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    August 6, 2011

    SCUBA Diving Veterans Park

    I was called into work last Sunday morning and was unable to attend Sunday Services.

    I’m trying to dive at least once a week now that Psycho Bitch is gone, so this is my weekly dive.

    Veterans Park in Redondo Beach

    There were a lot of Divers here, most of them students.

    I was determined to find this so called “Monument,” also known as, “a pile of cinder blocks;” I was told to go off the stairs, dive to 50 feet and go South.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #386

    Solo Diving
    Veterans Park, Redondo Beach, CA

    In With: 2700 psi
    Out With: 1100 psi
    Max depth: 70 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat
    Visibility: 15 feet plus
    Water Temperature: 59 degrees, colder at depth
    Total Bottom Time: About 40 minutes

    Entrance was easy – it was harder to avoid the students thrashing around in the surf zone than the actual waves.

    I descended in 20 feet of water and swam West.

    The canyon edge.

    At 40 feet, the edge of the canyon appears – you just see black as it falls to 85 feet, really quickly.

    Attack crabs lie in wait…

    Attack crab.

    Deadly attack crab.

    I didn’t find the blocks, and the visibility was pretty good.

    Scuba divers practice their skills.

    Scuba divers practice their skills.

    I don’t leave my camera on all the time while I dive, so I didn’t get a picture of the nurse shark that swam past me as I was coming back up the canyon.

    It scared the shit out of me – the shark probably was only four feet long, but water magnifies things by 25 percent, and my imagination magnifies sharks by 300 percent.

    Well, Veterans Park is really not a very exciting place to dive, scenery wise, so I headed in after 30 minutes.

    July 24, 2011

    Sunday Services – Diving Terranea Resort

    I’m on a diving roll – I got my tank filled on the Sand Dollar (I paid the deck hand $5) yesterday, after three dives in Catalina, and now for Sunday services – my traditional shore dive from Terranea Resort.

    As I approached Palos Verdes, driving in my chick magnet, I realized that I left my regulator soaking in a five gallon fresh water bucket at home.

    However, I did luck out.

    Since I was prepared for a boat dive yesterday, I still had my emergency backup regulator in my bag – perfect!

    Another saved dive!

    I arrived a little late, but there were a lot of divers there.

    Not only the regular Diveveters were there, but Dive N Surf was having a club dive – there must have been 30 divers in the parking lot.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #385

    The Cove, Terranea Resort, Rancho Palos Verdes, CA
    Dove with Jordan and Jordan Senior

    In With: 2500 psi
    Out With: 600 psi
    Max depth: 35 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat with a few challenging swells
    Visibility: 8 – 18 feet
    Water Temperature: 66 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: About 50 minutes

    I teamed up with Jordon and his father; we all had about 2500 psi in our tanks, so we decided to go off of the Cove.

    A lot of people dove off the Point as the water was extremely calm, at least, for the most part.

    I made it out with no problems, but the swells kicked up a bit as my buddies entered.

    Jordan and his Dad make it out.

    We surface swam to 120 reef and descended.

    SCUBA descent

    Visibility was great!

    Visibility was good!

    We trolled around 120 reef…

    Starfish.

    Sunstar.

    A sunstar.

    A SCUBA Diver tours 120 reef.

    About 15 minutes into the dive, my camera froze – it wouldn’t turn off and the buttons were not responsive.

    Of course, that’s when we had a seal encounter.

    We started back when I hit 1000 psi and surfaced at the finger that leads to the cave.

    There were some psychos diving off the rocks near the cave (see the below video) where it’s “shallow and pointy;” luckily they apparently quit before anyone got hurt.

    I made a perfect exit, so did Jordan and his Dad.

    Dive N Surf was nice enough to DM our exits.

    Reports from divers going off the Point were – “Visibility was about eight feet and we had to fight one hell of a current.”

    The current was so bad, that some SCUBA chicks from the Dive N Surf club exited the Point – something that not many divers do.

    But, they were new divers and didn’t realize that most divers avoid a Point exit.

    SCUBA Debriefing.

    We took over part of the parking lot for our debriefing.

    Chef Chris.

    Chris fired up his grill for hotdogs and Texas style bread.

    Professional Debriefer Paul made a short video:

    To watch this video on YouTube, click here.

    Another perfect Sunday service!

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