Mozambique- land of sun and coconuts
Part 2
August report back from Fiona Ayerst Underwater Photography Internship run in conjunction with Guinjata Dive Centre, Inhambane Mozambique and Africa Media.
By Ari Robinson
By Ari Robinson
I thought this program just couldn't get better but this last two weeks have been more than amazing.
At the beginning of the week we went on a cultural tour to the house of one of the dive centre staff. His name is Franky and he has 3 kids with one of his wives :D yes, polygamy is the norm in Moz.Franky he has 4 more kids with another wife. We got there and immediately all the kids from all around came to climb all over the vehicle to say hi and they welcomed us with huge smiles.
Franky took us to his house, we met his mom and his wives and we played with the kids, they danced and sang for us (see video below) and they happily posed for all our pictures.
Frankie's wife made some Matapa for us, a traditional Mozambican dish made from leaves, nuts and coconut milk, this was delicious! One of the kids also climbed a palm tree to get us coconuts with fresh water and crunchy meat. We thought that was it with the delicious food but Franky brought cashew nuts and toasted them on a fire next to us. A true traditional Mozambican experience.
We dove all week, the students learned about wide angle Photography and took some stunning shots of the marine life of Guinjata. We had one potato bass encounters that came so close to us that one of them even kissed Pepe! The mantas came back to Manta point with crazy amounts of fish everywhere and the conditions were perfect, good visibility and almost no current. The only dive site where we have current is called Pandaine express and we love it because you don't have to swim at all. You just drift enjoying the show as the current takes you along. We usually see many loggerhead and hawksbill turtles and different kind of rays on that dive site. On one dive we counted more than 20 devil rays on our safety stop, it was amazing! These are some of the pictures from the students taken the first week of training.
At the beginning they struggle a lot with the strobe positioning and the most hated thing for underwater photographers, the horrible BACK SCATTER! For the non- photographers reading this, the definition of backscatter are particles floating in the water that get lit up by the flash when they are not in the right position creating awful spots on the picture. After a lot of practice, getting over frustrations and studying their pictures with Pepe after the sessions, they managed to take mind blowing pictures! We really admire our students, because some of them had never used a camera before.
We did some more fun dives on the weekend and we organised a trip on a luxury catamaran with the interns and all the volunteers of Love the Oceans. We sailed around the estuary and stopped on a beautiful island where we had water sports included, we did some skiing, surf board and tubbing and we ate burgers and had pina colada cocktails next to the pool, what a weekend!
On Monday we dove in the morning, we went to Extacy reef and later we played in the waves to practice more wide angle photos. It was so much fun and we could hear the whales singing every time we put our head underwater. This is just magic for everyone. The pictures turned out well as you can see here and it was good practice for our ocean safari that we did the next day.
There was bad weather coming and the dives were cancelled so we went to the local school to help the volunteers from Love the Oceans to paint and to play with the kids. It feels amazing to help to create a better world and to spend some time with the most amazing kids I've ever met. They live a simple life where they create their own toys and use their imagination to have fun, just the way childhood should be.
We went to the ocean safari next day and since the beginning we were so lucky because we saw a leatherback turtle and a shark at the surface. We played with a pod of dolphins for about 10 minutes and we swam with a humpback whale and her baby! This was the best day of our lives for many of us, we were screaming and dancing on the boat on the way back.

As all the good things come to an end, the first month in Mozambique was over. I couldn't believe how fast it went. All our interns left very satisfied with a very good level of underwater photography and amazing pictures to show to everybody.
And I am still thinking that this is a dream I don't want to wake up. I will still be enjoying one more month in this beautiful paradise and I just know it's going to be magical.
Wait for my next report from the land of sun and coconuts... and if you are keen to have as much fun as we are - take a look here for our 2017 season on the underwater photo internship
Ariane Robinson
5 September 2016
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