Click Here To Go To Psycho Solo Diver
  • HOME
  • You are currently browsing the archives for the Notable Events category.

  • Categories

  • « Previous PageNext Page »

    September 19, 2009

    Skull Found During Redondo Pier Clean Up

    Sorry again for the delay in this post, but my 486 at home crashed again and I’m trying to repair it – hopefully, without burning the valuable motherboard.

    Yes, the headline is correct, so without going in to our boring dive at first, you can read about the skull and the event here, or you can watch the following, on scene coverage…

    To watch this video on Youtube, click here.

    Logged Dive #349 – Veterans’ Park
    Redondo Beach, CA

    The Annual Underwater Clean Up

    Dove With TwinDuct

    In With: 3000 psi
    Out With: 700 psi
    Max depth: 84 feet
    Waves: 2 to 5 feet, sporadic
    Visibility: 10 to 14 feet, pretty clear
    Water Temperature: 55 degrees at depth
    Total Bottom Time: About 35 minutes

    Redondo Beach Pier Cleanup

    While volunteers cleaned the beach and surrounding areas, TwinDuct and I geared up and entered just off the pier…

    TwinDuct and I off the pier.

    The plan was to clean the trench that is a few dozen yards South of the pier.

    That area is basically where all the half dead fish go to die – last year we found a lot of trash and fish skeletons.

    If a piece of trash was something’s home, we left it alone.

    If a piece of trash was something’s home, we left it alone.

    TwinDuct patrols for trash.

    TwinDuct patrols for trash.

    We did such a good job cleaning last year that, aside from a hand full of plastic bags and a bucket, there wasn’t much trash this year.

    A bed of sand dollars.

    This was just another typical, uneventful Redondo Beach dive, but looking for trash and not looking at trash.

    We had no problem exiting with our heavy bags of debris.

    The underwater trash pile was fairly small this year.

    The underwater trash pile was fairly small this year.

    The trash was so exciting, some even video taped the collection heap.

    The trash was so exciting, some even video taped the collection heap.

    During the debriefing, we were told that “Someone found a human skull.”

    My brother promptly grabbed his video camera and shot the above footage.

    The skull finding was the topic of conversation – “It still had hair and teeth…” “It was wrapped in linen and then in a bag…” “The Divemaster who found it is quite shaken…” “It was probably a mafia hit…”

    To ease our trauma, one of the divers showed off her tattoo.

    To ease our trauma, one of the divers showed off her tattoo.

    The Redondo police talk to a diver.

    Around noon, the Redondo Beach Police showed up to talk to the Divemaster who found the skull; the Officer did his best to comfort the diver as he gently explained that the skull was made out of plastic!

    Some say it may have been part of a ritual, I think it was a practical joke aimed at this event.

    After all, all the voodoo rituals I have seen never used plastic props, and apparently the skull was without sea growth, so it had been tossed in the ocean within the last few days.

    July 21, 2009

    Giant Squid Attack In San Diego

    SAN DIEGO – Thousands of jumbo flying squid — aggressive 5-foot-long sea monsters with razor-sharp beaks and toothy tentacles — have invaded the shallow waters off San Diego, spooking scuba divers and washing up dead on tourist-packed beaches.

    Giant squid attacks divers in San Diego.

    The carnivorous calamari, which can grow up to 100 pounds, came up from the depths last week and swarms of them roughed up unsuspecting divers. Some divers report tentacles enveloping their masks and yanking at their cameras and gear.

    Stories of too-close encounters with the alien-like cephalopods have chased many veteran divers out of the water and created a whirlwind of excitement among the rest, who are torn between their personal safety and the once-in-a-lifetime chance to swim with the deep-sea giants.

    The so-called Humboldt squid are native to the deep waters off Mexico, where they have been known to attack humans and are nicknamed “red devils” for their rust-red coloring and mean streak. Those who dive with them there chum the water with bait and sometimes get in a metal cage or wear chain mail to avoid being lashed by tentacles.

    “I wouldn’t go into the water with them for the same reason I wouldn’t walk into a pride of lions on the Serengeti,” said Mike Bear, a local diver. “For all I know, I’m missing the experience of a lifetime.”

    The complete article can be found here.

    An MSN video about these squid can be found here.

    « Previous PageNext Page »




    RSS Subscribe
    Subscribe!

     

     

     

    ©Copyright 2002-2026 Psychosolodiver.com. All Rights Reserved. However, if you are going to steal anything from this site, please give me credit and link back.