Looking for something interesting, but more relaxing than my previous swim, and found it at Aberporth, a small seaside town in the county of Ceredigion. Aberporth's beach looked interesting from the aerial photographs I got from Local Live [similar to Google Earth]. We got there early, while it was still quiet, and parked up. Parking was reasonable - as it commonly is in Wales (you really get skinned in England).
Visibility was excellent [I think we were getting towards neaps] and though cool - not too cold. There was some sediment but it was nice and bitty and didn't make the water cloudy. LT was 10:40am (Fishguard).
First of all I swam west out of the bay along the coast toward MoD base. I was a bit windy around here as I had seen there is a danger/exclusion zone along the coast - so came back (there wasn't a great deal to see here anyway). I cut across the bay towards the rocks and caves the other side of the beach stopping at the submerged outcrops, and began to find lots more wildlife. There were juvenille ballan wrasse in schools around the rocks; striped gobies in schools, and SBF and SSF nearer the beach. Very many spider crabs, a few small to medium-sized edible crabs, some shore crabs, and velvet swimmer crabs below LW - the first I'd seen. All I'd heard about the velvet swimmer's feistiness was confirmed!! Most crabs will scurry away if they see you or you get too close - velvet swimmers (bless 'em) seem to want to have a fight with you. Around the outcrops I found blenny, hermit crabs, mussels, periwinkles, corals (a. digitatum), anenomes- dahlia, a pure white sort with a stalk, actina anemomes and strawberry ones with blue spots. On a swim down to take pictures of the anenomes I snapped a Tompot Blenny resting on a ledge. Lots of plants too: wracks - serrated etc, Irish Moss, UL, blobby fern-like plant [probably gut-weed] like I'd seen the other day, sea potato, kelp, sea belt, C. officinalis, and lots of that fine spindly brown weed. This was all great, but did see a fair number of heavy duty plastic bags embedded in sea floor etc. Removed one floating one (I often do this- scrunching them up and stuffing them in my suit). There were a few derelict lobster pots too.
The addition to my standard kit (FJ/vest/boots/X3s/3kg), was a pair of neoprene gloves with slits cut into the back joints of thumb and first two fingers. They are necessarily, very snug but perfect once in water I should have used them before. Swimming was hard work after all that I'd done over the holiday so tended to side stroke - thus my fins were fully in the water and I reckon I get better propulsion like this (more streamlined body too), and it was good for a rest and change.
This was a fantastic swim, and rounded off the trip perfectly - I saw lots of stuff I'd never seen before, like the velvet swimmer crabs and the tompot blenny. I could feel my dives were getting better - much more relaxed, and I had more time underwater for pictures. Something else I learned here was that (perhaps counter-intuitively) in gloomy conditions it is better to underexpose to avoid shake. The pictures are dark, but at least they are sharp; and it's better to be too dark than light and bleached out. The beach was nice and clean, and Aberporth had a friendly laid-back atmosphere; Yas had a nice time ambling about the place and taking pictures too.