Tag Archives: scuba dive

Just back from diving in the Caribbean…

Typist

I just got back from some great diving while in the Caribbean from March 17th – March 24th, 2012.   I got to do diving in Grenada, Barbados and Dominica.     I will be posting many videos and photos from the dives, but wanted to get the first video posted as soon as possible.   Just finished editing and putting this together of a dive through Grenada’s Underwater Sculpture Park which felt a little like diving in a sunken city.  It was very cool and if you ever get a chance to dive there, I highly recommend it.

Please enjoy this video I put together with the best highlights of video and photo’s from this dive.  Note that I had to use my backup Sony TX7 camera due to a mixup with Fedex, so I didn’t have the NEX7 camera that would have shot this with much higher quality.  But I did have my new lights, the Light and Motion Sola 1200 and 800 to use with the TX7.

This video can also be found directly at YouTube here: http://youtu.be/Zmy0o7Zk4wg

 

My current and future Certification path with PADI

I got the bug for scuba diving several years ago when I tried a “Discovery Dive” in tropical water.   A week after I got home from that vacation I found a local dive shop in the Seattle area (Underwater Sports) and signed up to become Open Water certified.   That was a fun class, although we started with 8 students in the class and pool, and on the first day of our open water dives, four people (half the class) dropped out.   To be fair, the water here is a balmy 48 degrees so some couldn’t handle that condition.  On top of that, the wind was blowing pretty hard causing the water to be quite rough and choppy.   The four of us that continued braved the cold, wind and chop, and completed the open water certification.

I then did some fun dives, and decided I wanted to become Advanced Open Water certified.   I went back to my same instructor and talked with him about doing that, and combined getting my AOW with also learning how to use a Dry Suit, and getting Dry Suit Certified.  Trying to do the AOW navigation dive in Puget Sounds dark and murky water really made it critical to learn how to use a compass, since visual cue based navigation was impossible.

I then did a good number of fun dives after this both in Puget Sound and in tropical places like Kona, Hawaii.   While in Hawaii, I decided to get myself certified for Enriched Air (Nitrox).   That was a fun class, and now when travelling I almost always prefer to dive Nitrox.

While in the Philippines, I decided to get my Underwater Photography certification, which was quite fun, and I got to use my first DSLR underwater, which was quite cool.

Next up for me will be Rescue Diver certification, which I am hoping to take in Feb of 2012, depending on my instructors availability to teach the class.   Additionally, I would like to get Underwater Videography certification sometime in 2012.   I will only need one additional specialty after these two certifications and I will qualify for the Master Scuba diver certification because I am well over 100 dives now.

After this, I will need to decide if I want to consider going down the Pro path and become a Dive Master.

Anyway, for now, in 2012, my goals are Rescue Diver, Underwater Videography, and then one more cert so I can get my Master Scuba Diver Cert.

What was your path to certification? (or what will it be?)

Make sure you post on the site for others to see.

Thanks,

LouisK

 

New Year, new resolution: DIVE more… oh and lose weight!

Mandarin fish shot in the Philippines

Now that we have started a new year (2012, so hopefully the world isn’t going to end), I plan on making a new years resolution to lose weight (doesn’t everyone) and most importantly dive more.  Hopefully diving more will increase weight loss as I have read several reports that suggest an hour of diving burns 500-1000 calories (who knew doing something fun could burn so much fat).   With that in mind, my goal for 2012 is to do a lot more local diving here in the Pacific Northwest (and add a bunch of new video and photo images to my blog from local dives) as well as do more dive travel this year as well.   I know I will be in the Caribbean in March of this year and plan on getting some diving there, plus I am sure I will make an appearance at least once in Hawaii towards the end of the year.  Other than that, I think it would be really cool to attend the Digital Shootout 2012 in Little Cayman this year.  That event will get me two big fixes, one is of course diving itself, and the other is access to the latest in underwater photography and videography technology and knowledge.

So, everyone have a GREAT 2012, and lets get diving!!!

Thank you  for your continued reading of this blog, it makes diving even more fun because I can share my passion with my readers.  Looking forward to a great and dive-ful year.

LouisK

Diving the real world “Abyss”… doing a Black Water Pelagic dive


One of the coolest dives I have ever done (and I have done it twice now) is known as a black water Pelagic dive.   Basically you leave after dark on a boat and head directly out into the ocean, a few miles off shore.  You want to be in water that is essentially bottomless (obviously it isn’t, but it’s over a mile deep).

50 foot lines are tied to the boat and each diver is attached to a line (given the diver the ability to focus on the dive and not worry about how deep they go – all the cool stuff is usually in the 20′-50′ depth range anyway).

At night, things that live at the bottom of the ocean come up to feed and more often than not what you see looks a lot like the creatures from the movie “The Abyss.”   I am convinced that James Cameron must have done a dive like this in order to get the idea for them.

The video at the top of this post is of a cone jelly that I happened to see, if you have good bandwidth, bump up the resolution of the playback to 720HD.

If you ever get a chance to try a black water dive, jump on it, this is one of the most exciting experiences you will have in the water.  Imagine, total blackness, not being able to see anything except the creatures you find when they are right up on you, no warning, you just see them.  Obviously not for the faint of heart, but more for the adrenaline junkies among you.

If you decided to try it, I recommend doing this with Jack’s Diving Locker in Kona Hawaii.