are subject to change without prior notice until confirmed reservation.

  • Full payment is due no later than 90 days before departure.
  • We reserve the right to sell any space that is not paid in full by 60 days before departure.
  • Refund is made if replacement was found less unrecoverable costs of sales, administration special promotion.
  • Cancellation must be made in writing, 90 days before departure.
  • No refund is made for unused part of the itinerary.

To Register for both trips of the Sardine Run and the Great White Sharks Trip, please call.

What to Bring Along
We will be in South Africa during the fall season.  Warm clothes - Polartec jacket, raincoat and windbreaker are recommended.  Outside temperatures can be from 50 - 65 degrees.  Casual clothing is fine throughout South Africa.  Jeans and/or khakis, and layering options are a traveler's best choice. Also recommended are a hat, sun glasses, sunscreen, etc. Please remember all of your medical requirements. Remember, bring your passport and c-card. Phone cards and credit cards are widely accepted throughout the country.
Consult you doctor for Malaria prescription!

Scuba Diving Equipment
You must bring your own exposure suit. We strongly recommend that you bring a Dry Suit. We also highly recommend that if you have no experience in Dry Suit diving that you take course and/or a refresher course.  Polartec undergarment for your Dry Suit, dry gloves. Sweat shirt and pants. Regulator, mask (bring spare mask), fins, BC and snorkel. Weight belt, (weights will be provided) and ankle weights. Diving gloves and diving hood. Spare parts and tools.

Travel Documents:
US citizens are required to have a valid passport and round-trip air ticket.

The following are subject to change:

  • Cost of services, which are not included in the expedition price
  • The vessel may change however, the number of participant will not exceed 8 divers
  • Weather and water temperature and Orca behavior
  • I will confirm and update whatever information humanly possible 30 days prior to departure

A general note:
Although we have reported honestly and accurately about our sightings and experiences along the Wild Coast, we would like to point out that we are working in the wilderness and despite all of our good intentions and utmost preparation, Mother Nature may not cooperate with us everyday to the tee, and the Sardines are not on contract with us. When we are at sea we are not at Sea World. It is an effort of wait and see. We trust our previous experiences, and so far our record is receiving high marks. We believe that with good planning and a realistic approach, you will have a successful time with us in South Africa and with the infamous, Indian Ocean Sardine Run.

Information current as of January, 2008. Dates and prices may be subject to change without prior notice.

For Booking and/or further questions, contact Amos:
Phone: (415) 923-9865
Toll free: 877-229-4253
Email: amos@biganimals.com


EXPEDITION PROFILE

Worldwide Sardine Run Experience:
7 years

Where:
Off the Wild Coast
East Coast, South Africa

TRIPS IN 2008:
Date: June 28 - July 12
Duration: 15 Days
Cost: $5,900 per person
Max No. of Guests:
6 guests only*
Availability: 6 guests

SPECIAL EVENT 2008:
Three Weeks Combination - The Best of the Best of South Africa Diving
One Week with Great White Sharks (June 20 - 28)
and Two Weeks Sardine Run (June 29 - July 12)
Date: June 19 - July 12
Duration:
24 Days
Cost: $9,400 per person
Max No. of Guests:
6 guests only
Availability: 4 Guests

Registration:
Deposit (details on Registration form)

*Max No. of Guests:
6 guests only
(We guarantee operating each trip with the maximum number of guests. However, when we do not have the full number of guests required, we maintain the right to add few guests on board from other sources.)

Sample Airfares:
$1,600 - Atlanta to Durban

 
Facility:
Diving from on board 24 foot, semi rigid, twin 85 HP outboards. Plus Microlight for scouting and air to sea radio. Land Based in Umbeki. Umkambati

Activities:
Scuba & Snorkeling
 
Temperature:
In Water: 65°F
Air: 40 - 70° F

 
U/W Visibility:
10 - 30 feet

VITAL STATISTICS
Latin Name:
Sardinops sagax

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Day 1:
Depart to South Africa from New York or Atlanta, GA USA.

Day 2:
Arrive South Africa and continue on a domestic flight to Durban. In Durban we will be met by our local operator. Meet all the group and transfer in a convoy to the Wild Coast to St. John. There we will get settled into our campsite.

Day 3 - 16:
Commence our fourteen days of high voltage adventure along the rugged, Wild Coast in search of sardines and encounters with feeding activity on the bait balls by dolphins, seals and sharks.

The day begins with the search along the coast directed from above by our "Eyes in the Sky," our Macrolight pilot. At sunrise, we launch our semi-rigid zodiacs and spend all day on the high seas. At dusk, it’s back to shore for good food, rest, the campfire and storytelling.

Day 17:
Leave the camp by convoy to Durban where you can catch a flight to your next destination.