Category: Recreation

Sports and Recreation

  • Diving today

    Updated for Friday.

    Nope. Too windy today. Yesterday fog today the wind. Oh well, gives me more time to work as I have too much work to finish before I leave for Canada in five days.

    Thursday: Nope.

    It was very foggy in the morning, meaning you couldn’t see more than 20 meters at times, so our planned departure of 10:00 a.m. was not done, and the dives for today were cancelled. Well, the fog didn’t burn off until about 1:00 p.m.

    The thing is you can dive in the fog of course as it doesn’t get foggy underwater, except inside my mask 😉

    But, if you come up and don’t come up next to the boat, how will they find you, out there waving your marker tube and blowing your little whistle?

    Maybe tomorrow

  • PADI Products

    Update: Apparently PADI in the new year will require all instructors and Divemasters to have one of these gizmos. And apparently they cost about $30. How may PADI instructors are there in the world? Well thousands for sure.


    Seriously with everyone using dive computers do you think anyone would buy this eRDP? Perhaps it can be used for planning surface intervals?

    And for the Palm Pilot, their portable dive log. I don’t think there are many Palm Pilots being sold any more though?

  • Into the Blue, You Can’t Believe Everything You See in Pictures

    Lies all lies. They Photoshopped the photo below to show off his abs. The waist belt on the Halcyon BCD is supposed to be high over the waist, not low on the hips.

    I’m not big on other BCDs with their extra materials and also the cummerbund. Plus they don’t inspire too much confidence with nylon buckles etc.

    BCDs are important. If you don’t have good buoyancy control diving is difficult. I posted previously them it here at the end of the post.
    I am considering buying a Halcyon BCD and have found Halcyon to be very responsive to Emails with my many questions. I’ll put the questions and responses below in a day or two.

  • More on diving and reefs

    Update: Check out some new ways to create reefs.

    The Kuwait Dive Team which varies in membership and activity level has done many things particularly they have previously installed many mooring buoys. This is very important for the reefs. The placing of anchors from boats absolutely destroys the delicate coral which would take hundreds of years to regrow if ever. There are also companies that do reef balls like the Kuwait Reef Ball Company which I’ve not heard of until seeing their web site.

    From this page on reef ball deployments:

    “Scuba divers are the only group of humans on the planet that see, from day to day, the amount of destruction going on in our world’s oceans.”

    In fact, I honestly now eat fish, particularly local fish with a different perspective. Now that I’ve been swimming with them and know that they are overfished, it seems different. Last month seeing an actual cuttlefish in the ocean for the first time changes my perspective of it in the Chinese restaurants. Wow, so many years eating cuttlefish and not knowing what it looks like.

    Aside:
    Tide is important while diving. Very important as it makes the currents and changes the water depth here by up to two meters. You can go to EasyTide to get free tide predictions.

  • Dives 22 and 23 at Uraifjan


    Not too impressive a profile. There were four of us on the boat. Instructor with a student and I was to dive with another person. But he didn’t check his gear assuming the dive center would pack his wet suit. Well, no wet suit for him so he didn’t dive.

    So I went diving near the anchor line to just hang out near where they were doing their class. The visibility was very poor. More than a meter from the anchor line and you lose sight of it and there was also a current. So I practiced my frog kick at the bottom near the line, hovering at fixed depth, but lost sight of it at one point and then couldn’t find the line and came up. No problem not far from the boat and then back to the anchor line and down again for a bit.

    One observation is how finning into the current just to stay stationary sucks down the tank of air at least twice as fast as normal!

    Good thing I’ve been going to the gym! All that finning gives the legs a good workout. Lately I’ve been working out on the rowing machine and that seems to be more specific to the muscles used for finning.


    This dive was more interesting. Actually fun! Though many people wouldn’t say it was fun. Three of us went around the reef to the wreck which is an old cement barge on the bottom about 7 meters down. Very strong current and 1 meter visibility but floating around, practicing my improved buoyancy control gained from time in the pool. All in all I enjoyed it and so did the others.