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Peacock with TMet

You have brains in yer heads, and feet in yer shoes.
You can steer yerself in any direction you choose.
Yer on yer own, and you know what you know.
You are the one who'll decide where to go"

~Dr. Seusss

It was dark out when I got up….. no fair! What is this all about……. Caves don’t have tides….. no assigned time slots….. it is the advantage to looking at wet rocks……. Where is my advantage? Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa……..

TMet is a slave driver….cracking the whip…… up before dawn …. Pack into the car….He didn’t even bring donuts!!! Waaaaaaaaaaaaaa…………..

Enough of the whining……I smuggled a cup of coffee into the truck, along with my dog and my dive gear and we were off. We didn’t stop for gas, or a potty break, or donuts……. Sorry, back to the dive story.

We arrived at the Dive Outpost late-morning and unpacked the car…….no we weren’t staying…. We just put the tanks on the bottom, in the future we will reconsider this strategy….. anyway, it was quiet and while Ron put a cave fill in some and “topped off” the rest we stretched our legs and looked about. Grabbing a few supplies and hoses, and a Twix bar…..they had no donuts….. I know I know…. focus……. We collected what we need and packed back into the car.

Hobie found a soft piece of floor and opted to stay, knowing full well that anyone who entered the shop would fall for his sad eyes routine and give him a pet and a milkbone…… he is a fan of cave country.

We pulled into the park and headed for Peacock. There is a new trail running through the park and I told Terry about it as we drove. This project has been a few years in the making and is entirely designed, built and paid for by cave divers. We have been told it is one of the best in any of the States many parks and divers should take pride in this. Anyone who dives the springs and parks in north Florida should take a few moments and join and support the North Florida Springs Alliance. http://northfloridaspringsalliance.org/ This organization is a wonderful ambassador for the diving community providing things like this interpretive trail, promoting conservation of the springs and working to open more areas to divers. The trail is 1.05 mile long, beginning at the Peacock steps and ending there as well. It follows the same route as the caves below the ground with over a half dozen stations describing the caves below and trail above. These are located at places like the Breakdown Room, Crypt, Peanut Restriction and Olsen Sink. Olsen will also have a scenic overlook built there so you can walk out over the top of the sink and get a good look down into it. (no throwing rocks at the divers below…. They told me that….I don’t know why… really…) A few weeks ago I met some other divers here and we spent a few days clearing the trails, putting benches in along the trail and setting the signs in at each stop…they weighed in at over 250 lbs each, Tim the Toolman would be proud.

The park ranger remembered me, he introduced me to another ranger as the one who got their 4 wheel drive golf cart stuck between 2 trees, a story for another day…..

If you are in the area, be sure to take a few minutes to walk this trail and enjoy it.

Terry and I geared up and other divers made their way out of the water or into the park. Even on a Monday there is a steady stream of divers here enjoying the caves.

I am still working out the kinks on my new dry suit. Cannot say I am a fan yet, but I am working on it…. There is less water in this one than my last one, so that is a good thing.


Terry is practicing and getting ready to further his training. He is making his way to full cave and doing just fine. I think I have to keep a close eye on my double 85’s from here on in though, as he is a fan of them.

There were a few equipment glitches and after ironing them out we were on our way.

The walkway out to the Peacock steps is only a short distance in flipflops but extends, meanders and snakes its way along when you are carrying a100 lbs or so of dive gear. Like the march to Bataan we made our way to the water. I sat on the steps, pulled on my fins and plummeted face first into the water. It is an art and I am the master of it.

A quick bubble check and we are on our way. I have my new reel and I am about to give it a workout. There are 2 other teams already in the system and it takes several tries to find a good spot to tie in around them, they took all the good rocks!

Securely tied to the cavern entrance we make our way inside. Our first dive will be the right side and out to Pothole Sink.

A short distance into the cavern is an oval opening in the rock wall. As you slide into this opening you drop almost straight down 65 feet making your way to the floor and the beginning of the cave. I tie into the gold line and we make our way forward. I am struggling in my drysuit with about 3 feet more zipper than there is real estate across the front of me and am working on how to move the air about my suit though this excess as I adjust my buoyancy during the dive. My struggle seems to be in the beginning of the dive. Going from the surface to the cavern and getting rid of the bulk of air. I don’t believe I had any problems in the cave and Terry did not point out any bouncing about so I am good so far, although I do need to put a bit more air in the suit next dive.

Terry is moving about brilliantly, getting to enjoy the cave as a tourist and not a student.

Large rocks give way to lower passages with silty floors. The beams of our lights illuminate arched grotto like alcoves along the cave walls and the white of the walls contrast sharply with the dark floors and sand. The arches increase in size as we move along extending across the cave and providing openings large enough to swim through and explore. The cave begins to widen and several pure white crayfish scurry along the floors. These are troglobites. They live only in the pure dark of the caves and so have no eyes as there is no need to see and no color as they need not hide from an enemy nor attract a mate. They are especially fun when they float down from the ceiling and you catch them in your light like it’s raining creepy crawlers.

At Pothole Sink the dome of the cave opens up and rises over 50 feet into the air and as you look up you see a hazy patch of blue where the sunshine from the surface filters down into the water stretching its rays far as it can reach into the black of the cave. There is a T tied into the line pointing the way to the surface with a note stating “Emergency Exit Only” and halfway up the wall a small ledge. The cave narrows after this and the Nicholson Tunnel lies beyond.

We turn head on back seeing Mother Nature’s architecture from a whole new angle. Some of the dark grotto like indentures light up as small passageways with at least one tying into the left side of the system. There is no flow and the quiet and the dark lets your thoughts concentrate and wonder at what you are seeing. I pick up my reel and begin to crank in the excess as we slowly rise up the wall and towards the surface. The line tangles round the spool, but this is a wreck reel and I have used it before, I know it will keep going. It continues to tangle but still turn and as I reach my tie in I have a mess round the reel but no unspooled line. Yep, this will be my primary from now on.

At the surface I clip off my tangled reel to a stage clip at the steps and we float about resting and planning the second half of this dive. The left side and the Breakdown Room.

We sink back below the surface and I tie around another team’s line and we make our way back into the cavern. I tie into the gold line and we make our way to the start of the tunnel and the grim reaper sign proclaiming “there is nothing in this cave worth dying for”. This is true. When your light is out and there is no sound, and a dark so black that not a hint of the outside world pierces it. You need to touch your eyelids to see if they are open or closed but you cannot for there is a mask in the way and help or harm could be but an arms length away and you cannot see it…. You want to know what to do and how to do it.

I think of this each time I pass one of these signs and go over in my mind what I need to do. Then the cave is there and I swim on. Past rocks and boulders of all shapes and sizes as you slowly go deeper and then there above is again a small slit, ledge like, and as you approach it you see it extends to the left in a low narrow like passage. Through the Chute and into the Breakdown Room we go.

As we pass along the rock encased tube of a tunnel you can see it is not just wet rocks. There are fossils, some lying on the bed of rocks, small perfect scallop shells permanently embalmed in stone and bits and pieces sticking up from the rock floor. You can scoot along through here pulling on the occasion and riding it like something at Disney or you can march on through eyes forward, finning perfectly not touching floor nor ceiling and making your way along looking for the end and anticipating the rooms farther back, or you can meander like a drunk down a hallway with no straight line and check along the floors and walls for the fossils. Little treasures, time capsules of a time gone by and long past. The sea was here, starfish and sand dollars dotted this floor. Maybe great sharks swam this same passage, maybe it was not always a cave. So many maybes, so much wonder.

This gives way to larger and larger spaces and once again boulders of rock line the floor and as we turn to make our way back I listen…. Can I hear footsteps…. Are there people walking, children running just above our heads? The silence is deafening. But they are up there, in some spots not more than 20 feet above…. There are squirrels scurrying and snakes slithering and maybe even people following the trail…. And reading those signs…. Planted 30 inches deep…. I know cause my arm is 29 inches and if I couldn’t touch the bottom of the hole than it was 30 inches and deep enough.

Ahhh, the surface. We are on our way.

Terry is in the lead now. Beams of light bouncing off white rock in every direction as we take one last look. Silvery pools pock the ceiling. They are pockets of trapped air waiting their turn to make their way slowly up to the surface through the porous limestone rock. And if you drag your finger through them they shimmer and tiny bubbles appear. Almost as good as poking fish…. Almost.

I pick up my reel and crank my way to the light, the haze of blue green marking the entrance to the cavern and the exit to the surface and home. I am a poker….. I hang for a few moments before surfacing and there are a few fish I now know…. On an intimate basis….. they will learn.

We stop to pay our bill and pick up the dog…. Another Twix….. STILL no donuts…. And we are on our way home…. A long day…. But sweet dives….

The Blackthorn

I shall go the way of the open sea, to the lands I knew before you came, and the cool ocean breezes shall blow from me the memory of your name.


~Adela Florence Nicolson ~


The 180 foot U.S. Coast Guard cutter Blackthorn, was built at Marine Iron & Shipbuilding Corp., Duluth, Minnesota, on May 21, 1943, launched in July of 1943, and commissioned in March of 1944. She served in the great lakes doing rescue, salvage and breaking ice, off the coast of California and finally at ports along the Gulf of Mexico. She had just been refitted in Tampa and was heading to Galveston, Texas on January 28, 1980 when she collided with the 605 foot freighter S.S. Capricorn just outside the Sunshine Skyway Bridge. The blending of lights from vessels, land and the bridge, inexperienced crew, lack of proper response, wrong side of the channel …… it doesn’t matter what the reason was, that doesn’t change the fact that 23 of the crew of 50 on the Blackthorn were lost that night in 40 foot of water due to an unbelievable chain of events. Such was the impact of this tragic loss that it prompted changes in the Coast Guard including special schooling of officers who would command ships and raised standards for emergency training and equipment. It also fore fronted the improvement of navigational aids in the shipping channel and systematic of tracking vessels in Tampa Bay.

The collision alone did not spell disaster for the Blackthorn, but one of the anchors of the Capricorn pierced their hull, at the crews showers, and dragged the coast Guard cutter along with the huge freighter until the Blackthorn pulled up aside the Capricorn causing slack in the anchor chain which folded under the cutter. Seconds later, when the chain went taunt again, like pulling the string on a top, it rolled the Blackthorn and she sunk in less than 3 minutes trapping 23 crew members inside.

In 2000, Seaman William Flores, was posthumously awarded the Coast Guard Medal for heroism. He had opened the life jacket locker as the Blackthorn capsized, and secured it open with his belt making sure that his shipmates were able to get to the life jackets as the vessel sank. His quick thinking and ingenuity and the time he took on a sinking vessel to complete this selfless act helped save many of the 27 survivors.

The ship was raised but so damaged that it was scuttled on January 28, 1980 just 300 feet from the Sheridan on Pinellas Reef #2. Today, the site remains a memorial to those Coasties who perished that night and a coast Guard flag “flies” at the wreckage and a yearly memorial service still takes place.

Topside, Dave is having computer troubles and opts to join another group for this dive. Mr. Bravo and I ready to dive and with a grace few others will ever know, I launch myself, like a big ole cannonball into the warm green swells.

We drift down onto the broken portions of the Blackthorn and begin our dive. She sits broken and turtled on the sea floor, covered in life from the sea bottom. There are not as many moon jellies here but swarms of bait fish still dart about and the ever watchful barracuda eye us like rent-a-cops at the mall.

A portion of the hull has given way and you can slide in and hover with the cool kids as they eye you with distrust. If you ask me, I think they hang in here and have a little toke outside of the prying eyes of ‘cuda gendarmes. That’s what I think…

We swim all about checking the nooks and crannies as fish swim freely all about. We head out into the sand to look and come across some oversized pipes. Shining my light inside all I see is Jens shining his light and waving from the other side. No one is home.

We head back to the anchor line where there are fish in need of petting and poking flitted in and about. Black sea urchins beckoned to be decorated with small shells. So much to do, so little time.

It is unfortunate that we missed the loggerhead turtle that was seen by other divers, but it was still a great dive and I mused as I made my way back to the boat how different yet the same this Florida diving could be.

As I surface I grab the tag line and as I pull my way over to the ladder, I remove one fin and place the spring strap over my hand and as I reach the ladder I pull back the spring on my second fin. Two large swells pass under the boat and the ladder bucks beneath me and I reach to hold my unsecured fin…. But I have a bad feeling….. a real bad feeling…… and before the next swell comes through I toss my spring strap and only my spring strap on the dive platform…… and then bang….. I am bounced on the ladder once more. Some days……..

The captain offers me a spare fin to go retrieve it but Tracy slips into her gear and steps off the back of the boat….. thank God for heavy fins….. straight down and in less than a minute she is back…. Fin in hand. Thank you Tracy, thanks.

The ride in is a pleasure. As all the men folk sit huddled beneath the canopy, trying to keep warm and dry, Tracy, Heidi and I sit near the transom drowned and drenched with the proliferation of waves and water clearing the gunwales of the boat. We make the best of it, laughing with each drenching. There is not much else you can do. We talked, and laughed, and rested and contemplated warm, dry land.
 
As we cleared the pass I looked back and it was like a crazy movie….. boats of every size, shape and color were heading in behind us. It looked like we were being chased….. boats going in and out, coming up port and starboard, huge cabin cruisers on our stern, jet skis zipping across our bow……. A traffic jam on the water. Expertly maneuvered through by our illustrious captain and safely tucked into our slip at the dock we unload and head home…..

There are more places like this out there…. There are….. I want to dive them…. I really do.
 

The Sheridan

Far across the ocean,
Far across the sea,
A faithful jelly doughnut
Is waiting just for me.


Its sugar shines with longing,
Its jelly glows with tears;
My doughnut has been waiting there
For twenty-seven years.

O faithful jelly doughnut,
I beg you don't despair!
My teeth are here with me, but
My heart is with you there.

And I will cross the ocean,
And I will cross the sea,
And I will crush you to my lips.
And make you one with me.

~Dennis Lee~

Excitement was in the air, a wreck dive, a real wreck dive in the Gulf and I was going. It is hard to explain why I feel the way I do, but wreck diving is special to me.

To know the history, no matter how slight, to see the remains and put it whole again in your mind….they become real and fire the imagination and feed the soul. Real people walked her decks, events played out below her decks, tragedy and history, stories and sights sometimes beyond the imagination. And finally they rest on the ocean floor and sea urchins walk the decks, large fish hold court in the empty holds, barracuda circle the broken rails and feed upon small fish trying so hard just to survive. And creatures, ones others only get to imagine, lay hidden among the nooks and crannies just waiting to be found as these once proud ships melt slowly into the oceans floor. I love these dives.

Fall, or at least Florida’s version, has arrived and as I drive in the early morning hours towards the marina I see … green. No changing leaves on the trees to shades of rust and brown, the yellows and reds of chrysanthemums do not dot the sleepy yards, no new palette of color to herald in the change of seasons and passing of time. I miss this.

But my mind changes focus as I approach the dock for Tanks A Lot and the Cantankerous. I am diving, a real wreck, and Jonny is bringing donuts….. and coffee….. and familiar faces will be on the boat….. and there will be donuts….. did I mention the donuts?

As I load my gear onboard I call out morning greetings to MissD and Captain Mike and Captain Heidi. Bob and Tracey arrive with their students for the day. There are new faces, Verne and Javier, soon to become new friends. And then Dave pulls in with his new Nitrox cert….. but no donuts. Hmmmm. No donuts, no cookies, no tic tacs, no gum….just a nitrox cert. Hmmmm.
Finally Jonny arrives….with coffee….. and donuts….. boston creme donuts….. they have no holes…. donut holes are such a waste of space….. life is good….. let the day begin!

We all climb aboard and Captain Mike takes our picture, takes several actually. I am still somewhat shy being new to the group and hang back a bit, but I think he got me in one of them. We will see.

The ride out is a long one, 2 hours and as we lose sight of the shoreline conversations turn to diving and dives past. The time passes quickly, donuts are eaten and soon we are approaching our first site…… the Sheridan.

In 1951, Ira S. Bushey & Sons, Inc., of Brooklyn, built a 180ft tugboat, the D. T. Sheridan. For 35 years she moved barge and boat and finally, based out of Tampa in her final years, her job included hauling barges to New Orleans and the Caribbean. As sleeker, stronger and more fuel efficient barges moved in to take her place she sat for several years in a shipyard before being donated to the Pinellas County Artificial Reef Program.

On November 17, 1986, she was towed 20 miles out off of Clearwater, to Pinellas Reef #2, and sunk, without the usual fanfare of blowing the holds, by simply opening her valves. She came to rest upright and intact with her propeller in the sand at 80 fsw. This reef program uses a mix of materials shapes to provide the most diverse habitats and you will find the Sheridan surrounded with an array of tires and cement culverts which add its diversity of sea life.

Jonny, Meg and myself once again joined forces, like the 3 musketeers of diving, or maybe not, were Moe, Larry and Curly musketeers? Anyway, at their urging I quickly joined them on the wet side of the boat and we were on our way down to a fish pokey time on the Sheridan.

The water was 84 F and while visibility was in the 80 foot or so range, the water had a slight green tint to it. Moon jellies are flat jelly fish resembling both a sand dollar with their teardrop center markings and a round table set with a centerpiece and fringed cloth. They are clear in color and the dozens that floated round the wreck gracefully flapped their “fringed” edges in unison as if being blown by a sudden fall breeze. A few small sea nettles made their way round near the anchor line and large shiny barracuda circled round as we made our way through throngs of small baitfish.

The Sheridan sat, as promised, the lone prop lying half buried in the sand while the rest of the tug sits upright though slightly off kilter as if listing to with the swells above.

Bait fish swarmed the upper structures and I find it ever amazing that you can swim through hundreds of them and never get bumped. Why weren’t people blessed with such agility. I can’t walk through a near empty Publix without someone bouncing off of me.

As we make our way round the structure I am antsy to see inside. I imagine the crew scurrying along the narrow walkways flanking the wheelhouse and swells of water clearing the gunwales as the lone propeller spins its way round moving tug and barge forward through the water. I am antsy to see inside, imaging the crew living and working on this spartan workhorse of a vessel. As Jens and Dave peek in porthole shaped openings I duck into a doorway to have a peek myself. I am in a small barren room with another doorway ahead, through that opening I can see ambient light and move forward figuring to poke about and emerge the far end right next to my dive buddies.

Who but I could choose to explore….. the head. Yes, through that tantalizing opening was a small narrow room, barely wide enough for a swarthy broad shouldered mate with 5 o’clock shadow covering his strong square jaw to turn both ways. And there filling the small narrow alcove of this space was ….intact porcelain. A potty, sans seat, bolted securely to the deck and harboring naught but small coral, sponge and an errant tiny fish thank goodness. And through that second door, another small room with the sink, long since fallen from its berth on the wall, laying haphazardly on the floor. I need not use my imagination here a minute longer and exited the doorway meeting my own crew and moving on with our dive.

A few yards off in the sand I come across an anchor….a gift for the captain!!! A rescue and salvage!!! But alas, while there is little to no growth on the anchor, but the chain and rope hold a whole new neighborhood in the making. While they are relocated a few feet, they remain below the water. Another time I will surface bearing gifts. It will happen…..it will happen.

MissD made a great find along one of the outer stairways….. a small octopus blended in almost perfectly and inching his way along. How very cool. And Captain Heidi led me to the hiding place of a scorpion fish….. absolutely amazing…… so much to see.

Jens and I dropped down in the hold, two levels to the bottom and….. as I spun in a circle looking for a place to go, to get out of the way, Jens who was patiently hovering just above my head got tired of waiting and squeezed in past me and circled also….. nowhere to go. Oh well…This must have been the engine hold, the oil run engine long ago removed. And so we make our way out and onto the line and up to water’s surface.

Our next stop is just 100 yards away, the U.S.C.G. Blackthorn.

The Vandenberg Revisited Two

Where no great fish venture
nor small fish glitter and dart,
only the anemones
and flower of the wild sea-thyme
cover the silent walls
of an old sea-city at rest.
~Hilda Doolittle~


Cindy Bill and I spend the evening with a bottle of wine, relaxing on the deck and I get a sneak preview of pictures and stories to come from their trip to the Philippines. Dinner, once again, makes me too full for dessert and lulls me into a lazy comfortable haze calling out for a soft bed and softer pillow. I oblige and come morning we are once again on the dock of the Sea Eagle loading tanks and gear for our dive. Bill is using his old booties and a new dive friend, Mike, today. Cindy and I are doing a diva dive and plan on checking out the elevator shaft and poking some fish. At least I do.

Upon surfacing from our last dive yesterday, I discovered I had lost an earring, I am not sure how I feel about the pirate look and have skipped the earrings this morning while I decide. Bill suggested that the glitter of light on my silver hoops were the tantalizing draw that kept the barracuda so close to us yesterday and here I thought it was just my sparkling personality. I asked everyone aboard to keep an eye out for my earring, how hard could it be to find? It’s not like there are that many down there.

I like diving with Cindy, she, like me, loves to peek about and enjoys the small treasures each dive has to offer. We gear up and she gracefully steps off the port side and into the water. I follow with a launch and plummet as only I can do….. maybe this is what made me so memorable to the crew….. it is my signature move…..

We are again tied to the stern mooring ball, our second dive we will move to a mooring closer to the bow, and as we drop on down we can feel that the current has picked up ever so slightly since the day before, Earl is on his way. I follow Cindy as we make our way forward and she suddenly points and picks up a lone earring from the deck. What are the chances….. it is a pearl stud, not my loop but I tuck it into my sleeve before continuing on. It can only enhance that pirate look I am beginning to embrace, and oh the story it will add to it.

We come to the elevator shaft. The water is hazy and you cannot see all the way down. Cindy slips over the side and down we go slowly dropping towards the dark. At about 110fsw the first opening appears and it is completely dark, no light from a swim through cutout reaches this spot. I turn on my light and poke my head in but Cindy is not carrying doubles and chooses to explore other areas this dive and signals up and we head on back to the deck. She has much she wants to see and today she is not carrying her camera as she did on yesterday’s dives, it is the size of a small sofa with arms and strobes and gidgets and gadgets…. I have no idea how she does it, but I do love her pictures.

I have been soaking in all the changes in the 10 months since I was last here. Like each of her past unique services, Vandy is embracing her new position, this time beneath the water’s surface. Her final retirement duty is possibly her greatest success. She has settled upright on the seafloor sturdily riding out the currents without wavering. Soft corals and sponges are tentatively laying claim to her nooks and crannies. And fish…. Well the neighborhood is filling out. Size is the most notable since my last visit. The small parrotfish that last time nibbled at the algae on the radar dish are now gi-normous. They have little fear as they nibble their way along, their colors flashing against the still bland colors of the hull. Regal sized queen angel fish swim about the tie in and large blue ones flit about.

The grunts swarm the higher parts of the superstructure and the barracuda have bulked up dining among these plentiful schools of fish who dart about in an unimaginable unison. Like Dancing With the Stars, with no noticeable signal, they quickly take off and make a chain of graceful precision turns as if choreographed to some music only they can hear and practiced in the long warm water afternoons. I found myself in their center several times during these dives and just stuck out my hand as they washed over me, marveling at the scene unfolding around me.

The small damselfish still puff out their chests and protect their “hood” as if they were the size of small whales and not goldfish and as I dropped between two railing to escape some of the current I came across the telltale squiggles of sand leading to a black and brown sea cucumber the size of a size 10 Nike doing what sea cucumbers do best.

There were midsized fish also. Large yellow and black butterfly fish swimming in and out of doorways, neon blues with their single vertical white stripe outlined in black, and the rest of the rainbow of colors that mark fish that call the warm southern waters home. These, I am sure, were the tiny fish we saw last October, just hatched and hiding among the safety of structure below deck in their new home. Large spiny legged shrimp try to blend in with the butt hinges of the doorways as they await their next meal and tickle as they scurry over your hand.

And there were new hatchlings and small fish varying size and color. They have replaced the parrot fish grazing on the grate like structure of the dish.

All are now schooled in poking 101 and I imagine the ship makes a small sigh as she settles farther in.

While the interior porcelain still shows white, the thinner pieces of metal are slowly bending with the waters currents. The frames of shelves and bunks are slowly showing signs of buckling and the salt water and changing currents have made the thin pieces of grating fragile and starting to fall from the radar dish in spots.

It will be many long years past the time of my visits to her that her decks and sides fall away but the sea is very upfront with her intentions and has begun to slowly refit the Vandenberg in what will be her final wardrobe. Soldiers and sailors no longer scurrying about her decks, no radar dishes vacillating to and fro and the hum of electronics scanning the skies above are quieted and the strange glowing lights of aliens will no longer haunt her halls, just the TV screens of sci-fi enthusiasts. They are replaced with the vigilant sentries of barracuda, herds of colored fish and the glow of bioluminescent at night.

She will give up her battleship gray for the fields of color the corals and sea flora and fauna bring. She will sit in the center of the sea as its diversity washes over her and stick out her hand and marvel at the scene unfolding around her, just as I did, seeing what goes past and what catches and stays.

We end our dive day once again at a small table on the deck, this time I have dessert first, I do love key lime pie, and we marvel at the wonders we have seen and make plans to do this once more…….. we sit at the pier and watch the sunset in stripes of pinks and blues and look out over the water and I remember the words of Lord Byron ~ Roll on, deep and dark blue ocean, roll. Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in vain. Man marks the earth with ruin, but his control stops with the shore.

I’ll be back, I can’t help but to.

The Vandenberg Revisited

My soul is full of longing
For the secret of the sea,
And the heart of the great ocean
Sends a thrilling pulse through me.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow “The Sound of the Sea”


In 1944, the USNS Gen. Harry Taylor served as a troop transport ship. In 1958 it was decommissioned.

In 1963, the USAFS Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg served as a missile range instrumentation ship. It was retired in 1983.

In 1996 the Akademic Vladislav Volkov did double duty as a Russian science ship and love nest for electrical aliens. It was dropped faster than Jamie Lee Curtis and Donald Sutherland’s Oscar dreams. <1999 movie VIRUS>


So goes the history of a single floating steel structure, just over 522 feet long, 71 ½ feet wide and 10 stories tall. But her story doesn’t end there. Once again claiming the proud name of the General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, she began her final service assignment.

May 27, 2009 the Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg became the second largest artificial reef in the world when her bow touched sand 130fsw just 6 miles off the coast of Key West, Florida.

Now affectionately referred to as the Vandy….. she has begun her final transformation on the ocean floor to ocean habitat, sea life sanctuary, fishie nursery, coral and algae magnet and dive site…. A little bit of fish pokey heaven in my book.

There are big ships and small ships. But the best ship of all is friendship. ~Author Unknown…. Bill and Cindy are my ships and I count myself lucky. They are just winding up a dream vacation and spending the last few days of it diving and shopping with me. I won’t bore you with the shopping part, although I did get a great little picture for my hall but did not get to hold the one eyed chicken. Stories for another day, but will say that I arrived in Key West mid evening and after a short stroll we settled in a small Cuban restaurant with mojitos and the Cuban version of nachos to catch up on news and goings on.

The next morning we head out on the Sea Eagle with Captains Corner and as we load onboard, the mate remembers me from my last trip with them…… not sure if this is a good thing or not….we will see.

Bill and I dove the Vandenberg in October, just a few short months after her sinking, and I am excited to return and see how things have progressed.

We are lucky to hit a small window of diving before the arrival of Hurricane Earl in just a few short days. The seas are choppy and we are thoroughly drenched when we arrive at the mooring ball. There is a brisk current from surface to sand and while the water registers at 89F the visibility is just 60 to 80 feet.

We drop down on the stern and as we descend the line we pass some of the largest barracuda I have ever seen. They slowly circle as drop on down and spend the remainder of our dive just out of reach with one unblinking eye on us at all times. A thickening coating of growth envelopes the ship and we set off on a grand tour. The current seems to run both sides of the ship and we do not get to the bow this dive. I head over the rail and while the impending storm has stirred up the waters I can just make out the anchor chain stretching out into the sand. We enter the first set of cutouts to get out of the current and check out the changes below. The carpet of silt on the ships interior is deepening quite quickly and we pass an array of disabled machinery before heading back out. We pass the radar antennae and dish which are also deteriorating much faster than I expected. You can easily spot small cross pieces already fallen away. We look down the gun turrets and in and out of doorways, drop back over the sides and again traverse the ships interior using the large cutouts in the ships sides. The Coast Guard flag still flies proudly flapping in the current and just below it is a new addition, a sign post from Duvall Street and we stop to pose and take pictures with it.

Noting the time, we head back up with just short of an hour’s dive. Our SI is very short as is our next dive as the captain plans to pull anchor in an hour. We regroup and plan a short dive to finish the day.

Cindy hits the water first and drops down to wait for us. As we begin to make our way down the line with me leading and pulling hard through the current down the line. Before I reach the mooring line Cindy has gone back up due to an O ring which had suddenly began leaking and Bill and I continue on. We enter through a doorway on deck and move through a passage heading down and passing by abandoned bunks, off kilter shelving and slender rooms filled with surprisingly still white porcelain. There are narrow oval openings with ladders spaced throughout the deck leading to decks below but I question squeezing my doubles down them and move onto larger openings.

We again exit near the radar dish and as we hover above it a tap on the shoulder scares the bejesus out of me. Here is Cindy back with us. As she hit the ladder and explained her dilemma, the mate in one swift move reached down and plucked her out of the water, gear tank and all, placed her on the dive platform, switched her tank out and pushed her back in in record time. Oh to be young again……

We continued on peeking and poking and as you can imagine….the poking does live on…. Did you know parrot fish have teeth?

We end our afternoon with burgers and drinks and back to our rooms to change before some wine, shopping, and a Key West sunset. And I swear….. I will not play tricks on Bill anymore…… the “great dive bootie incident” will be my last…. I am pretty sure…. I think….. kinda….. yea.


Jersey Diving in FLA

Why do New Jersey divers roll backwards off their boats?
Cause if they rolled forwards they would land in the freakin boat!


Hello…. My name is Cheryl and I’m from New Jersey …. we did things a bit different there…….
First off, we didn’t start a dive trip without breakfast….. there is a reason Dunkin Doughnuts is open 24 hours….. but I am in Florida now and there is a Florida way….. Hmmm………



All dive boats leave at O’Dark Thirty…... why is that? At least that part didn’t come as a shock. I loaded up the truck the night before and was on the road before first light. The black quickly gave way to the dark blues and deep reds of predawn, slowly morphing into the pinks that give the first hints of sunrise. As I make my way to the marina, the colors of morning wash over me and with the help of hot coffee I slowly awaken to a new dive day.


It’s been a while since I made a dive boat trip. The reasons don’t matter, just the time….. and I have missed it …..a lot. There will be people I know on this trip, friends old and new, and I look forward to the day.


Today I am diving on the Can-Tank-erous with Tanks-A-Lot Diving. Captain Mike and Captain Heidi are my hosts and MissD aka Tracy, the dive master. [In NJ, someone, goes down and ties in and a Styrofoam cup or empty water bottle is sent up when the hook is set and ready to dive. When the cup is up, the pool is open and divers roll off the sides of the boat like rats abandoning ship and the diving begins.] Dive masters are new for me. They go down and set the hook, come up and give a report, and as each diver steps off the platform into the water they stand by to retrieve errant gear and divers. Interesting.

Dive boat rosters are always varied and interesting and this one no exception. The requisite young couple, a father/ daughter team from New York, two brothers who looked almost like twins (although one claimed his brother got youth and he got the good looks), a very quiet local diver, and the ruffians from FDF who were to be my buddies for the day, Jonny Bravo aka Jens (who has been in a baby induced dry spell) and Megaladonbite aka Dave (who is renewing his love affair with diving after a lengthy hiatus). I round out this group of merry divers and quite the group we are. The Captain took a group picture before we left the dock so he could pick us out of a line up or maybe it was for his online gallery, I forget.


It is a long ride out and the time passes quickly with dive stories and chat. (no Danish just dive stories and chat). The air is warm and the water warmer and with just rash guards and dive gear we head for the stern and step off the platform one by one and make our way to the anchor line. The water is warm, 89F warm. And the viz looked suspiciously like 40-50 foot as we make our way down to the ledge. [Please don’t ask me which ledge, I am new here and still trying to figure out the difference between a reef and a ledge…… ]


We are greeted by colorful corals and fish. [NJ has colors, there are many different greens and browns…but the history more than makes up for it] I bought a set of books (the Humann/Deloach Reef series) so I could identify what I saw when I dive, unfortunately it didn’t help. There were mounds of corals that reminded me of giraffes with their shapes and markings and stripes of purple coral lining the ledges edge. Green leafy algae floated just above the sand and pink and green corals filled in the spaces. Collar shaped egg casings sat in the sand. Could there be moon snails in Florida? Like a little retirement village of moon snails with little white belts and shoes scurrying along to the early bird special at the Krusty Krab.


We peeked under and over as we swam about and small grouper and bait fish flittered back and forth. A large arrow crab sat in one opening and small blue and yellow butterfly fish ventured out into the sand. As we moved along Jonny motioned for us to look and tucked in a large cavern under the ledge sat 2 small fish. And behind them swam a giant grouper. In the 200-300 pound range I believe. Let it be known the silt cloud around us was not diver induced.


As we swam on back I poked and chased the fish and they darted in and out. Fingers of sponges waved in the current and I began to look for a shell for my bucket. As I picked a large piece of broken conch shell from the sand something jumped. A small leopard crab had been comfortably nestled underneath and I snatched him up and had a look. I had never seen one before and he was a beauty. I placed him back in the sand and the shell back on top and moved on to catch up with the boyz.


The good captain had limited us to an hour this dive and at 52 minutes we headed on up. We were met topside by choppy seas and pummeling rain. As I arrived on deck the captain was taking pictures and I nearly drowned smiling for the camera. Hey I was getting wet!


With everyone aboard we headed on to our next site another ledge and this time I know the name! Bent Knife Ledge. [so named cause some biologists bent their knives trying to get some samples…. In NJ they use a crowbar….]


Once again we lined up to step off the swim platform and this time I held my nose as I jumped off exhibiting my usual grace and agility as I plummeted into the water. What can I say, it’s a gift.


We again dropped down in the water and arrived on the ledge to be greeted by groups of blue tube corals dotting the sand. Joined by MissD we made our way up the reef in search of turtles but alas none were to be found. But I did spot a hogfish snuggled up against a wall of coral and apparently napping. I made a perfect poke to the midsection taking him totally by surprise. With an annoyed look in my direction he prepared to swim off and I reached out and grabbed him by the tail. As he darted away I got one last poke in….ahhh I still got it.
We turned and swam back still looking to and fro, at times hanging almost upside down to peek under the ledge.


There were several more hogfish dotted along the route but they must have gotten the memo we were about and kept their distance. Tucked in one small cave and nestled into the sand sat a midsized toadfish with what appeared to be leopard like markings. Jungle animals seemed to be the theme today.


As we continued on we passed over a small abandoned anchor and MissD pointed and giggled. Now I remembered Captain Mike mentioning his retirement plan of collecting anchors and decided to gift him this little beauty. No longer carrying my wreck diving lift bag I needed to improvise and slowly unfurled my safety sausage. A little puff of air and I clipped off my spool and began to wrap line on the anchor. Another puff of air but nothing happened…. Hmmmm……. I picked it up and began to jump it over to the anchor line…… this was not going to work……hmmmm.


I put two more puffs into the sausage and it began to strain….. like the Little Engine That Could, it pulled and reached its way upward…..you could hear the faint echoes of “I think I can… I think I can…” but alas, it could not…..


I don’t think so…… I am a Jersey girl….. I pumped air into that puppy til I heard the seams scream and then….. we had lift off!! And up it went. I swam over to the anchor line towing my prize behind me.


As I broke the surface of the water, the squall had ended but the black clouds still loomed around us. The sun peeked through the clouds to the west but our day of sun had ended. We loaded onboard and headed home snacking and chatting, telling stories of dives past and to come. [ Jersey divers pack a breakfast and a lunch and often grill on the back deck of the boat too….]


MissD makes a good dive master, Meg has returned to diving as if he never left, Jonny…. he will be given another chance to redeem himself with Guava Danish, and me…….. well, I might be a Florida diver now….. but I guess I will always be a Jersey Girl at heart…… and no Captain Mike….. I don’t have an accent…..

Venice Beach



You never saw a fish on the wall with its mouth shut. ~ Sally Berger

I always have a good time with Cindy...we drink wine, we talk, we drink wine, we shop, we drink wine, and most importantly we dive...... and then we drink more wine.... hey ...... dont be a hater....


Cindy flew in from PA on Friday night and at 5:30AM on Saturday we were loading up the car for a trip to Venice Beach to sharktooth dive. We could have taken the afternoon boat but there were other things to fit in the day along with our diving...... and so off we went, coffee in hand, heading for the marina in Venice Beach.

This was to be Cindy's first time sharktooth hunting, and while I had been several times before I am by no means a "shark tooth afficianado".

The sun was making its way up in the sky, white puffs of clouds taking shape above us and the air working its way up the thermometer to its hot and humid summertime temperature.

It is a short trip out to the underwater river beds and the mate gives a quick lesson in underwater fossils 101 and then we are gearing up to slide beneath the warm blue waters (87F warm) and hunt us some fossils.

Now we should be outstanding fossil hunters, after all we are world class shoppers and fossil hunting is much like shopping. You have to take your time and look at everything and sort through the junk to find the real bargains and treasures. But alas we are oft times distracted by the glam and glitter of the ocean floor.

We find several whale bones and manatee ribs, some teeth shaped like rocks and many rocks shaped like teeth. There are tiny starfish and , herds of sea urchins rolling like tumbleweed across the sand, sponges grasping onto the sandy bottom trying desperately not to be swept off with the currents, and eels dug into their sandy little caves, curious at our approach but not fond of the company. We have been given a compass heading to follow and Cindy diligently leads as I straggle behind poking and prodding and picking along the black sandy streams of sand looking for whole teeth.

Cindy's forte is shells....she knows them all and can pick up the teeniest of shells out of what looks like rubble, but it is abolutely perfect and a treasure and she can tell you all manner of information about it..... I on the other hand am easily distracted by the cunner hovering inches from my mask so curious about us and our search, the large oysters sitting upright in the sand.... they open their shells to let the water and food filter through but shut so tight when you poke..... you cant coax them open, I know, I tried. And hermit crabs.... they are like little shy playmates with short memories, I can spend hours just messing with them.

Two hours later, at dives end, I have bone in all shapes and sizes, shells I need names put to, a hand full of small teeth and one small meg. Not bad. I am not disappointed.

Unfortunately, as with any group, you have "those" divers without a clue. I had stood aside when boarding and loading and gearing up and let them spread out and thrash about but as we approached the dive platform in the current there on the tagline was one diver, long out of the water and just in swim trunks hanging on the tagline buoy and swimming it out from the boat and drifting back on it oblivious to divers surfacing and in need of a line to hang on while removing their fins and waiting their turn on the ladder.

I tangle myself in the slack flagline as I wind it in and swim it over to my divebuddy for a quick helping hand before climbing back onboard. It is a quick surface interval and we are back in the water a short distance from our last dive but this time all eyes are on me to man the compass. They must be joking..... so far my compass usage has been banging it on the oyster shells and failing to get them open..... hmmmmm.

The viz is slightly less here than the first dive just 5 or 6 feet but more than enough for our task at hand and there seem to be less teeth in this area, again a small hand full is all I get but I note there are less bones here and searching is harder. I find a toadfish hiding in a sandy hole and I spend some time hanging small shells off of the sea urchins scattered across the gulfs bottom. There were shades of black ones and red ones and bright purple ones which look quite pretty with small pink shells dangling from their spines. There were some with gold colored soft spines and several ran away when I tried to play with them.... humphhh the nerve..... I was simply givig them some bling for their saturday night date..... no appreciation those little urchins...but it is funny to see them do their own little version of scurrying along.

I find my way out and back as my dive buddy floats in the current following behind me, sorting through the fine sand in search of teeth. We dont have a huge haul but there is enough to impress the kiddies if necessary and we pack up as we anticipate getting ashore and heading out to a good lunch, a cold drink and some searching, sorting and collecting of a different nature...all those little shops along the boulevard.... sweet......

Now I See It

...And the sea cucumber turns to the mollusk and says, "With fronds like these, who needs aneomes."
Marlin ~ Finding Nemo
The following day Becky got called into work and I went out once again. This time a young doctor from Germany was looking to get in some diving while visiting and I was tour guide.
On our trip out a pod of dolphins played in our wake and the captain slowly circled for a few minutes making a small arean of wake behind the boat for the dolphins to frolic in while we watched from the deck and drank our morning coffee. As they tired of their fun and moved off we continued on our way.

We were again hitting the City of Washington, and this time I was seeing her from stem to stern. I stepped off the dive platform with my usual grace and form and slowly slid beneath the bright blue water. As I led out we looked around. I followed the slowly deteriorating sides of the ship. Low lying metal walls with distinct breaks showing where she broke apart as they tried to raise her.

There were low jagged walls and what appear to be encrusted bits of debris or machinery with not as many hidey holes as I am used to. Fish swam freely in and out and corals and sponges were taking hold where they please.

While fish abounded, no artifacts were to be found. I fanned for a minute to see if coal lay under the sand but none showed. I would have thought I was on a Jersey wreck if not for the 45 feet of viz and 83F water temps!

And yes. With my good ole Jersey training, I followed the outline
of the ship from bow to stern and back, arriving at the anchorline just as I should be.

Our second dive was on a deeper reef called the Minnows. The reef fared better inthe deeper waters and while not in full bloom it was rich in colors and wore a healthy suppy of soft corals and sponges.


Barrel sponges and stagshorn corals were interspersed with brain corals sporting red and green christmas tree worms which love to be poked. really...they told me. Purple sea urchins were nestled in and several "quality" lobster were snuggled against the ledges. Alas there is a season for lobster here and this is not it. I pulled them out anyway...just for practice.

There were swimthroughs in the coral and portions reaching up in the water like towers of a castle dissappearing
in the sunlight.

Peppermint shrimp with their longlegs crawled about and queen angelfish swam past. A crayon box of fish small and large skittered about. But alas still no eels. No octopus either. The summer is still young. We will see.


Memorial Day Almost on the City of Washington


Poor is the nation that has no heroes.
Shameful is the nation that has them and forgets.


It is Memorial Day Weekend and while visions of Bar B Q and watermelon, hot days and clear blue water, nekkid ocean diving and good friends danced in my head, I also took time to remember. Remember those who served and those who are serving, those who returned to their homes and families and those who did not. There is a plaque on a monument..... in Tennessee I believe.... it reads....."Poor is the nation that has no heroes. Shameful is the nation that has them and forgets." I believe in that......and I believe in good times and good friends and so I plan to round out my weekend with the latter.... in Key Largo.

Becky is a good friend..... she opens her home, with its two young boys and 3lb dog to me and my 90lb shedding wonder whenever I call.... without question..... good friends are a blessing. She is also almost as good at directions as I am, but more about that later.

I arrive in the evening, a jumble of clothes, dive gear, soda and chips and we awaken the next day to clear blue skies and warm air. I told Becky I wanted to see one of the Keys wrecks.... reefs abound down there but I am missing my Jersey diving. She obliges me with plans to dive the City of Washington for me and a reef for the others. Life is good. Sometimes......

We head out with Garden Cove Divers onto flat seas and light breezes, a day filled with promise and adventure. It's always an adventure when we two get together.

Just to show how truly small the world is, there is a new captain and crew on the boat this trip and they are from NJ, Atlantic Divers I think they said. A small taste of home which I am missing. We talk Jersey diving and divers and soon we are there.

The City of Washington was an iron hulled, masted brigantine ship launched in 1877 and aquired by the Ward Lines for passenger and trade hauling between New York and Cuba.

On February 15, 1898, she was moored in Havana Harbor near the USS Maine when the Maine exploded. The City of Washington suffered some minor damage but sent out its lifeboats to rescue the crew of the Maine. The captain and crew of the Washington testified at a Naval Court Inquiry which concluded the USS Maine was destroyed by a submarine mine which was attributed to Spain and shortly after Congress declared war and thus began the Spanish American War.

She was immediately chartered by the US Army for use as a transport ship for the invasion of Cuba, and paid $450 per day, our tax dollars at work.

In late 1898, the ship returned to passenger service between New York and Cuba and was retired in 1908. She was purchased by the Luckenbach Steamship Line and refitted as a coal barge and on July 10, 1917, the City of Washington and another barge, the Seneca, were being towed by the Luckenbach 4 when all three vessels ran aground near Key Largo, Florida. The other two vessels were refloated but the City of Washington broke up and was not recovered. She now sits in approximately 40fsw, laying in a north south direction off of Key Largo and we were about to dive her.....maybe.

Becky lives and dives in the Keys, a year round wonder of warm clear tropical waters and crayola colored corals and fish. She also has a GPS and a sense of direction akin to mine. With that in mind and the vision in your head of two women who are not yet done with their conversation, giant striding off the back of the boat, you see us entering the water laughing and talking without missing a beat. We slip beneath the water still laughing and signaling as we end our conversation and begin our dive. Becks is in the lead and as I stop to peek and poke I begin to fall behind and swim to catch up. Here lies the anchor chain, still leaning propped upon the metal walls of the wreckage which is broken into groupings of low lying walls and coral groupings.

I give the chain a moment of my time and motor to catch up passing by the most gi-normous conch shell I have ever seen. The size of a basketball..... this little beauty would have given one of Barts moonsnails a run for its money in the ring. I only poked it a little....it was pretty big.

Soon the sides begin to give way to more coral and I wonder why they have been covered so much more here. Actually encased compared to the first pieces we saw. I catch up with Becky and she taps her gauges. We are in water a bit deeper than we should be and she signals up.

We are about 150 yards off the stern of the boat....we should be about 100 yards off of the bow. Hmmmm........ I tell her I am not following her anymore! She is like a bad GPS...... and we can barely stay afloat laughing. But we have plenty of gas and a compass..... Becky has her compass...and takes a heading. I wish there were mussels in Florida.... I wish we had taken her compas and smashed open the mussels and fed the fish. We should have ran a wreck reel. We would have been better off.

Becky is worse at directions than I am if that is at all possible. We looked about on the reefs, taking notice of any damage done by the winters cold spell, seeking out the inhabitants in all their color. As for the reefs, they are recovering slowly. The purples seem to be the color returning first, they are the most abundant. The fish are about, no eels and no shrimp or sea urchins but small colorful fish and the beginnings of soft corals and sponges. BUT.... the water is still getting deeper....

We once again surface and we are now about 400 yards off the stern of the boat, the boat a small dinghy in the distance. Channel markers are nearby, as are fishing boats, no doubtably bait in the water. I search the waterline for signs of a fin while I rattle off my opinion of her navigational skills..... she pees in her wetsuit she is laughing so hard. I wonder if that draws sharks too.

Let me just say.... I have NEVER once in my diving career missed the anchorline. Never once deployed my SMB. Never once had the captain begin S&R for me. I surely was taught better. And here I sit, heading for Cuba, bobbing on the surface in gamefish waters with little Miss GPS. And I pull out my marker and begin to inflate.

We turn on our backs and begin to kick towards the boat, markers flying high. By the time the boat reached us we are once again talking and laughing just as we had been when we first stepped off the dive platform. One big circle from start to finish.

Since Becky works for the dive shop, the captain and crew are convinced we did this on purpose. A test of sorts to see how they would react. How they would handle a diver emergency. We told them no..... it wasn't... but they didnt believe us and we just shook our heads and laughed as we headed out to our next stop, the Fingers just off Elbow Reef.

The Fingers are a series of linear reefs, one after the other, in rows, like fingers of a hand and you follow them like the outline of a glove from one end to the other, up one side and down the other. I led.

And for a third dive we hit a shallow reef not far from there.... and I led again....

Great day on the water, great friends, great adventures..... gotta love it. And someday.... I may even see a wreck out here..... maybe even the City of Washington.

Apprentice Day 3

...There is chamber after chamber, Legolas; hall opening out of hall, dome after dome, stair beyond stair; and still the winding paths lead on into the mountains' heart. Caves! The Caverns of Helm's Deep! Happy was the chance that drove me there! It makes me weep to leave them……-- Gimli the Dwarf from J.R.R. Tolkien's The Two Towers


I am tired of being wet all the time, I am tired of bouncing like a rubber ball as I dive and looking like it’s my first time in the water, I am tired of not getting it right.

We arrive at Orange Grove and suit up to go into the water. I have my primary light back, not that there as any fault in the one I had borrowed up til now. I have dry clothes, not that I am diving dry in my dry suit. And Orange Grove has duckweed. Nuff said.


We enter the water and slip below the blanket of tiny little plants and hover below them performing a respectable imitation of an S-Drill. Moving on down to the jumble of branches marking the front of the cave I shine my light as Lee ties in and follow on behind him to the start of the gold line.

The line wends its way along through tunnels of lacey rocks and fine silt blanketing the floor. We move on and on as we pass line markers heralding the distance we have traveled. 300, 500, 800…… and I am trim and level and diving as I should. As I know I can, as I usually do….. Life is good again.

We move along from high domed rooms to low rocky openings and turn corners and run up and down hills in a roller coaster ride of ups and downs. At one turn the rocks narrow into a long vertical passage opening up into a low wide tunnel.

We are past the 800 foot marker when we turn and make our way back out. I am leading now and stop to run my finger through a long glittering puddle of air on the cave ceiling. I shine my light from side to side taking in the colors of white walls and jagged edges, black sediments of goethite and soft fine brown silt so beautiful to look at but dangerous if stirred.
We fin along the rolling hills and berms occasionally rising up and over and accidentally flicking fin tips in the fin floor covering. But over all…… we done good.


I spend my hang time chasing after little catfish hiding in among the rocks. I am sure no one else pokes them as they get quite the shocked look on their face when I do.

As we rise above the surface of duckweed I struggle with the suction of my fins. I need some silicone spray…… and a freaking DRY dry suit….. but not much more than that.

We are calling it a day. No more dives today but the review sheets, dive logs and final test are still to be done. I have been working on mine…. Lee has not….. I stayed up and pored over the book while someone went to dinner and got his beauty rest…… I am not letting him copy off me…… well maybe… if he carries my tanks….. hmmmmm……