Archive for September, 2008
Splash for Trash
3
Saturday 20 Sept dawned uber bright and clear. I was a little excited and I woke early, so I lay in bed with my fresh coffee and a copy of the New Zealand Underwater 50 year celebration book.
Then I jumped out of bed and headed down to the diveshop for today was Project Aware Splash for Trash International Clean Up Day at Mission Bay.
Project AWARE Foundation spearheads global underwater cleanups during International Cleanup Day and year round. This annual volunteer event addresses the devastating impact of marine debris on the aquatic environment.
Project AWARE empowers dive centers and individuals to clean the world’s oceans, lakes, rivers and shorelines. Vvolunteers take part in practical cleanup solutions and collect data which is vital for change.
International Cleanup Day is held annually on the 3rd Saturday in September but cleanup and data collection activities are supported by Project AWARE, partners and volunteers on an ongoing basis.
In 2007 a total of 358,617 recorded volunteers helped Project AWARE clean 34,560 miles of shoreline and remove seven million pounds of rubbish.
Alex, one of the Global Dive Divemasters, had been organising a group of divers and a group of landlubbers to get out there and give Mission Bay a good clean up going over in support of the cleanup cause.
Some people though we were crazy heading off to Mission Bay as The Auckland City Council take pretty good care of the beach – and we didnt anticipate too much rubbish would be collected.
We all met at the diveshop at around 9 in the morning and had 6 divers! Myself, Leigh (another divemaster), Anna and her student completing a refersher and then Jakob and Claire. Anna organised sausages and bread and sauce for afterwards and off we headed.
We geared up on the beach and gained quite a lot of interest. Ah ha! This was part of the plan!
We were generating interest and curiosity. Whilst we were diving, well pretty much snorkelling, along the beach and then the wall, lots of kids stopped on the sea wall to see the funny people in their masks and tanks.
Most people thought it was a funny place to dive but when we told them what we were doing out there, they were very supportive. The kids were asking about the equipment and what was out in the bay and what it was like to go scuba diving.
All in all, it was a great day. We collected an old handbag (the woman owner must have woken up on exactly how bloody ugly this thing was and then weighed it down and turfed it into the ocean – perhaps to save herself the embarrasment of the garbage man seeing it), loads and loads of bottles and glass, straws, and old glasses but unfortunately no lovely jewellery. I was very pleased to see that there was not a lot of fishing line out there. There were also no entangled animal life.
When we got back to Global Dive and saw what we had all collected, it was rather surprising. There was more garbage out there than any of us expected.
Anna and Anna also saw a seahorse. In Mission Bay! And a small stingray. I found a baby flounder. Woooo.
Thank you Alex for getting us (and the Oracle crew) organised. I am looking forward to next year.
Its the Reef!
0i have just had the most glorious weekend out at the Poor Knights Islands.
Arriving in tutukaka much later than we had originally planned (and $200 poorer thanks to Andrews awesome ‘Australasian Salesman of the Year’ tactics and a pair of Fourth Element bottoms), Leigh and I got on board the pacific hideaway and turned on the lights for the two couples sitting in the dark. who sits in the dark and doesnt look for the lightswitch?? weirdos ….
anyway, saturday morning dawned bright and clear and we took a walk down to the corner store for water and sugary snacks, and got ready for the land based exercises. this weekend, we had two advanced open water students and part of this is navigation techniques. we did our compass reading and turning techniques with the students, Adam and Jakob, and we were off!
for a really nice change, the 1.5 hour boat ride out to the Poor Knights Islands (a marine reserve established in 1981) was calm and the sea was almost like glass. mark the skipper told us that a couple of weeks before hand, a whale had surfaced right in front of the bow of the boat but had gotten a hell of a fright and descended very quickly never to be seen again.
we arrived at the islands and headed over to Blue Mao Mao Arch – one of my very favourite dive spots. we geared up and got in the water and as i was wearing a new DUI drysuit, i did my weight check. sat at the surface right, sunk approximately 1 metre and thought i was good to go. we swam over to the wall near the arch and gave the okay to descend. then i got the most horrendous cramp in the ball of my foot. the DUI suit has rock boots but due to the size of my ass, i need a suit that has size 11 boots. size 11!!!! my mares volo fins are smalls! $how the bloody hell can i fit size 11 boots into small fins. i should have pulled on my wet boots over the water proof bottoms of the drysuit. i gave up at this stage.
i snorkelled above the group until i caught the instructors attention to let her know i was heading back to the boat. with two things not quite right before the dive and the group already heading off, time to abort.
from Blue Mao Mao Arch, we motored through the gorgeous arches of Aorangi Island, admiring the natural beauty of the eroded remains of a volcano which is 4 million years old.
we were heading towards the Gardens. this was a perfect place for the next dive of the Advanced Open Water – Underwater Navigation. i geared up and jumped in and completed the swim to the wall. there was myself, anna, adam and jakob. we gave the okay to descend and down we went. i got to 1.5m and took my first shallow breath and **pop** i was at the surface again. okay .. grr .. gave it another go and same thing. i was getting really annoyed at this stage after having to abort the previous dive due to cramp so i signaled to the boat i was on my way back and grabbed some more weight. and more weight. and more weight. not only did that bloody drysuit give me cramp, but i had to carry 8 extra kilos of weight! i snorkelled half way back to the wall and kept an eye out for my groups bubbles. i knew that they would only be at about 10-12 metres so they were easy to see as the visbility at the gardens was amazing. i saw them and began my descent. i got down to them just as they were about to begin the swim out – where anna would make a face like where are we – and they would navigate us back. they were learning about natural navigation techniques.
navigation is a lot of fun underwater and whilst i do what my compass tells me, i like to take a bearing and then head off in that direction and check out the scenery. the cool thing about doing this underwater is you have more than one way of determing where you are and where you have been.
for goodness sake dont choose a fish as they never stay where you want them – especially when trying to photograph them – watching the light, the direction of the sun, interpreting the way in which the water is travelling, what the bottom composition is like (eg sand ripples are always parallel to the shore), where the rocks/boulders are and then there is the noise. sound travels 5 times faster. and although everything seems like its overhead, you can hear the sounds that the sea life is making. crunching, crackling and popping – listen to the reef, it is talking to you!
the standing joke of this weekend became “its the reef!”.
from the gardens, we headed to rikoriko cave to check it out and for mark and pete to tell their stories. exaggerated stories and for mark to blow on his conch to demonstrate the acoustics in the cave – which is the largest natural sea cave in the world. we checked out the conditions as we were planning on staying in the cave overnight and it is also a good safe place to do a night dive as part of the course. from rikoriko cave we headed over to middle arch. next to middle arch is bernies cave in which there is a frog for the girlies to kiss, a teddy bear money box and a large air bubble which you can ascend into, remove your regulator and talk to each other in squeaky voices whilst your gauge registers 8m below the sea. this was to be my first internship dive – it was to include the dive briefing and guiding certified divers.
the briefing went pretty well, i know the site well so the map was accurate and i remembered my previous dives and thought we could make the dive i planned easily. we geared up and jumped in and made our way over to the wall which conveniently has a streak of limestone which points down to the cave. we descended and went into the cave. we found the frog and the teddy bear even though it was quite dark at the back of the cave. there were a bunch of other divers in the air bubble – all kicking like mad (why didnt they just inflate their bcds?). we left the cave and continued into the arch where there was no current but a mad mad mad amount of yellow eels and nudibranchs, both clown and tamja verconis.
we crossed the arch and made our way over to the other wall which was also covered in nudis. unfortunately, as i lost my casio camera somewhere in buenos aires and i haent replaced it – i dont have any underwater photographs of this trip.
at our safety stop, i had the holdfast kelp parted and was holding on whilst looking at dwarf scorpionfish and nudis and trying to deal with my floaty ankles. bjorn – one of my divers – asked me if i was okay and i signalled i was and after 3 mins we ascended and made a short swim back to the boat. i marked a few things on my evaluation form but #1 – my divers made it back to the boat!
that night, phew, i was knackered! i managed 1.25 beers and sloped off to bed. being rocked to sleep with the slight noise of the sea is dreamy. we had a quick breakfast in the morning and headed up to northern arch for the deep dive.
anna, adam, jakob and lee on his twin tanks headed over to the wall and descended down stopping at 16m and 22m to check ourselves and our equalisation before descending further down to 26m. i got completely narced! getting narced is diver talk for nitrogen narcosis. i felt like i was a bit drunk and not in control of myself and even though i have been deeper than 26m, it hit me at a different depth this time. i realised it was happening when i caught myself spinning around in a circle and not looking at the group. i checked my gauge, finned up to 24m and felt better and then just breathed through the last of the anxiety. even though i was supposed to be down with the group as a divemaster, i signalled to anna and she came back with okay? okay i signalled.
after they finished their tests, we headed off into northern arch and just missed a bronze whaler shark! it was a short dive because of the depth and the arch was a little cloudy so the visibility was good but not great. we got back on board the boat and it was time for baked beans and bacon for breakfast. YUM!
we headed back down to rikoriko cave but because i had a slight headache, i sat on board in the sun and updated my logs instead of completing the dive.
the last dive of the day was on the HMNZS Waikato. i had been looking forward to the wreck dive all weekend – even bringing nitrox for the dive but after my experience this weekend something wasnt right. and it wasnt just the 3 metre swells and the thought of 3-4m of visibility.
i know whats up. i am not 100% dive fit. i need to work on my fitness more before completing a challenging dive. in rough seas, getting back on the boat with my haematomia and patella tendonitis is too slow and could be dangerous so i thought about it and then discussed a plan with anna. instead of me feeling bad about not completing as many of the dives as i would have liked, she gave me a thumbs up and said that part of diving is recognising your limits and dealing with them – or also in my case – sorting out a plan to minimise them. we are doing a rescue course at the moment and an open water course starts next week so combine good food, gym and shallow training dives and i’ll be back to a good level of dive fitness in no time.
coming home last night, just heading into whangarei, adam and lee came roaring up behind us (in their uber-cool peugot 407 hdi station wagon *cringe*) and flashed their lights and moved out to our left hand side. leigh pulls over to the left a little – when they pull past us and lee leans out the window screaming “its the reef!”
i nearly peed my pants laughing.









