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2010 Florida Artificial Reef Summit
January 21-23, 2010 Hilton Cocoa Beach Oceanfront More info at 2010 Summit Web Page Call for Papers and Poster Exhibits (Due November 15) Contributed papers are being solicited for the following topics: Fisheries management and Artificial Reefs; Lessons Learned and Adaptive Management Strategies; and, Citizen Involvement in Monitoring and Reef Development. Posters will be accepted on a variety of general artificial reef-related topics. Why attend? Meet and discuss current issues, hear the latest research, and share new ideas for future projects with other members of Florida’s artificial reef community. Who will attend? Scientists, artificial reef program managers, fishery and natural resource managers, volunteer research diver organizations, and artificial reef citizen constituency organizations. Topics Addressed Synopsis of the 2007 FWC Artificial Reef Science Colloquium and the 2009 International Conference on Artificial Reefs and Artificial Habitats, marine fisheries and adaptive management, permitting … Read entire article »
Filed under: Convention, Reefs, Summit, Training, Travel, Trip Report
Surface Consumption Rate, SCR
The examples below are NOT to be used to calculate decompression dives. Do not attempt to calculate the amount of gas needed to perform decompression dives solely on the Information within this text. Technical / decompression diving requires proper training. Surface Consumption Rate, SCR. SCR is the average utilization of volume of gas, air, over time. When you know your SCR, planned depth and time of a dive, you can get a good idea on the amount of gas you will need to support the dive. Get a calculator, an 80cf aluminum cylinder filled with approx. 3000 psi of air, a water proof timer, something waterproof to record your observations on. Find an area where 33 feet of seawater may be reached. A 35 foot deep area would work best to help guide you towards staying at 33 feet for ten minutes. Once … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training
Respiratory Minute Volume, RMV
Respiratory Mimute Volume, RMV, what is it for? In the post on Surface Consumption Rate, SCR you learned how much gas you would use and/or need to support a dive to a specific depth for a specific time. With RMV, you can now identify the volume of gas you would need to support a dive and perhaps the cylinder you could use to support the planned dive. Take the rate pressure of your scuba cylinder, again for this demonstration we will use an aluminum 80. An aluminum 80, or 80AL when filled to it’s working pressure, 3000 psi will hold 80 cf of gas. The working pressure of the scuba cylinder is stamped around the neck of the cylinder. Take the cubic feet of the cylinder and divide it by the working pressure of the tank. For an 80AL filled to 3000 … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training
Mona Passage, PR Dec. 26, 2009 – Jan 2, 2010
This trip was an interesting trip. It started on Saturday December 26, 2009. The flight into San Juan, Puerto Rico was uneventful and quite fast. The weather into PR that day was around 80 degrees and the sun was shining. I have about a 5 hour wait for the shuttle to Mayaguez, a three hour ride. One van, my van and the van carrying all the dive gear left the airport at around 6pm for our first stop, the grocery store. There I search for super glue. See, while waiting at the airport, I put my new video camera into the housing to find the housing doesn’t quite work with this new camera. I discover I am only able to turn the camera on/off. No zoom, no macro, no other controls may be reached using the housing mechanism to press the neccessary … Read entire article »
Filed under: Reefs, Travel, Trip Report, Video, Videography
Blue Grotto
Sunday, December 6th, 2009. Conclude the Open Water training with the same students from Saturdyas visit to Ginnie Springs. Also one advanced student needing their Deep and Navigation to become AOW certified. Everyone did exceptional and passed all of their water skills. Blue Grotto was all ours by 1pm. Probably because it was cold outside, colder than Saturday, but getting in the water felt good when compared. The earlier crowds has silted up the place, but since I was performing a Navigation course, this helped make the course more challenging. My student is a Boy Scout, and I expected him to do well on his navigation. He did excellent, following his reciprocal back from various point to his starting point. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training
Ginnie Springs
Dec 5, 2009. A team of Open Water Divers, their instructor, Divemaster Candidate and myself, with video camera made a trip to Ginnie Springs to continue with open water training. It was a perfect day for diving. Cold outside and water temps at 72 degrees. It was warmer in the water than out. There was no one at Ginnie, except a small number of divers. Perhaps 12 divers in all and we had 7 of the 12. I figured either it was too cold for people to go diving or the Gators game that started at 4pm was the reason. Which ever, we got to dive AND listen to the game on the ride home. Great students! Here is a small clip from that day. [xr_video id=”2acc4e18627a4da29e137a89fb964469″ size=”sm”] Larry Davis … Read entire article »
Filed under: Open Water, Training, Video, Videography
Highway Cleanup
Headed out today, Saturday 21, 2009 to Little Talbot Island where volunteers with the Jacksonville Reef Research Team met to cleanup 4 miles of litter along the highway. I took the farthest point south and walked north, back towards the entrance to the park. Other teams took the north route and headed south. I was quite surprised and pleased that in the 1 mile I walked, I produced just one full bag of litter. That’s great! I believe we ended up with about 8 bags and a few other items to large to fit in the bag. Great Job everyone! Larry Davis … Read entire article »
Filed under: Events
Rainbow River Florida Drift Dive
Here is the video made of a drift dive down Rainbow River. We entered at KP hole, was shuttled upstream to drift for about 1 hour. Pretty kewl! [xr_video id=”40f27bd07cba41e8ad9c4516188e715a” size=”sm”] … Read entire article »
Filed under: Open Water, Travel, Trip Report, Videography
Crystal River, Florida Manatees
We stopped to glide outselves into the water to interact with these beautiful creatures. You can see from the video how they interact with us. [xr_video id=”c82ab39ed42f48d7abd0540998b0ebd7″ size=”sm”] … Read entire article »
Filed under: Open Water, Travel, Trip Report, Videography
Buford Springs, Florida
This dive was a side trip for the grown ups in our group. We were actually in the area to swim with the Manatees and a drift dive down Rainbow river. This was/is one of the most specatular cavern dives I’ve performed. Here is a small video of that trip. [xr_video id=”1b7685f30ce3418b8d55e5001b209906″ size=”sm”] … Read entire article »
Filed under: Adv. Open Water, Cavern, Travel, Trip Report, Video, Videography
What is my Pressure Group?
This article addresses how to calculate your Pressure Group after athe 2nd or 3rd dive. I thought this subject would be a good one. As an Instructor, one ofthe most common problems I find individuals having is calculatingthe correct Pressure Group at the end of a second or third, etc. dive. In my blogs on RDP, I showed you a little on how to use an RDP. We will now work through an exercise that will demonstrate how to correctlyidentify the pressure group you will be in at the end of your dive. Pull out the AIR RDP. The process is the same for any RDP. We will startthis subject at the end of your first dive. Table #3 Let us begin You just complete your first dive of the day and ended in a PressureGroup … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training
Cay Sal Banks, Bahamas
It is August, 2009. One World Ocean is headed for Cay Sal Banks, Bahamas for a third time. My goal this trip is to film the sharks. In 2006 the last time I visited the Cay Sal Banks one of the dive sites known as Big Hole was filled with sharks. Big Hole is the name of the Big Blue Hole that sits on the West Side of the banks. It is at this blue hole sharks are predominant. In 06′ the sharks were predominant. This year they were not. A shark was spotted at Lady’s Secret. Lady’s Secret is located on the eastern side of the banks. This shark was tagged, which may be seen on the video. Since the trip did not contain the abundance of sharks I was hoping to find, I decided to begin filming the guests and the sites we dove. Here is the … Read entire article »
Filed under: Reefs, Travel, Trip Report, Video
2010 Florida Artificial Reef Summit
2010 Florida Artificial Reef Summit January 21-23, 2010 Hilton Cocoa Beach Oceanfront More info at 2010 Summit Web Page Call for Papers and Poster Exhibits (Due November 15) Contributed papers are being solicited for the following topics: Fisheries management and Artificial Reefs; Lessons Learned and Adaptive Management Strategies; and, Citizen Involvement in Monitoring and Reef Development. Posters will be accepted on a variety of general artificial reef-related topics. Why attend? Meet and discuss current issues, hear the latest research, and share new ideas for future projects with other members of Florida’s artificial reef community. Who will attend? Scientists, artificial reef program managers, fishery and natural resource managers, volunteer research diver organizations, and artificial reef citizen constituency organizations. Topics Addressed Synopsis of the 2007 FWC Artificial Reef Science Colloquium and the 2009 International Conference on Artificial Reefs and Artificial Habitats, marine fisheries … Read entire article »
Filed under: Artificial Reefs
DEMA, Orlando Nov. 2009
I will be at DEMA Nov. 5 – 7, 2009. Thursday and Friday am, I will be participating in continued education sessions with PADI. Friday afternoon I am participating in the SDI/TDI crossover. Saturday am, concluding my ConEd sessions then onto the floor from 11am – when I walk out. Spent my first day at DEMA today Thursday November 5th. My day started at 3:15AM, cleaned up and drove to Orlando. My first seminar: Risk Management from 9am – 10am The second seminar: Survival Training from 10am – 12am (I thought the subject was survival training as in Save your butt) It was survival in the market.. I still learned something, that’s gotta be a good thing. The third seminar was an unofficial visit to a room where the subject was the extinction of the Leather back turtle. I stayed, it was interesting. They say … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training, Trip Report
Sometimes mixing techniques isn’t a good idea
What I mean in my Title is mixing processes of two different types of diving sometimes do not blend well together. During my Open Water training and all training in between OW and Instructor, I have been taught to open the valve of the tank all the way, then approx. 1/4 turn back. During my Close Circuit Rebreather, CCR rebreather training, I was taught to open the valves, just until they are open and stop. The reason for this is in an emergency, if for example the Oxygen begins to freeflow into the loop, you must address ‘the problem’ and get back on the loop. One way to stop O2 from free flowing is to turn off the O2. If you are at 180 feet, you can see the danger of your O2’s PPO spiking UP. Anyway, if the O2 valve was turned ALL … Read entire article »
Filed under: Training
Caylee Anthony – Orlando Search at Little Econ River
It was around 11:30AM, November 13, 2008 when I received the initial call asking if I would be willing to assist in a search for missing 2 year old Calyee Anthony. 3am, November 14, 2008. I wait outside a grocery stores parking lot for a friend to arrive to share a ride. The search is to be conducted in Orlando Florida’s Little Econ River. The river is dark, filled with debris, and alligators. We arrive at around 7:30am to see the site, find our spot and unload our gear. Between the time we arrived and the time we entered the water, which was around 10:20am, a number of news stations as well as curious onlookers have set themselves up along the river. Everyone was quite polite and respectful. We received our orders, if we find something, we bring it up, keep it below water … Read entire article »
Filed under: Rescue Diver