Guardian Of The Reef on Grand Cayman

Guardian Of The Reef is a bronze statue that was sunk in about 65 feet of water just off the coast and is easily accessible as a shore dive from Divetech’s front yard on Grand Cayman.  In order to access the dive site from the shore, you have to start out in a man made ocean pool and then traverse a cut through the sea rocks out to the Caribbean Sea.  It’s a lot of fun to do and my family and I can’t wait to do it again!  Very very cool!

I’m in a hurry getting ready for a dive coming up in a couple of hours so, I’m being lazy and not including pics of the pool and cut that we used to enter the ocean on this shore dive.  Will include that later for sure.  Also, you’ll have to turn your head sideways in order to truly appreciate some of these pics.  Sorry for the picture formatting laziness/lack of time.  😉

Viz wasn’t that great on this dive as the ocean was a bit choppy but, how fun!  Check out the artist that made this statue, The Guardian of the Reef.  More later!

 

-saltydog

Cayman Islands are calling to us! What do they have to say for themselves???

Do you like the feel when in the Cayman Islands?  I do.  I also like the jerk chicken and the super clear warm water and soft sand the islands there have to offer.  Maybe I’ll gather up my lovely family and head south to the beautiful Caymans soon and escape the shitty Michigan cold?  Yes, I think I will do that.  Close your eyes and day dream with me a bit…  can you smell the salty Caribbean Sea air as we sit at Calico Jack’s and order up half of the menu?  I’m having the jerk chicken, fries, EXTRA EXTRA sauce pretty please.  If the napkins taste as good as the fries and chicken there, I’ll also use those dry white starchy paper wafers as vehicles for that badass Jamaican jerk sauce goodness!  If the meal doesn’t arrive quickly, I may just try out that napkin flavor fer certain.  But, from thorough training and experience, I’ve learned to not rush things when in the Caribbean or while on vacation for that matter.  It’s just not right to be in a hurry while on holiday and we should all remember that it’s not polite to be pushy either.  Sometimes I forgot that you catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar and I can get a little in a tizzy when it comes to wanting to get food in front of me fast.  So, therefore one can deduce, that it’s good training for me to go on vacation frequently in order to keep my manners tuned up and to remind myself that patience is indeed a virtue and to not be a rush-round asshole.  So, I will wait quietly for my jerk chicken, fries and EXTRA EXTRA sauce to arrive at the table in front of me.  Though if there isn’t any Caybrew beer there to help me in this training endeavor, all bets are off the table!  C’mon Cayman Islands!  Can’t wait to get back to ya again.

 

Scientific Weather Reading:

Current weather in Michigan is…  Shitty cold and snow on the ground with a good chance of the same tomorrow.

Current weather in Georgetown, Grand Cayman is…  Let’s find out and let’s do some scuba diving with the family while we’re at it!

I’ll be sure to report back.

-saltydog

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cJODNxx9Ww

 

 

Scuba in Cuba! Non-stop flights to Havana from the USA

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First nonstop flights and frequencies to Havana. By the Cuba Journal

The above new flights are regular scheduled flights operated under a new agreement between the U.S. and Cuba. Previously, all flights from the U.S. to Cuba were considered “charter” flights. The charter flights have permission to continue flying but may decide to suspend service due to price competition.

Approvals for regular scheduled flights and routes to Cuba were separated by city. The first batch to receive approval were the non-Havana flights, the first of which was last month’s JetBlue flight from Ft. Lauderdale to Santa Clara.

Fares to Havana range from $59 to several hundred dollars.

For scheduled flights to and from each of the nine non-Havana international airports in Cuba, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has allocated up to 10 daily round-trip frequencies at each airport, for a total of 90 daily flights. Including Havana, the total number of daily flights between the U.S. and Cuba can be 110.

Here are the non-Havana airlines and routes.

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Schedule of Approved Flight Routes to Cuba

Friendly sea lion pup

LOS ISLOTES, Mexico, Dec. 2 (UPI) — A scuba diver off the coast of Mexico encountered a friendly and curious young sea lion that showed a particular fascination with his flippers.

Jared Hartman recorded video of a sea lion pup that approached him underwater during a dive off the coast of Los Islotes, a small rock island in the Sea of Cortez.

The sea lion swims curiously around Hartman before gnawing on the swimming flipper on his left foot. Hartman plays with the sea lion, which gives the other flipper a taste before swimming up to the man’s diving companions.

The young sea lion taste tests the other divers’ flippers, but doesn’t damage anyone’s diving equipment.

“Here, one juvenile sea lion pup takes turns chewing on my fins along with the fins of other divers in my group,” Hartman wrote. “They are very playful just like puppy dogs.”

dogs.”

 

Belize Prophecy movie trailer

I’m currently cutting my teeth on video editing.  Here’s a very quick editing session (very hard to tell, right?) output that I created with my own hands…  along with the help of Apple iMovie’s easy movie creating wizard and a GoPro video camera.  I have a lot to learn about splicing video but, I can see how it could grow into an addiction.  Very satisfying to take raw video and sound and then make something cool of it all.

Many thanks to our support team, lead by Mr. Ernest Leslie – PADI Scuba Instructor and friend at Ramon’s Village dive center on Ambergris Caye, Belize.

Do you know what I like better than my first day of video editing?  Scuba diving!!!  There are some other things that I’ve enjoyed even more as well.  😉

 

So, go grab some microwave popcorn, some Twizzlers and a friend and click and enjoy the movie trailer below that did NOT take the Cannes Film Festival or the Sundance Film Festival by surprise…

 

-saltydog@sd

Scuba diving pig farmer with UK’s biggest all-female dive

A scuba diving pig farmer and her adventurous daughter have proved ‘This Girl Can’ after helping nearly 70 women and girls take part in the UK’s biggest all-female charity try-dive.

Fiona Lucas from Lincoln was part of a team of diving instructors to lead the scuba and snorkel taster event, organised by British Sub-Aqua Club (BSAC) clubs across the East Midlands.

The BSAC Dive Leader and daughter Grace, 16, are both members of their local BSAC club, Lincoln & District 109 and supporters of the ‘This Girl Can’ campaign to get more women and girls into sport.

 

 

They joined instructors from across the region including hosts Bingham Sub-Aqua Club, to help a total of 69 try-divers take the plunge at Bingham Leisure Centre.

The event also raised more than £500 for Breast Cancer Care, a charity close to Fiona’s heart as five of her relatives have battled the disease.

Fiona, said: “It was excellent fun.

“I had a lady from Ireland who nearly didn’t dive. She walked into pool area and said ‘I’m not doing this’ but she did and when she’d finished she was absolutely bursting with pride that she’d achieved what she had set out to do.

“To see someone’s face so excited after she’d been so nervous to begin with was incredible. It summed up the whole day.

“Everyone thoroughly enjoyed it. We had a group of girl guides and I had to instruct a young girl of 13 who was absolutely brilliant. When you see a girl aged just 13 enjoying themselves in a fun and safe environment while also raising money for charity it’s incredible.

“I’m so proud of the whole team and the amount of people who gave up their time to organise the event beforehand and on the day itself. It was very empowering.”

 

Fiona, 47, only learnt to dive three years ago with the aim of ticking it off her “bucket list” of things to achieve in her lifetime – and now three years on she’s a qualified Dive Leader.

She was joined on Sunday by her daughter Grace, who took the underwater photography at the event, held at Bingham Leisure Centre where the club trains once a week.

Grace, a qualified Ocean Diver and sixth form pupil at Wiliam Farr secondary school in Welton, said: “It was really good fun and very busy. This time last year I didn’t have any diving qualifications but this year I was able to take all the photos.

“There were lots of younger girls there who were very nervous to start off with but we had a torpedo toy sponge which we’d throw into the water to encourage them to dive to the bottom and this would distract them from what they were doing and build their confidence.”

The event, which involved a series of 30-minute introductory sessions led by female-only instructors, attracted women and girls of all ages to try out the sport. Organisers are now hopeful many of those who turned out will sign up for scuba diving lessons.

Ella Greatorex was the youngest to take part in the event aged just 12.

The youngster, from East Leake, near Loughborough, suffers from bilateral cerebral palsy which leaves her with significant motor disabilities and she spends several hours each day undergoing physiotherapy but she was not about to let her condition stop her.

The East Leake Academy pupil, who is already a member of the Bingham Penguins Disability Swimming Club said: “I really enjoy swimming because it makes me feel free and I don’t have to use my wheelchair or walking frame.

“I like putting my head under the water so I thought it would be good to have a go at the try-dive.

“It was a totally amazing experience and everybody should try it.”

 

Helena Robertshaw, Diving Officer at Bingham SAC which hosted the event, said: “It’s been really great and we’ve had some very happy people who didn’t think they would be able to do something like this.

“There was a real mixture of ages and the atmosphere in the pool was absolutely amazing. We definitely have lots of people wanting to sign up.”

The event involved a series of introductory sessions led by ten female instructors including Fiona. It highlighted the positive health benefits of scuba diving for women and the increased confidence the sport gave through learning new skills.

As the governing body for scuba and snorkelling in the UK, BSAC represents more than 30,000 divers and 900 plus family friendly and sociable clubs, run by volunteers, up and down the country and abroad.

Mary Tetley, BSAC Chief Executive, said: “We are immensely proud of the achievements of the girls and women who took part in this charity event and look forward to welcoming many of them into our clubs in the future.

“Scuba diving is a fantastic sport that it can be enjoyed by a wide range of people, of all different backgrounds and ages, and we are always keen to look at ways of boosting the numbers of women in the sport.

“It’s important to us that BSAC is as diverse an organisation as possible. We have women from grassroots right up to senior positions on our committee and the contribution they give is invaluable.”

 

How cool! Awe-Inspiring Home Reef Aquarium Large Enough to Scuba Dive in

Eli Fruchter, an aquarium enthusiast from Haifa, Israel, is one of the few people in the world who can swim in his living room surrounded by brightly-colored tropical fish. He is the owner of the largest home reef aquarium in Israel, and probably the world.

For as long as he can remember, Eli loved aquariums. When he was five or six year old, he lived in a tiny two meter by two meter room, but also made space for a small aquarium. He never really outgrew his passion, and about 10-12 years ago, he upgraded to a large 1,000-gallon fish tank, but sadly, it broke and flooded his old home. That was when he decided that he needed “to build another aquarium, and the house around it.” This time, he went all out, and the result is truly breathtaking.

 

Fruchter’s living room aquarium holds a whopping 30,000 liters of water and is large enough for him to dive into and feed the fish out of the palm of his hand. The mammoth tank is home to 150 tropical fish of 30 different species, as well as to a a rainbow of corals that constantly bob back and forth with the light waves created by an impressive filtration system. The tank is designed to replicate the reef’s natural environment, which has also allowed some of the residents of the tank to grow to a size usually only reached in the wild.

 

 

For most aquarium enthusiasts, Eli’s filtration system is probably even more impressive than the tank itself. Located 6 meters directly under the tank, behind thick metal double-doors, it features four 25,000-liter/hour pumps to return the water from the sump back into the aquarium, after it’s been filtered. For cleaning he relies on gravity, with the water flowing down from the tank to create a foam from the impurities, which is then removed by a revolving paddle. A self-built frequency-controlled system connected to the pumps, controls the speed of the two return pumps to create waves in the tank. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

 

 

To ensure that the reef and fish live in perfect conditions, every week Eli Fruchter drives a specially equipped golf cart from his home to the nearby shore of the Mediterranean, and fills it with 1,000 liters of fresh seawater for his aquarium.

 

 

“The corals especially must have water that’s completely clean, and that’s very hard to get in a closed system,” he says. “Most public aquariums are located near the ocean, and they just pump in clean water. It requires a lot of maintenance. “A reef aquarium of this size you usually just find in places where they have a full-time staff.”

 

 

“There aren’t too many crazy people around the world who will do something like this,” Fruchter adds. “You really need to like it a lot.” Yes, that’s one factor, but money is another important one. And just in case you’re wondering how one man can afford to build and maintain such an amazing project, you should know that Eli was the CEO of a very successful business that was recently acquired for over $800 million. So yeah, I guess he can afford it.

 

 

Eli Fruchter has been working on his giant aquarium since 2012, and still considers it a work in progress. He estimates that it will take a few more years for the ecosystem to develop completely, especially as coral reefs need a long time to flourish. But in the meantime, he’s happy just sitting back and enjoying the view, and the occasional living room scuba-diving session.

 

 

Source: Times of Israel

Minnesota Scuba Diver finds old elk antler while diving in lake

DETROIT LAKES, MINN. – (WDAY News) – A piece of the land’s past, pulled from the treasure-filled waters of Becker County, now, a local scuba diver wants to know just how old his find is.

Gary Thompson has been pulling history out of the water for half a century.

He has thousands of dives under his belt, but his find this August, may be his oldest yet.

A few months ago, Thompson found this giant antler in nearby Buffalo Lake, while scuba diving.

“I came across it, and it looked like a big root to start with,” said Thompson.

But once he pulled it out of the water:

“Got it up into the boat and was just awestruck by the size of it,” said Thompson.

Thompson’s antler is massive. It’s about five feet long, and weighs about 30-pounds.

It’s not just big, it’s ancient.

“The last time there were elk reported in this area was 1850,” said Thompson.

But Thompson believes it could be much, much older, possibly from an extinct species.

“Could be, from what I’ve been told, up to 13,000 years,” said Thompson.

He did some research, and asked a few experts; but no definitive age.

“Once we find something in the water, we have to know more about it,” said Thompson.

Which is why Thompson plans on having a laboratory determine how old it is.

“It costs so much to get it carbon dated,” said Thompson.

He wants a little help so he set up a GoFundMe account.

So far he’s been given $260.00 from curious donors.

The antlers have been in the lake for a long time before Thompson found it.

He’s hopeful he won’t have to do too much waiting to find out how long.

Thompson believes he could have his answer as soon as January.

He plans on preserving the antler and donating it to a museum eventually.

Do donate to his GoFundMe account, click here.

 

DETROIT LAKES, MINN. – (WDAY News) – A piece of the land’s past, pulled from the treasure-filled waters of Becker County, now, a local scuba diver wants to know just how old his find is.

Gary Thompson has been pulling history out of the water for half a century.

He has thousands of dives under his belt, but his find this August, may be his oldest yet.

A few months ago, Thompson found this giant antler in nearby Buffalo Lake, while scuba diving.

“I came across it, and it looked like a big root to start with,” said Thompson.

But once he pulled it out of the water:

“Got it up into the boat and was just awestruck by the size of it,” said Thompson.

Thompson’s antler is massive. It’s about five feet long, and weighs about 30-pounds.

It’s not just big, it’s ancient.

“The last time there were elk reported in this area was 1850,” said Thompson.

But Thompson believes it could be much, much older, possibly from an extinct species.

“Could be, from what I’ve been told, up to 13,000 years,” said Thompson.

He did some research, and asked a few experts; but no definitive age.

“Once we find something in the water, we have to know more about it,” said Thompson.

Which is why Thompson plans on having a laboratory determine how old it is.

“It costs so much to get it carbon dated,” said Thompson.

He wants a little help so he set up a GoFundMe account.

So far he’s been given $260.00 from curious donors.

The antlers have been in the lake for a long time before Thompson found it.

He’s hopeful he won’t have to do too much waiting to find out how long.

Thompson believes he could have his answer as soon as January.

He plans on preserving the antler and donating it to a museum eventually.

Do donate to his GoFundMe account, click here.

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