Wreck Diving Training on the Robert Gaskin

15 01 2009

By deepstop

The first two dives of my wreck diving course in 2007 were in the St. Lawrence River near Brockville, Ontario (or, if you prefer, Alexandria Bay, New York) on the Gaskin. At only 60 feet depth, and with lots of holes in the deck through which a diver can pass, the Gaskin is great place to practice wreck penetrations.

The setup for the course was to make 6 dives, consisting of two dives on each of 3 wrecks. For the Gaskin, and the second wreck, the procedure was for each buddy pair to descend together to the bottom of the buoy line where they were met my the instructors. Each diver would pair off with an instructor and separately enter the wreck, one on the port side and one on the starboard, tying off their lines on the outside. On the first dive, it was simply a matter of laying a good taut penetration line, then reeling it in on the way back.

The instructors and safety divers stayed underwater during both dives by the students, a total of about an hour and a half. The students were spaced every 10-12 minutes, so after a surface interval of only 25 minutes my buddy Mike (an instructor in the RCMP getting his civvy certifications) and I were back in the water descending to the Gaskin once again. This time, when we were reeling back in, the instructors silted out the wreck so we had to depend on the lines for navigation. No problem.

The water temperature at 20C (68F) was cool in my 3mm wet suit and hood, but the dives were short (20 minutes and 18 minutes) and the air was warm so no problem. The maximum depth was 68 feet, which I hit on the first dive. We used Nitrox because of the short surface interval with a mix of 37% Oxygen.

In short, it was lots of fun.

http://deepstop.wordpress.com/2009/01/10/wreck-diving-training-on-the-robert-gaskin/





Diver Down – January Atlantis Divers SCUBA Show

12 01 2009

January 11th, 2009

 The January edition of Diver Down – Atlantis Divers SCUBA Show is available for your listening pleasure! Sit back, relax & enjoy as we take you to meet two Atlantis Divers staff members, we talk about diving in Costa Rica and we look at what’s new in our dive shop.

http://atlantisdivers.podbean.com/

 





Case registered against scuba diver

8 01 2009

Case registered against scuba diverRSS

Kalinga Times Correspondent

Kendrapara, Jan 5: The state forest department on Monday registered case against a scuba diver for unlawful exploration of a sunken ship off Hukitola coast on the ground that the exploration was carried out without the mandatory departmental sanction.

The exploration mission had sparked off a major controversy as nationally-acclaimed scuba diver Sabir Bux had trespassed into prohibited Gahirmatha marine sanctuary while undertaking the underwater sea voyage.

“We registered case against Bux under Sections 27 & 28 of Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 for illegal entry into the marine sanctuary besides resorting to unlawful underwater videography,” said Prasanna Kumar Behera, Divisional Forest Officer, Rajnagar Mangroves Wildlife Forest Division.

via KalingaTimes.com: Case registered against scuba diver.





HMAS Brisbane dives

5 01 2009

HMAS Brisbane dives

12:00a.m. 5th January 2009| By Rae Wilson

The scuttled HMAS Brisbane has become a major tourism draw card for the Sunshine Coast. Photo: scubaworld.com.au The Sunshine Coast dive industry has almost doubled in size in recent years as awareness of the scuttled HMAS Brisbane lying just off Mooloolaba has spread worldwide.

via HMAS Brisbane dives | General | Coast news | thedaily.com.au.





Forest dept ire over trip to sunken ship

4 01 2009

Statesman News Service

KENDRAPARA, Jan. 2: The state forest department has launched an inquiry into the scuba diving exploration of a sunken ship off Hukitola Coast on the ground that the exploration was carried out without the mandatory departmental sanction.

The scuba diver, Mr Sabir Bux, had made unlawful entry into the prohibited Gahirmatha Marine Sanctuary. “The coastal waters within the marine sanctuary are now out of bounds for such exercise because it’s the peak breeding season of Olive Ridley turtles,” said divisional forest officer, Rajnagar Mangroves (Wildlife) Forest Division, Mr Prassana Kumar Behera.

“The incident is being departmentally probed into. On the basis of probe’s findings, cases would be booked against the intruders under Section-27 of Wildlife Protection Act, 1972,” he added.
To unravel the mystery of a sunken ship, Mr Bux had, on 31 December, embarked on a mission to explore the 200 feet-long ship lying stranded near Hulitola off Bay of Bengal coast since more than a century.
Mr Bux holds both international diving license and a rescue diver card issued by the Professional Association of Diving Instructors.

The sunken ship continues to arouse awe and wonder. International tourists often prefer visiting the mid-sea spot where the ship had met its watery grave in 1875. The sunken ship finds mention in Memoirs of a Bengal civilian ~ the biographic account of John Beams, who served as the collector of Balasore and Cuttack from 1869 to 1878.

via The Statesman.





Exploring the Kaiser’s Sunken World War I Fleet | Big Blue Tech News

1 01 2009

January 1, 2009

It’s a descent into history. The remains of the German Imperial Fleet still lie on the seabed at Scapa Flow off Scotland’s Orkney Islands where the Germans scuttled their ships in 1919. The ice-cold, deep waters are a paradise for professional wreck divers.

Bulky diving cylinders, decompression equipment and diving suits: the deck of the vessel Loyal Mediator is cluttered with all the things the wreck divers need.

“Dives in Scapa Flow aren’t for beginners,” says Horst Dederichs. “Some of the warships lie fairly deep down, the water temperature is just 9 degrees Celsius (48 degrees Fahrenheit) and you can get dangerous currents at the edge of the bay.”

The 39-year-old historian and diving instructor is one of Europe’s leading experts on exploring underwater wrecks. He was the first German to explore the wreck of the Lusitania at a depth of 93 meters (305 feet) below the surface of the Irish Sea. Dederichs regards Scapa Flow as Europe’s most interesting wreck diving area. There’s no other location where you find so many ships so close together.

The destination for today’s dive is SMS Markgraf, a king class battleship with a length of 175.4 meters (570 feet) that lies upside down on the seabed 45 meters (147 feet) down.

Dederichs lets himself sink slowly into the dark green water down a cable laid from the boat. He has two diving cylinders on his back that contain Trimix, a special gas mixture of oxygen, nitrogen and helium.

The two bottles are connected via a bridge that contains two breathing regulators, a security feature for cold-water dives. In the cold, breathing regulators can freeze up and blow gas out of the cylinder. If that happens, Dederichs can block the connection and transfer his air supply to the other cylinder.

At a depth of 25 meters, the first outlines of the steel giant emerge amid the green murk, and shortly after that Dederichs has reached the hull. The ship once had a crew of 1,100. These days it’s populated mainly by spider crabs bigger than tennis balls. They scuttle off to escape the beams of the underwater lamps.

“Like Ants on a Sleeping Whale”

“Warships usually lie upside down or on their sides due to the heavy superstructures,” says Dederichs. “When you land on their mighty hull you feel like an ant exploring a sleeping whale.” Dederichs glides along the hull looking for suitable entry points.

In the light from the strong lamps, aerials come into view, then the crow’s nest becomes visible and one of the many deck guns. A frightened crab hurriedly scrambles to safety down the barrel. Suddenly the divers come across a hole in the hull. A large cod darts out as the explorers enter gingerly. Details emerge in the beam of Dederich’s lamp: rust-brown walls, bent pipes and small hand-wheels that will never be turned again. And a boot.

It’s only possible to see a few meters ahead, and if the divers make a wrong move and whirl up the fine dust-like sediment that covers the entire ship, they won’t be able to see anything for hours. That’s how long it takes for the sediment to settle again, and this far down, divers don’t have that kind of time.

Dederichs has run a cable from the entrance to the ship to guide him back outside. Too many wreck divers have lost their lives by getting lost in the labyrinth of passages in the submerged steel giants.

On June 21, 1919, SMS Markgraf was interned in the British Royal Navy base at Scapa Flow, together with 73 other ships of the Imperial German High Sea Fleet moored there under the terms of the Armistice that had ended World War I in November 1918.

The internment was to last as long as it took to decide on the fate of the German fleet. But on June 21, it became clear that the British were not prepared to release the ships. To prevent the heavily-armed ships from being seized by the victors of World War I, German Admiral Ludwig von Reuter decided to scuttle the fleet.

At his command, 59 warships sank in front of the Orkney Islands. Many of them were later raised and turned to scrap. Markgraf wasn’t spared — huge steel plates were cut from her hull and her engines were also retrieved. Parts of the wreck are as permeated as Swiss cheese, making it ideal for professional wreck divers like Dederichs.

Panic Lurks in the Confined Darkness

“Entering deep into large wrecks has little in common with normal sports diving,” says Dederichs, who has been on several thousand dives. “These dives demand vast experience and corresponding levels of training. The deep, the cold, the darkness and the confined environment frequently cause anxiety in inexperienced divers, and that often develops into panic.”

Is he ever afraid during his dives? “Down there you work like a machine. It’s good to have respect but you shouldn’t be afraid,” says Dederichs.

He advances ever deeper into the belly of the ship. It’s virtually impossible to orient oneself exactly inside this monster, he says later. He gradually glides towards the stern, past steel shelves covered in rust and sea anemones.

As he passes through the vessel, Dederichs tries to imagine what could have happened in this particular room, or what that particular lever was for. Who sat on the chair, what was his task on board? Wreck dives are a descent into the past, they’re an attempt to lift the veil of time and to enter a long-gone epoch.

One question nags at the historian: how did the reduced German crew manage to prepare the scuttling of the ship so thoroughly under the watchful eyes of the British 89 years ago? He hasn’t found a satisfactory answer. Not yet, at least.

To view the complete article: http://www.bigbluetech.net/big-blue-tech-news/2009/01/01/exploring-kaisers-sunken-world-war-fleet/





Divers find 1903 shipwreck near Block Island

25 12 2008

December 25th, 2008

 

MYSTIC, Conn.—A group of divers says it has found the wreckage of a schooner that collided with a steamship and sank in 1903 near Block Island, R.I.

Mark Munro of Griswold, Conn., said his Sound Underwater Survey group and the Baccala Wreck Divers began looking for the remains of the Jennie R. Dubois in 2002, searching a few times a year in an area that eventually stretched to 17 square miles.

The group positively identified the shipwreck in September 2007, but kept it a secret until Monday so more research could be done and others interested in the ship couldn’t claim the find, Munro said.

It was discovered about six miles southeast of Block Island in federal waters, he said.

“We were pretty elated,” Munro said Tuesday. “It was one of those projects that you were starting to wonder if you were really going to solve the mystery of what happened.”

The 2,227-ton, five-masted schooner, which was launched only 19 months before the collision, was named after the wife of a Rhode Island Supreme Court justice who owned stock in the company that built the ship, Holmes Shipbuilding Co. of Mystic.

Munro said the vessel, which cost $100,000 to build, was the largest ever built on Connecticut’s Mystic River. Jennie Dubois christened her namesake ship with a bottle of wine on Feb. 11, 1902, in a ceremony that attracted 6,000 people, Munro said.

The Jennie R. Dubois went down on Sept. 5, 1903, after colliding with the steamship Schoenfels in dense fog about seven miles southeast of Block Island. All 11 men aboard were rescued, Munro said.

A lot of people had looked for the wreckage over the years. Munro said it was difficult to find because the Army Corps of Engineers blasted the wreckage with dynamite in 1903 so it wouldn’t be a hazard to other ships.

“They were looking for something that would look like a schooner,” Munro said. “In this case, it was not what you would typically see at the bottom. It was spread out.”

Munro and his fellow divers were able to identify the shipwreck by its anchors, size and location, he said. They researched local newspapers, examined the national archives in Washington, looked at Mystic Seaport records and talked with Block Island residents.

Members of Sound Underwater Survey and the Baccala Wreck Divers plan to present their findings at the Mystic Yachting Center on Feb. 11, the 107th anniversary of the Jennie R. Dubois’ launch.

To view the complete article: http://www.bigbluetech.net/big-blue-tech-news/2008/12/24/divers-find-1903-shipwreck-block-island/