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    June 21, 2008

    The SCUBA Show – June 21, 2008

    I finally went to the SCUBA show after many years of assuming it was going to be a bunch of vendors pushing travel packages.

    I took the bus down to the Convention Center to avoid the parking situation and to mingle with the common folk.

    It was $12 admission into the hall and an additional $25 for unlimited Seminars – the beers were $5.50 for a Budweiser bottle.

    The SCUBA Show

    The first Seminer that I attended was “A Divemaster Shares His Secrets” by Ken Knezick of Island Dreams.

    Unfortunately, the title was all that persuaded me to attend.

    He briefly talked about reading other divers and safety issues, but by in large it was how to travel with gear, which gear to bring and how to chose a dive charter.

    As he said, “99% of the time, nothing goes wrong on a dive, but you want to chose a dive charter that can deal with the other 1%.”

    A good seminar, but I think the title should have been changed to “How Not To Have A Bad Diving Vacation.”

    The second seminar was put on by the publisher of California Diving News and author of The Best Southern California Beach Dives.

    A SCUBA Seminar

    He basically went over his favorite beach dives – some place in Ventura, Leo Carrillo, Old Pier number three in Redondo Beach, Malaga Cove and White Point.

    He ran out of time before he got to Orange County.

    I was going to go to “Why Divers Die,” but the lack of earth shattering news at these seminars made me just want to cruise the hall.

    The SCUBA Show Movie Festival

    In the back of the hall was the movie festival.

    The

    Some travel booths even brought some native entertainment.

    Ancient SCUBA Equipment

    Ancient SCUBA equipment is displayed by the Historical Diving Association.

    Ancient Instructor Training

    Let’s not forget ancient instructor training, too!

    The SCUBA Show Hall

    The hall was fairly crowded; but during the course of the show, I ran accross many dive friends – Divevets, Pacific Wilderness, Dive and Surf.

    Recovered artifacts.

    The California Wreck Diving Club displays recovered artifacts.

    Too much beer

    Even at $5.50 a beer, some just drank too much.

    All in all a great SCUBA Show – I will go again next year, but I think I’ll skip the seminars.

    June 14, 2008

    Logged SCUBA Dive #287 – Veteran’s Park, Redondo Beach, CA

    Veteran’s Park, Redondo Beach, California

    Diving with buddy “Rafael”

    In With: 2900 psi
    Out With: 1200 psi
    Max depth: 70 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat
    Visibility: 8-15 feet
    Water Temperature: 50 degrees Fahrenheit in the canyon, warmer above
    Total Bottom Time: 32 minutes

    I haven’t been diving for two weeks and wanted to make sure I still remembered how.

    I got to the parking lot and hooked up with “Rafael” who was looking for a buddy.

    After a quick briefing of the dive plan and how each other’s gear was rigged, we entered the water and met outside the surf zone.

    Rafael and Me off of Vet’s Park.

    Rafael and Me off of Redondo Beach.

    We descended to 20 feet and swam West, determined to find the “monument.”

    Going over the shelf at 35 feet was a tremendous thermocline – the temperature went from 62 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit.

    We went to 60 feet and swam South in search of the “monument.”

    A sea snail? Sea slug????

    A yellow crab sleeps in an old ammunition box.

    A  crab sleeps in an old ammunition box.

    A transient village of conch.

    A transient village of conch.

    I tried to navigate… I was sort of narced… 50 degrees and 70 feet below.

    Oh, yeah!

    I felt really good, but had no idea where the hell I was going for a while.

    Regaining my composure as I always do, we swam through a section of the canyon that was absolutely twilight dark.

    Rafael underwater.

    This is what Rafael looks like underwater.

    We headed back after a slow swim South, but at 70 feet instead of 60.

    I thought we were sure to spot the monument.

    A sea blob -  What the hell is this?

    A sea blob – What the hell is this?

    An octopus squats in a vacant snail shell.

    An octopus squats in a vacant snail shell.

    We came across a huge Shovel Nose Guitar fish that blended in to the sandy bottom so well, none of my pictures came out.

    We swam across the orange traffic marker and the man eating killer crab from last dive was still waiting for its next victim.

    A killer yellow crab.

    Seeing that he couldn’t take me and Rafael on at the same time, the crab was passive.

    The crab stands down.

    We must have missed the “monument” by only a few feet.

    At 1200 psi, we went back up the shelf to warmer water and did a slow swim and safety stop back to an almost easy exit.

    There’s a sand step that I tripped over in a foot of water.

    I crawled up and got back on my feet, hoping nobody saw my non-macho trip.

    Me and buddy Rafael.

    Rafael and me.

    We debriefed with a couple beers and hung out with a few dive groupies.

    A great dive and another day of cheating death!

    Rafael is welcome as a dive buddy anytime.

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