It's taken me a few days to get around to blogging about the diving last weekend. I was back at Stoney Cove to do my advanced open water, dry suit and nitrox specialities. That meant five dives (all in a dry suit), one of which was deep, one navigation and the other nitrox (although we actually dived two on nitrox)....
Saturday's dive one was a disaaaaassssster dahhhhhrling! (anyone watch Strictly?).... despite 8k on my belt and 2k on each ankle, and an initial weight check that seemed fine I really struggled to get down. Once down there, I was all over the place. I did a passable fin pivot and hover but the rest of the dive saw me up and down like a yo-yo. I couldn't get the hang of the shoulder dump, which wasn't venting automatically as well as it could have, and it was almost a relief to surface.
Once at surface the scuba unit removal went ok, but the weight belt removal (my favourite.... not) went only marginally better than during the open water. I passed becouse my technique was spot on, but once again the weights slipped along the belt making it impossible to get the thing redone up.
I almost gave up there and then, but the instructors were so supportive and when it came to the second dive of the day I took all their advice in, used air in the dry suit to prevent squeeze and modified my buoyancy slightly with the BCD. And I put some extra weight on. Success!! It was fantastic, and I managed to almost look like a real diver! LOL
The third dive of the day saw three very cold students (one fell out due to mild hypothermia) - and in my case, one student with feet as wet as an otter's pocket - get back in for the navigation dive. I'd been diligently practising my square in the car park with right hand turns, and the buggers made me do left hand turns under water! I'm sure it was more luck than judgement that I got back to where I started, and I spent the rest of the dive practising fin pivots while waiting for the others to do their bit.
After a great curry and final adventure playground assault course at the pub, I headed to bed shattered but looking forward to getting Sunday out of the way.
Sunday morning arrived cold and damp. There were definitely moments of "what am I doing here?" as we kitted up, but I'd looked forward to the deep dive for ages and I wasn't disappointed! We took a nice swim down to 25 metres, and the only issue was sitting on my knees doing the tasks in the cold for so long (I was just getting twinges of cramp when we set off again). But it was fascinating to see the loss of colour from the charts, the affects of the cold and depth on the timed task, the water bottle trick and the cracked egg.
After a safety stop we surfaced, and that's when it all got a bit distressing. The rescue boat was out to a diver who had got into trouble by the far side of the lake, and police and emergency services (including an air ambulance were swiftly at the scene). They were doing CPR for 90 minutes, and to be honest it looked pretty serious. I still don't know the outcome, but my thoughts and prayers are still with that diver and their family today.
With one dive left to do, it was with some trepidation that me and my buddy went back in for the nitrox dive. But once in I was so glad I'd overcome that nagging doubt about going back in. Yes I was cold. Yes I was wet (despite some last minute repairs, the dry suit was still leaking at the boots) and yes I was tired after the surface swim to the buoy. But descending down the line was so much less stressful with a computer to track the depth we were at. By this time there was just the two of us, as the other two students didn't make the descent.
A familiar swim around the Staingarth, and then we headed out to Defiant, the sunken tug boat, before finding our way in the dark and poor vis to the Wessex (awesome DM and his navigation skills!). We kept swimming and before I knew it we popped up at the surface right by the slipway!
It's been an awesome couple of months - and I am sad it's the end of the season. But I've got Costa Rica next month, where I will finally be able to write something other than "Location: Stoney Cove" in my logbook, and I'm already thinking about the courses and trips I can do next year...
Just one note to self, might need a second job to help pay for it all! Hope you've enjoyed following my journey so far.
:-)

Thursday, 25 November 2010
Friday, 19 November 2010
Getting ready to bump into Nessie again

Off up to Stoney Cove again tonight for the advanced open water course - that's me at the back with Nessie last time - although I much prefer to think of it as 'adventure diving with the minimal skills I currently possess'!
Just as last time, I'm feeling pretty nervous about the whole thing as it has only been four weeks since the open water course, and I've only had the one pool session in a dry suit since then! Got three new diving buddies on the course this weekend and they are all more experienced than me I think, so I'm hoping that I will be able to keep up with everyone and manage the dives successfully.
Some big pluses this weekend are that it's not all totally new to me, that I don't have to do mask clearance or removal in the freezing water and that I'm diving in a (hopefully) dry suit and on enriched air nitrox, having passed the test with 84% the other night (although the calculations and table use need some refining!).
On the plus side, if I manage the deep dive without it all going pear shaped and I don't end up with a suit full of air at the surface hanging by my feet after a rapid uncontrolled ascent, I'm all set for the deeper dives in Costa Rica next month, where it will be blue, and warm and clear and fun!!!
This I fear will be my mantra this weekend whenever it seems a bit too cold, wet and miserable for me......"Costa Rica, Costa Rica, Costa Rica...."
Adios and I'll let you know how I get on when I get back!
Thursday, 18 November 2010
Dry suit diving has its drawbacks
Saturday night saw me in the pool practising dry suit skills in preparation for the advanced open water course this weekend. It all started quite well, until the buddy check when I realised at "W" that I'd kitted up minus my weight belt! Doh!
Once in the water things started pretty good - the fin pivot and hover went well but my low pressure inflator hose would not come off the suit. I tried. The instructor tried. The DM tried. Moving on to the next skill - filling me up with air and trying to right myself before the surface - it became apparent that the suit wasn't getting any air in, and I kept landing on my back at the bottom of the pool!
Quick surface and it became clear it was locked halfway on, halfway off. Without thinking, the instructor asked me to take my BCD off at surface and get that skill out of the way, so I undid all the releases and slipped one arm out, and immediately hit on a snag..... a still attached inflator hose! LOL
Eventually after much pushing and pulling - leaving me with a fair few pinch marks on my chest - the DM freed the hose and it worked like a dream from then on in. I spent the rest of the session practising buoyancy and fin strokes and came out a little less stressed about diving Stoney Cove in a dry suit than I was in the moments before I went in!
Once in the water things started pretty good - the fin pivot and hover went well but my low pressure inflator hose would not come off the suit. I tried. The instructor tried. The DM tried. Moving on to the next skill - filling me up with air and trying to right myself before the surface - it became apparent that the suit wasn't getting any air in, and I kept landing on my back at the bottom of the pool!
Quick surface and it became clear it was locked halfway on, halfway off. Without thinking, the instructor asked me to take my BCD off at surface and get that skill out of the way, so I undid all the releases and slipped one arm out, and immediately hit on a snag..... a still attached inflator hose! LOL
Eventually after much pushing and pulling - leaving me with a fair few pinch marks on my chest - the DM freed the hose and it worked like a dream from then on in. I spent the rest of the session practising buoyancy and fin strokes and came out a little less stressed about diving Stoney Cove in a dry suit than I was in the moments before I went in!
Friday, 12 November 2010
Totally inspiring!
Ignoring the American language around disability, this film is so inspiring. I've been twitchy and nervous about doing my dry suit course this week and this has put it all into perspective for me. Who cares if my buoyancy isn't perfect first time? Who cares if I screw up every now and then - I'm still a beginner! These guys are awesome:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/40005787#40005787
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/40005787#40005787
Friday, 5 November 2010
Adventure dives - next up dry suit
I'm somewhat relieved to discover that I'm not the only learner diver to struggle with buoyancy, as my brother – who is training for his Divemaster and headed to Stoney Cove this weekend with a group of open water students – is finding that their current crop, by all accounts, have not quite mastered the art of BCD control!
This has been weighing on my mind since being seduced into taking the advanced open water course, with the prospect of taking the dry suit course in order to do it without freezing to death! I've been reading the section on dry suits in preparation for next week's knowledge review and am somewhat amused to find that I might have to screw myself into a ball, while launching into a backwards roll (or was it forwards?)... either way I'd pay good money to be able to see myself do that little trick! :-)
Alternatively, I might have a suit malfunction and blow up like Mr Staypuft while hurtling to the surface, or my boots might fill with air forcing me into an upside down position..
...................... Yea gads, what on earth have I signed up for?
This has been weighing on my mind since being seduced into taking the advanced open water course, with the prospect of taking the dry suit course in order to do it without freezing to death! I've been reading the section on dry suits in preparation for next week's knowledge review and am somewhat amused to find that I might have to screw myself into a ball, while launching into a backwards roll (or was it forwards?)... either way I'd pay good money to be able to see myself do that little trick! :-)
Alternatively, I might have a suit malfunction and blow up like Mr Staypuft while hurtling to the surface, or my boots might fill with air forcing me into an upside down position..

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