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    November 5, 2011

    Diving The Palawan Wreck, Redondo Beach, CA

    I was invited to go dive the Palawan wreck with a bunch of technical divers.

    I was the last person to show up at the dock, 20 minutes before the boat was scheduled to
    leave.

    Even though I didn’t hold the boat up much, I was still given shit for “being the last to show up.”

    When I told Dry Suit Greg that I was on the boat, he was relieved that he didn’t have to take his doubles – he would dive with me, following recreational dive limits.

    I’ve often thought about becoming a technical diver – however, some consider solo diving “Technical” – but I’ve been told constantly, why spend $10,000 dollars to go from 130 feet to 300+?

    Regardless, aside from Greg and I, everyone else was going to do a 30 or so minute dive and decompress gradually come up – not to be confused with non-decompression recreational diving, which simply requires a “safety stop.”

    Hey, my budget is a constraint, but more power to the techies!

    I bought a new underwater camera, and decided to go balls out – a Fujifilm 3D digital still and video camera.

    This was it’s test run; I was scared shitless that the casing would leak.

    As Greg and I were were doing recreational limits, for us to do two dives at 120 feet, we would require almost an hour on the surface between dives.

    I was planning to do my first dive with just the case, to test for leaks.

    However, with our long surface interval, the tech divers would be back before our second dive began – so, a second dive was in question.

    I greased the seals of the case and said, “Fuck it!”

    I was the first one off the boat, Dry Suit Greg followed.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #394

    Dove with Dry Suit Greg
    The Palawan Wreck, Redondo Beach, CA

    In With: 3000 psi
    Out With: 1200 psi
    Max depth: 120 feet
    Waves: Choppy
    Visibility: 30 to 40 feet
    Water Temperature: 53 degrees
    Air Temperature: 72 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: 14 minutes bottom time, 35 minutes total

    We descended down the anchor line and went North to the Palawan.

    My automatic inflator on my BCD doesn’t work, so my “trim” wasn’t at it’s best.

    Dry Suit Greg later remarked, “Man, I wondered who I was diving with.”

    Yeah, my buoyancy wasn’t that great with no air in my BCD at 100 or so feet, however, I didn’t feel the need to orally inflate it.

    We had rain and some pretty tall waves last night, and I was surprised the visibility was absolutely spectacular.

    And, wearing my core warmer, I didn’t feel that cold, which probably kept me from getting narced.

    The Palawan is a wreck that I doubt I will ever get bored of – it is encrusted with sea life, there’s many swim throughs, with easy outs, if need be.

    Lots of fish and lots to see – wait for the video which should be on the next post.

    I followed Greg, took some test video with my new camera, and followed him back up the anchor line to a good safety stop.

    My camera casing did not leak.

    The tech divers were still down.

    Will we do another dive?

    Stay tuned.

    October 29, 2011

    Divevets’ Under Water Pumpkin Carving Contest – 2011

    The Redondo Beach City council is determined to make city parks nothing more than glorified public lawns with their new “Fun and safety rules.”

    Stupid Redondo Park Rules

    No barbecues, no shade tents, no dogs, no skateboarding, no smoking, etc., etc.

    No barbecues in a park?

    What fascist city council ass wipe came up with that one?

    The world is now so perfect, that politicians are going after barbecuing, trying to condition us to the tyranny of a totalitarian state.

    The Divevets tried to get a permit, but the request was denied.

    The ironic thing is, there were two shade tents up for an event called “Boarding for Breast Cancer” and the parking lot was full of skateboarders, who were – yes – skateboarding around the parking lot, dodging cars.

    Someone must have gotten their palm greased somewhere in the city.

    Someone must have gotten their palm greased somewhere in the city.

    Anyway, the diving event:

    Conditions were spectacular!

    The barren seascape of Veterans Park was visible up to 30 feet!

    It’s been years since conditions were this good.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #393

    Solo Diving
    Veterans Park, Redondo Beach, CA

    In With: 2800 psi
    Out With: 1200 psi
    Max depth: 84 feet
    Waves: Flat
    Visibility: 20 to 30 feet – no joke!
    Water Temperature: 53 degrees
    Air Temperature: 72 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: About 35 minutes

    I had a small pumpkin and carved it in 25 feet of water – I did a quick carve job of a pirate, using the store’s label as the eye patch.

    This “Pumpkin Carving Contest” is so rigged, I figured I will just enter a token pumpkin and stay for the beer and dive company.

    I continued on, down the shelf.

    The visibility was the best I’ve seen in a long time; I wish there was just more to see other than blocks, sand, crabs and other divers.

    Still no camera yet – so there’s no pictures.

    The pictures that you see on this post are actually from a cheap disposable Kodak film camera – how 20th Century.

    Ass Grab Pumpkin

    The “Ass Grab” Pumpkin.

    Underwater carved Pumpkins

    Underwater Carved Pumpkins.

    The Winners

    The winners line up!

    The group of Pumpkin Carvers.

    The Whole group.

    Dan was not their to interfere with the Judging, which meant that ECO Dive Center kicked the Divevets asses.

    As always, Professional Debriefer Paul has captured the moment:

    To View this video on YouTube, click here.

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