Bluebottles on the Northern Beaches

thermalben started the topic in Monday, 1 Feb 2010 at 11:37 am

Lots of the little buggers in the surf zone on Sunday. Went for a swim around lunchtime and managed to escape the onslaught that hit mid afternoon. Anyone get worked?

Craig Monday, 1 Feb 2010 at 12:18 pm

I was amazed that you even made it out of bed after Saturday night...

thermalben Tuesday, 2 Feb 2010 at 02:39 am

Still plenty around this morning. Looks like it'll continue all week with these persistent E/NE winds through the Tasman.

wayneoz Friday, 5 Feb 2010 at 07:41 am

Surfed Airlie Beach (Whitsundays), Qld on Sunday. The first time I have seen waves in 4 years. We didn't have any bluebottles though. Just heaps of Iracongi and Box jellyfish. Oh, and big crocs:-0 Most people had steamers on, with 30 degree water temp. But surfing 1/2 to 1 ft onshore mush once every 4 yrs with killer creatures is so worth it!

supershaneae86 Friday, 5 Feb 2010 at 09:04 am

what is weird is that wer are getting them in Adelaide down at victor..now thats strange!!

acecactus Friday, 5 Feb 2010 at 04:01 pm

and on the southern beaches!

coops Saturday, 6 Feb 2010 at 01:24 am

Been pretty lucky. Seen heaps on the sand but haven't been stung..... yet.

st3phi3 Wednesday, 10 Feb 2010 at 05:05 am

must say seen alot but havnt got stung, which is a change for me:P

patty Wednesday, 10 Feb 2010 at 07:22 am

You've gotta harden the fuck up!

Let them sting you is what you've gotta do. Go and swim with them and let them sting you all over - under your pits, in your groin, up your coit. That's the way you build up a resistance to the little blighters.

I could eat one now and it wouldn't bother me.

spongebob Wednesday, 10 Feb 2010 at 11:22 am

You've gotta harden the fuck up! I eat them with milk and crushed Iced Vo vo's, does it for me!

Peter Pedestrian Tuesday, 26 Dec 2017 at 06:07 pm

Last year at Christmas there were plenty. This year not so...

Craig Wednesday, 27 Dec 2017 at 06:16 am

I feel it depends on how deep the north-east to east-northeast winds delve into the Coral Sea and tropical waters north and north-east of us.

Our north-east winds have been mainly localised, with no sustained trade-flow from further afield to bring them in.

I have seen a few Nuidbranchs in the surf lately though.

https://assets.wired.com/photos/w_2048/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/8599051974_5aaef88102_k.jpg

Distracted Wednesday, 27 Dec 2017 at 06:36 am

Craig, that is the Blue Glaucus which eats blue bottles and is therefore also generally pelagic. Apparently they can also sting but I’ve never noticed.

Craig Wednesday, 27 Dec 2017 at 08:10 am

Yeah we did an article about it 4 years ago :) .. Beware the Blue Dragon

Distracted Wednesday, 27 Dec 2017 at 08:47 pm

Wayyy ahead of me! Will have to rename Swellnet as Wikinet