My logged dives #1332 - 1335 I was referred to a someone in Al Ain who wants to help his kids with their diving. A long-time diver himself, Jean-Yves has dived a lot with his son Alexandre, who certified when he was 12. Now he is 15 and Jean-Yves asked me to refresh his skills and help with securing his adult card. PADI has recently introduced a 're-activate' program which will soon replace the Scuba Review and refresher concepts, so I agreed to meet Alexandre at the pool and go through the 25 steps of confined-water scuba review with him using the re-activate protocol which will show the date of Alexandre's most recent work with a PADI instructor on his adult card replacement. The process can include an optional dive, and this is what gave us the excuse to yesterday drive to Dibba and roll up at Blue Planet Diving at 11:30 in the morning (8 a.m. departure from Al Ain for us). BPD are quite flexible with their schedule and ideal for basing yourself on the beach and diving on short boat rides, in case you have a family along for a beach outing. That was the plan though in the end no one from our families joined us so it was just Jean-Yves and Alexandre and I.
I did three dives on Dibba Rock and the Mevels did two. Visibility is usually best earlier in the day and I was quite excited when on the first dive we found schools of colorful fish while exploring the aquarium at the 5 meter mooring line and then found barracudas schooling off the north face of the rock. I was following some large barracuda around at close quarters when I noticed my GoPro wasn't blinking in video mode. In fact it was reporting no SD card. I almost knocked my face mask loose slapping my forehead, thinking I'd left the SD card in my computer back home, but after the dive I found it was just improperly inserted. Still with no working camera I was not totally disappointed when we didn't find the 20 sharks Alla had seen in the shallows the day before, nor that I again was unable to find the rays in the sand where Slava and Emad know where to go but I don't. It was a little tedious working across the shallows to deep water near the east mooring, but we enjoyed the dive, we saw a flounder, cuttlefish, morays, lionfish, and more barracudas, and my buddies did very well on getting back in the water. When we walked out from the first dive, Alla told us the next one was in 15 minutes and said if we were going, get ready. I said let's go, but then I was the only one with a full 5 mm wetsuit. Jean Yves was cold from 23 degree water and needed a lunch break, and his son is a growing lad easily swayed by the prospect of something to eat. So I quickly changed my tank and joined the boat and was asked to show a nice Finnish couple around. They were no trouble, all they had to do was follow me, and me to check back on them now and then, and the barracudas were still there and the vis still reasonably clear, and most of the video is from this dive. Again back on shore I quickly switched tanks for a third dive, which the Mevel boys were now ready for. But it was 4:15 when went in down the east mooring so we descended into water that was now in the shadow of the rock with light diffused from the angle of the sun. Jean-Yves had informed me that he and Alexandre were going to practice sharing air with the secondary 2nd stage on the low pressure inflater of his BCD, but just as they were starting a turtle came up at me and I operated my GoPro with one hand while digging my reef hook out of my bcd pocket so could make some noise, which you can hear in the video. The turtle led me to some barracuda and after that it was a barracuda dive again. I had a lot of fun on these three dives. Congrats to Alexandre on his adult re-activated card, and thanks to him and Jean-Yves for getting me off my derrière, and Alla and Slava at BPD for the great day out as usual.
My logged dives #1328 and 1331 Bobbi and I returned from Koh Lanta, Thailand on a flight at 3 pm on Dec 16 and 9 hours later, at about that time in the morning local time Dec 17, we were grabbing our baggage off the carousel at Abu Dhabi airport. We got a cab into town where we had left our car in one of the new Mawaqaf garages and drove it home to Al Ain where we arrived at 6:30 a.m. and slept for a few hours. When we awoke we organized things there for arrival of Glenn and his wife Gulya and their daughter Gwenny (the 3 G's we call them) in Dubai late that night, where they caught a cab to our place. Bobbi had fixed Glenn's favorite burritos so we had an after-midnight dinner and all got to bed around 4 a.m. By morning Dec 18. I had developed a throbbing toothache and went to the dentist to have it sorted, but made it home in time with enough pain killers for us to get the family on the road by 2 pm for the drive to Dibba to meet Joe and Zach Wolfer at Blue Planet Diving. We had chosen to go there for the Wolfer's open water dive course because of the G's having day-long access to the beach and everyone being able to dive whenever they chose to. BPD were diving on Dibba Rock at 9:30 a.m. each morning, then sending the boat to Inchcape at 11:30, and doing an afternoon dive once the boat returned.
I sometimes meet my dive students for the first time when we arrive at the dive center and that was the case with the Wolfers when we met them at BPD Thursday evening. They turned out to be a fit and active father-son team, and I could tell as they engaged with equipment assembly and buddy check that they had prepared the academics well. The idea was to get them familiar enough with the gear that evening that they would be able to put it on quickly and get in the water first thing at 8:00 a.m. next day. We would attempt to get through module 1 confined water, which I briefed thoroughly in a dry-run dress rehearsal, so we could perhaps make the 9:30 dive on Dibba Rock. I find the old version of the PADI o/w course to be most convenient for training divers when timing is a factor. There is as yet no solid implementation date for the new course, but I try to integrate skills from the new course into the old one as much as I can, but keep to the old standards as we go.
Day 1, Dec 19, 2014
Our plan worked, we were in the "confined" shallow water off the beach by 8:30, out by 9:15, and we were on the boat at 9:30 for a first dive on Dibba Rock. We dropped into the Aquarium down the 5 meter mooring line on the west shoulder of the rock and found vis to be fair despite lots of particulate matter in the water. The Aquarium was aswirl with the usual fishes, including the school of banner fish that lead off my video, and a scorpion fish hanging out on a nearby rock, hoping to go un-noticed. Pushing down toward the back side we found hulking barracuda, and in the shallows I got to see the turtle I had missed earlier on the wall. On our first dive Zach was first to go low on air so we ascended and got him onto the boat ok, and Joe and I returned to see if we could find any sharks. We went as far as the 8 meter line on the east side of the rock and then turned back to the check out the wall. It was pleasant diving with lots of fish life to entertain us, but we didn't see any sharks.
Back ashore I worked with Joe and Zach on confined water #2. By the time we needed to do module #3 the tide had gone out and brown water was washing in from the sea, so we did that module in the pool, which was not too cold for me in a 5 mm wetsuit, and the Wolfers seemed fine in their 3-4-5's from BPD (5 mm at the core and 3 and 4 on the arms and legs).
Emad, leading another group on the morning dive, had told us he had found some huge sting rays in the sand beyond that 8 meter mooring line, so we decided to look there on our next dive, which was down the 8 meter line so we could go west with the current on the incoming tide. We looked in the sand where we did our o/w dive #2 skills and up the reef but found nothing big there, nothing noteworthy apart from some pipe fish. As my students consumed their air we rose on the reef and eventually tried to push into the shallows against some stiff back-surge. We paused there and came up on alternate air source (a required skill for the old version o/w dive #2). Bobbi and Glenn on the Inchcape wreck
Meanwhile Bobbi and Glenn had gone out at 11:30 to the Inchcape.
Here's Glenn's video of the same dive
Day 2, Saturday Dec 20
Our second glorious weekend day started as had the day before, with the Wolfers and me at the dive center before the owners arrived to get into the water as quickly as possible and do confined water modules 4 and 5 in the calm clear waters off the BPD facility, protected by the jetty there. Emad was back on Saturday with his dual side-mounts (I never asked him why he packed those two six shooters on dives to just 15 meters, though I assume it was for balance or fine-tuning his kit). At the briefing I asked where the sting rays were exactly, and as Bobbi and Glenn were joining on this 9:30 a.m. dive, we all decided to follow Emad (who amiably agreed to lead us to the sand where the rays were). We started the dive in the Aquarium on the west mooring but quickly pushed on past the barracuda to the deep side of the rock. Emad was leading at a fast clip in order to reach the sand at the far east end of the dive site. At 12-13 meters we found the layer of murky brown water, and the sharks were right there today. I saw the first one pop out from underneath the haze but he popped back before I could get him on my GoPro. But Zach was alerted and he and I saw the next two who were darting along just beneath the brown haze layer. Again I couldn't capture them on video so we continued to follow Emad who was focused on showing his student critters on the reef and whom I don't believe saw the sharks (Zach and I were the only lucky ones on this trip out). Nearing the sand patch where we would look for rays Emad stopped to do some skills with his student and I had mine deflate their BCDs, do mask clears, and then orally inflate to re-establish neutral buoyancy. But we had been pushing hard to reach that point, we were at 13 meters depth, and my students' air was running low, so we left Emad there (who did not find rays this trip in any event) and followed the reef up. Air got critical and we had to ascended off the reef to 5 meters where we practiced hovering for 3 minutes in the green without visual reference, a tricky skill which the Wolfer's did well on, for beginners, until it was time to surface.
Final CERTIFICATION dive for Joe and Zach Wolfer, newly qualified PADI o/w divers
We got to relax while waiting for our final dive, and then it was just Joe, Zach, and me on the boat along with one Russian-speaking snorkeler. We started again, due to current, at the 8 meter line, though current was almost nil, not always the case on Dibba Rock. I took Joe down the line first and ascended on a controlled emergency swimming ascent (CESA). This is a difficult maneuver for students, many of whom need to do it twice to (slap forehead) get it right. Zach joined us at the surface and did his and then I aimed us into the sand over a pair of sideways-oriented batfish. Visibility was very poor, so we did mask removal/replacement and a compass heading out west and back to the east to regain our sand patch. Both divers had over 100 bar so I decided to take us into the sand at 13 meters to look for the rays, but it was a shot in the dark for us, vis was so poor, and we were on compass the whole way. Even back on the reef vis was not much better, though it improved the higher up we ascended. With my divers down to 50 bar I led us to the shallows where we encountered large schools of barracuda. These entertained us as we finished out our air, and they were a great way to polish off an open water dive course.
Wed 10-Dec-14 - first 2 Ko Lanta dives with Dive and Relax on Koh Haa. My dives #1318-9
Thu 11-Dec-14 -two dives with Dive and Relax on Koh Bida Nok, my dives #1320-21
Fri 12-Dec-14 2 dives with Dive and Relax on long trip to Hin Muang and Hin Daeng, my dives #1322-23
Sat 13-Dec-14 2 dives with Dive and Relax on the new wreck the Klet Kaew and Koh Bida Noi, my dives #1324-25
Sun 14-Dec-14 we went with Palm Divers to Hin Daeng and Ko Haa, my dives #1326-27
Details and impressions ...
We start with our Sat 13-Dec-14 dive on the new wreck the Klet Kaew
(waiting for it to register on YouTube)
More videos will be posted as we edit them
Koh Lanta has been on our bucket list – from its own websites and reports of
other divers it seems superb. Our FB friends even were posting videos
from their recent encounters with mantas on Hin Muong. For us, as
sometimes happens but sometimes not (we do get very, very lucky
sometimes :-) we were not lucky this time.
Koh Lanta is in that circle of great diving
starting from Havelock Island in the Andamans going southeast to the
Similan Islands, further SE to Phuket, east to Kho Phi Phi and nearby Koh
Lanta, south to Lankawi in Malaysia, and on around back west to Pulau
Wei on the north coast of Aceh, Indonesia.
As in Pulau Wei earlier, I would rate KL diving very good but not excellent.
For the price, I would say that PW was the better bargain (unless you
see mantas on KL, and then it's worth whatever you pay). But if you
don't see mantas, or in retrospect didn't see them, then KL is quite
expensive by comparison for similar diving. A day of diving can cost
4000 bhat, or 5000 for the distant dive sites (with park fees and
fuel surchages). In PW it's much less.
But after hours, those long
overnight surface intervals, things are much more interesting in KL
than in PW. KL is a laid back place, not crazy like KPP (though we've
never been there, but Leonardo di Capio apparently oversold that
one). There is plenty to do and eat and drink on Long Beach at KL,
sunset happy hours being almost dangerous. We certainly enjoyed
ourselves on KL, enjoyed the diving as well, relaxed very well in our
beach bungalows (once we got ourselves in a room away from the reggae
bar). There were no such activities on PW except at the dive center.
It's very quiet, very peaceful on PW, with the option of excellent
shore diving where you can just take a tank, wade into the water, and guide yourself.
From North Beach at KL you can see the Phi Phi islands, and the dive shops on KL go there, though our diving tended to focus on just three areas, the Bida Islands, the scenic rock pedestals of Kho Haa to the west, and the deep reefs of Hin Muong and Hin Daeng less than an hour past Kho Haa, assuming good weather.
We were not there in good weather. There was a storm (Ruby) hammering the
Philippines when we were there and on our last day, our last boat
ride from Hin Daeng to Ko Haa, just that stretch between the two dive sites, normally half an hour apart, took almost three hours beating slowly
against the waves, Blue Planet catamaran unable to plane.
On our earlier days in the area, the beach weather was great,
plenty of sunshine and balmy breezes, but these translated to winds and waves at sea that we were hardly aware of, but those who
knew local conditions could somehow sense, so that the second
promised dive sites almost never materialized, and we were forced to
shelter in the same spots we had dived the first dive, but to avoid repetition we would
go left instead of right this time. The diving was always good mind
you, but other dive boats seemed under the same constraints, so the
sites were crowded, and even first in from our boat usually dropped
down on a reef spewing bubbles from divers passing underneath.
As we often do, we chose our dive center based on those who
answered emails. For KL the best correspondent was far and away
Cameron at http://diveandRelax.com. His outfit was professional and
friendly and his dive guides very competent. Unfortunately, they only
did Hin Muong trips twice a week on Tuesdays and Fridays. HM was
where the mantas were, but they hadn't seen any there in a couple of
weeks anyway, so for us it probably didn't matter that we could
only go there with them on the Friday. Still, we would like to have
dived there our first day, Tuesday. We landed in Krabi on a Monday afternoon
and had read it was possible to reach KL that evening, and we saw
kiosks at the airport offering to take us there, but Cameron required
a significant deposit in order to book space on the dive next day. He
said we would have to be at the dive center by 5 or latest 6 pm that
evening to check in for the dive next morning, and tailbacks at the
ferry landings made that an iffy proposition, which meant if we
couldn't get to DiveandRelax within three hours of our plane landing
at Krabi, we might lose our deposit, which made gambling on the
Hin Muong trip on Tuesday a risk. When we eventually met Cameron we had the impression he might be flexible on deposits in case you couldn't make your dive due to ferry hassles, but we had no way of telling by email.
So we opted to relax on arrival and overnight in Krabi instead
of rushing to Koh Lanta that evening. Bobbi had booked a room on Ao
Nang beach, one of the most popular in Krabi, but far from the
airport. Once we reached there we were happy with the ambiance and
sunset happy hour from the beach, but after dark and next morning we
realized we could have been on Kuta Beach or Waikiki, so we were happier still to
get away from there next morning and move on to Koh Lanta.
For those who need to know, which is anyone who lands in Krabi
with little sense of how to get about, there are at this writing two
ways to get to KL. You can take a large ferry which leaves Krabi
somewhere and arrives at Sela Dan on KL. The only catch is it goes on
a set schedule each day which you have to get up for. I don't know more about it than that because
we opted for the mini-bus each way. These pick you up at your hotel,
with pickups hourly or half-hourly, and they take you where you have booked. In our case some passengers were going to Phuket etc. We
couldn't figure out how that was going to work until we saw they took
us to a station where they had passengers transfer to other
destinations. We were put on a KL van leaving right away that took us
to another transfer point just by the harbor in the center of Krabi
town. Again we changed vans but this one took us south a half hour or
so to the first ferry landing. Here we waited until one of the two
ferries plying back and forth here arrived at our pier and had space
to take on our van. We didn't have to wait long.
On the other side we drove on a few km and repeated the process at
another ferry landing taking us to Sela Dan, the port town on Ko Lanta. We noticed they were
building a bridge here so one day soon this second ferry crossing
will be eliminated, and eventually most likely the first one as well.
In Sela Dan just after the ferry landing the van stopped and we
were again ordered out. We tried to claim that we had booked
transport to our hotel but in fact we didn't know what we had booked,
so the van driver prevailed. Fortunately there was a tuk tuk there
whose driver offered to take us to Palm Beach Resort just a few km up
the one main road on that part of the island, and then up a side
street to Long Beach, where our hotel was.
Our first night there we were so sleepy that we had no trouble
falling into a trance after discovering the happy hour sunset place
(Sen's) and enjoying a few Changs over Thai food at a nearby street
restaurant. But the following night we were more moderate in what we
imbibed and not so sleepy, and we were kept awake by a steady base
beat that went on and off till three a.m. We suspected a nearby rave
party on the beach, but when the same repeated the following night,
and us having to get up at 6 a.m. for our Hin Muong trip Friday morning,
we investigated and discovered our local bar was to blame. We met
another person diving with the same company who also stayed at our
place and she told us she had be given the room behind the bar and
had moved after one night. So the hotel owners, as sweet as they
were, knew about the problem, and they found a place a few bungalows
further away for us, and we slept like babies after that, ten hours a
night some nights, but that's the business, where you move people
into rooms others have not been able to sleep in, and see what
happens. In the end we were very happy with the Palm Beach Resort
bungalows, but not when waking up in the middle of our first nights
there.
We were there to dive, and we were also happy with Dive-and-relax,
but again the industry has come a far cry from what it used to be.
Dive operators these days will get complaints from people like me who
think they should have pushed a little closer to the edge to dive
places that might have been more interesting or that I might have
dived differently if left to my own devices, but then again we'll
never know if that would have made any difference. And they also have
to cater to those who might get seasick or whose skill levels might
put them in difficulty if they encounter currents or anything verging
on challenging conditions. The result is an experience that the
majority of customers seem to embrace, since they may have been only
a few days ago on a dive course, or haven't been diving for a couple
of years, and I can understand that it's best to be conservative and
cater to the majority and dive safely every dive day, minimizing risk
of incident let alone accident. This also means being sure that every
diver is closely monitored at all times and again, I can't blame
operators for doing that.
Problems will inevitably arise when divers are left on their own.
Bobbi and I were allowed to go free in the Maldives once, and we came
to a current we couldn't go back on, so we decided to go with it, and it
took us clear across a channel to another island. Fortunately, we
were carrying an SMB, and the dive boat figured out what happened and
came looking for us. Opportunities to deal with such situations make the most interesting diving for advanced divers, but as more people get into
the sport, I can understand that dive operators prefer that
everything is controlled to plan. It's the way it has to be, and we
are lucky that in UAE where we usually dive, that the community of
divers is such that the regular divers normally dive freely and
monitor conditions according to their skill level. Somehow this
results in safe diving as well, and is the norm we are used to in the context of UAE
diving.
Our first day in Koh Lanta, the Tuesday, we visited the dive shop after arrival that afternoon, and left our gear there.
The next morning, Wednesday, we were picked up promptly at 8:10 and
taken to Castaway resort for a routine which included a quick cup of
coffee, a thorough and friendly briefing each morning (a good touch),
a chance to use the bathroom, assembly on the beach, and then walk along the beach to the boat pickup point, where we got aboard and found our
equipment assembled (beforehand by our dive guide) and in the place
we had been told it would be, so we would sit opposite it.
Our first day the trip was to Koh Haa, a picturesque collection of
islands about half hour or 45 min. boat ride from the beach where the
dive center was. We were going to dive one of the islands at KH and
do the second dive on another, but on arrival we found that sea
conditions were such that the dive plan had to be changed from
something other than we had been briefed, since the wind was stronger
than expected and the ocean more wavy. As was often the case other
boats diving there that day were reacting to the same conditions and
so the boats clustered in the lee of the island and everyone in the
area did both dives from the same spot, one to the right to visit the
caves, and the other to the left to see the reef in that direction.
No complaints really, both dives were superb, reasonably clear, lots
of interesting things to see in the water, and Chris the dive guide
was excellent and personable. There was only one problem, which was
that we had been teamed with a diver whose air consumption was twice
ours. In our videos we can see him kicking constantly to control his
buoyancy, something we do with lung volume. At 45 min into the dive
he was at 50 bar, we had to turn around, and all go shallow, while
Bobbi and I were still over 100 bar. We felt this compromised our diving
but now that we have been back there we realize it probably didn't
make all that much difference. Still we mentioned it to Cameron who
explained that of course they didn't know who would be compatible
first day, fair enough.
Next day Cameron provided the two of us our own guide, named Kla,
who was an experienced and beatifically polite local instructor. We
went to Bida islands that second day, a pair of islands next over from
Koh Haa. Another boat was going to Bida and another site just north
of there in the Phi Phi chain. We had requested to be on that one but agreed in
advance to accept wherever they decided we should go since they knew
the sites, we didn't. The plan was to do the first dive on Bida Nok,
or north, and the second on Bida Nai, or south. But again when we
arrived we were told wind and waves would not allow us to execute
that plan and so we would dive from a sheltered spot in the lee of
Bida Nok, start with wall on our left, and turn to return to the
boat. For our second dive we would move a little further north and
dive wall on the left down to the initial drop in. The plan was not
what we had hoped but again the dives did not disappoint. For our
introduction to diving Koh Lanta we were having reasonable vis, mild
to nil current, and turtles, scorpion fish, lion fish, nudibrachs,
and schools of snappers, beautiful, relaxed diving.
The following day was Friday, time for the dive we were looking
forward to. On this day Diveandrelax was going further afield to HM
and HD.
I'm writing this in the car on a long journey home from Khor
Fakkan. We were there diving with Scuba 2000 run by old friend and
sometimes border policeman Hassan, whom we know from long ago as
owner of a dive shop we used to use repeatedly many years ago. We
stopped only because our interests pointed north to Musandam, but
difficulties crossing into Oman caught up with me the past 6 weeks so
I've been prevented going there. Accordingly I discovered some very
nice dive outfits south of the border, Blue Planet Divers where we
were two weeks ago, and now a return to Scuba 2000, which is just as
restful as it always was.
The five hour drive gave me plenty of time to log our dives. We were
joined late yesterday evening by David Muirhead and Peter Trollope, both
friends from Al Ain. We had nightcaps at Scuba 2000 and went to bed, to be joined
next morning by two big-camera guys we knew from Nomad, Michel and
Chris just driven down from Dubai.
We were told Michel and Chris were hoping to do a deep dive on the
Inchcape 1, the one near Aqa'a beach, a 30 meter challenge for
advanced open water student divers, but too redundant for their
instructors. Fortunately there was an Inchcape 2 sunk to make a dive
site at 22 meters near Martini Rock, off the newly expanded KF port.
This dive is similar in scale and in sea critters to the almost
identical wreck to the north, but not so deep, and so we had the
possibility of combining it with a fin along the bottom to the shore.
Michel and Chris were ok with that, and we let them choose the second
dive site.
The dive on the wreck was quite nice. Sea life seems to be bouncing back all along the coast after the double whammy several years ago of cyclone Gonu and the 6 month red tide, plus as in the case of the sites of Khor Fakkan, the silting from all the harbor works, and over-diving by people who on YouTube can be seen cutting off coral souvenirs on Martini Rock and stuffing them in their BCD pockets. So we weren't sure what to expect, which is nice when what you find exceeds expectations.
On these wrecks I always like to drop to the sand and see what's under the nose, stern, and gunwales. The Inchcape 2 lies in a NW/SE direction with its nose in the NW position. It's tilting toward the SW so on the NE edge animals can get under the edge that's slightly off the bottom. Here we found interesting creatures, in one tableau a pair of small crocodile fish in the sand and a pair of green morays just behind them, lion fish decorating the way in, and scorpion fish sitting unobtrusively in the sand just outside the wreck. Rounding the bow at the NW we found more morays and scorpion fish, and so it went as we circled to the stern and came up to the deck, where there were nudibranchs, snails with glistening smooth mottled shells, fine glass shrimp in the tires, more morays, and huge puffer fish lurking in the companionways.
About 25 min into the dive with still 150 bar in our tanks, Dave,
Peter, and Bobbi and I finned across the sand where I had told
everyone to be on the lookout for jaw fish, what David calls
whop-a-moles. We had failed to see them since Gonu and the red tide, so
Bobbi and I didn't have great expectations, and when we came in site
of the rock wall, and went back to look for them, we didn't go far
enough back. But David and Peter had seen more than one, and we were glad
to hear they were there since they were a plus feature of our
Inchcape 2 dives.
We ended in the rocks on the wall, heading into the shallows after
an hour diving. It was comfortable diving with more nudibranchs,
scorpion fish and morays, including one balled up in the sand looking
almost like a snake that poked out its head and almost hissed at us
as slithered under a rock, and and we ended by coming on a flounder
which only ruffled its fins when I scratched it no matter how close I
got with my GoPro.
Back on the boat we noticed it was December by the chill wind
while we searched for sunbeams to warm us up. We chilled for an hour
and then went to Sharq island for a dive that, if you start on the
south side, can be done either wall on your right or wall on your
left. We planned wall-on-the-right but when we went down about 9
meters, we all headed out wall-on-our-left to get more depth than
that. At some point passing 10 meters I noticed David and Peter
heading up the reef to head back the planned way, but Bobbi and I
were beckoned by the clarity of vis at depth and the shoals of
snappers schooling there, not to mention the prospect of finding rays
in the sand (no such luck). Heading north into the sand at the end of
the reef we found more rocks appear in the gloom ahead, and perched
at the top of one of those was a honeycomb moray who left his perch
and rippled along the reef looking for shelter, putting on a great
performance for our cameras in the process.
On the way back we crossed paths with Michel and Chris who had
also opted to dive that way, but we never caught up with David and
Peter who made it all the way to the staghorn coral and found turtles
there. Bobbi and I almost made it that far but we ascended at the end
of the hour after some entertainment by a family of clown fish rather
than keep people waiting. All in all we had two enjoyable dives in
compatible company.
Now, the drive logs
It takes us less than 3 hours to get from Al Ain to Dibba, but another half hour to go from there to Badiyah, known for the oldest mosque in the UAE and lit up in National Day splendor the night we arrived. Hassan's place is just off the roundabout just before there (it was a new roundabout, which was how we missed it and continued on to the mosque that night). Hassan's place is on the beach down a packed sand road at the far right of the beach from town. When we went there we found a film crew just wrapping up for the day. They had been to Sharq Island and were finishing the day with a feast catered by Hassan's restaurant. They had left a lot of food and we were invited to tuck in. That, free wifi, and a comfortable bed for the night made us happy campers when we finally got to sleep.
But as I'm writing this we've been 4 hours on the road coming back from there and we haven't even reached Madan yet. It's been maddening. We were leaving Scuba 2000 just after 3:00 after a couple of fine and hassle-free dives, and were heading the way home we know, the one that gets us there in 3.5 hours, a little more distant than the direct way, going 120 to 140 kph most of the way, when we noticed our GPS was telling us the best way home was the opposite way. It had been a long time since we'd been south from KF on the coast, so we decided to try it. Right away we hit small towns, a traffic jam just past KF where a national day parade passed with flag bedecked elders on foot and a platoon of highnesses on horseback, and the tedious stretch along the oil storage zone into Fujaira. There we found we were being routed via the Fujairah way back up to Masafi and into Dhaid, Madan, and Shuwaib, a way we normally do not like to go.
So I thought we should try the new road to Wadi al Helo with its tunnels which I recalled took us near to Al Ain. The only trouble was it was almost to the Oman border south of Fujairah, past Kalba on the coast, and inland from there, so it was almost 4:30 when we reached the start of the road, an hour south of where we'd turned around north of Badiyah. Then we found the speed limits to be unnecessarily low, no more than 60 km, and 40 km in the long uphill stretches (giving out to 80 km entering the tunnels, go figgah??). We followed our GPS up winding roads between mountains as the sun set, 60 km speed limits the norm, and lots of speed bumps in the tiny hamlets. It was dark when we emerged from there onto a 120 kph stretch that went through a chain of built up towns – why ridiculously slow speeds on the 4 lane mountain roads, and equally ridiculous fast speeds where no telling who might be crossing the road or pulling out into it and where? We whizzed along until well after 6 pm we came unexpectedly on a border checkpoint.
We would need at least an exit visa here. This was the small stretch of road crossing Oman territory from Hatta to Madan. Before, we used to drive it unhindered, but now there were checkpoints with tailbacks we were stuck in until just short of the border where we found a u-turn and managed to extract ourselves and head back the opposite direction. We drove all the way down to Hatta looking for a way home and asked at the guard at the gate at the Hatta Fort Hotel for advice. He said 6 km back there was a road for Sharjah-Kalba, we should take that.
This road was so new it didn't show on our GPS, and though it was new, 4 lanes, and empty, its speed limit was huh?? 60 km !!? We could see from our GPS that it was taking us north around where the Oman border bulged into UAE. I guess it was built to give people an alternative to having to drive the much shorter way through the two border posts.
We crawled, compared to going the 120 we were accustomed to, around the bulge and picked up other roads taking us to the Dhaid-Madan road. Once we reached that we at least knew where we were, and by 7:30, four hours after turning around at Aqa'a just north from Bidaya, we were in Madan and heading home the familiar way, at speeds of 60, 80, and finally 100 km per hour.
I finished writing this as we were pulling into our neighborhood in Al Ain at around 8:30, 5 long hours on the road driving home. :-(
Certified Molly Carter in PADI o/w, also diving with Marian Slangen, working on PADI open water course; Dan Miles, PADI Master Scuba Diver; and dear Bobbi, PADI rescue
On Oct 22 I submitted my passport for visa renewal and have been without it ever since. On Nov 6 I was supposed to take Marian Slangen to Nomad Ocean Adventure but the passport was not returned by the time they needed to apply for a permit for me so I had to cancel but I tried to take her to some place on the East Coast UAE where I wouldn’t need my passport. I called around trying to arrange an alternative and found places at Scuba 2000, but in the short time it took me to get Marian’s confirmation on her willingness to go, Hassan emailed me his apologies, but the places had been already taken.
Bobbi remembered that Dro Madry had been putting photos on FB from around Dibba Rock, and he was using Blue Planet Divers (Freestyle having moved to Um Al Qawain, and Freestyle were involved in beach cleanups that weekend, and they didn’t think the weather was going to be good anyway, and they were right.) We managed to get places at Blue Planet Diving at Holiday Beach opposite Dibba Rock, but they informed me Friday morning that the UAE Coast Guard was prohibiting small boats from leaving port, so we decided to go for Saturday, but in the end that was cancelled also, same reason, so we didn’t go anywhere that weekend.
We had reservations the following weekend at NOA too, for Molly Carter and others who wished to join us, but come Monday, same problem, still no passport, had to cancel diving for the six who were booked in with me. I gave my students the option of going ahead with Nomad, postponing with me for a later date when I could get there, or I could try an east coast UAE alternative as I had the weekend before, only now I had the contacts. Molly wrote back that she would prefer I taught her, she didn’t care where, and her Master Scuba Diver friend Dan said he’d follow us as well, so I booked five of us into Blue Planet for Dibba Rock diving, and apologized to NOA, who were understanding about the situation.
Thu night Nov 13, Marian, Bobbi and I ended up taking an apt at the Alia Suites in Dibba for 250 a night, 125 per room with 2-baths, kitchen, and sitting room, and Molly and Dan too, one across the hall. We went shopping at Lulu’s and brought a decent meal home and washed it down with beverages we didn’t have to sneak across the border. Molly took her eLearning quick review and filled out the paperwork, and we had a pleasant evening together in one of the sitting rooms and retired at a reasonable hour.
Blue Planet came alive at 8 a.m. and we planned to be there then to get our gear ready for the pool at 9:00. Waking up wasn’t a problem because of the pigeons and doves outside our window cooing gently at 6:30 sharp. We had coffee from a press brought from home and breakfasted on items from Lulu’s and were in the pool at 9 for Molly’s module 1 and repeat practice for Marian.
The plan was to get Molly through pool module 3 that morning, which Marian had completed in Al Ain, so that both could do two dives with BPD that day. We had some equipment issues and the usual unexpected occurrences that compounded into delay, one of them being that the pool was icy cold. We endured it for module 1 but were under-dressed in lycra, and were happy to get out of the pool and back to the sunshine at the dive center. I tested the water off the beach and found it to be clear, calm, and warmer, so we decided to do a shore dive there, but Marian had not been totally comfortable in the pool, so I thought we should work on mask clears for Module 2 as our next move, and as time was getting on, I changed the plan to do a shore dive at our convenience that morning rather than try and make a 1:30 dive boat, and dive the 3:30 at Dibba Rock as our second dive of the day. When things went longer than expected still, I decided to get Molly through module 3 as quickly as possible leaving just barely time to do a shore dive along the breakwater extending past our confined water area. There wasn’t much there, just a few fish, but I managed to get a minimal dive in with the two students going out and back along the jetty, focusing on buoyancy and acclimatization in the water and on gradually increasing the depth.
We were back on shore in time for the scheduled 3:30 dive in which Bobbi and I took Molly on a PADI OWSI dive #2 for the course. She had had ear problems in the past but worked her way down the mooring line ok. It was an entertaining slow descent with schools of fusiliers near the surface and huge jacks milling about near the bottom, and as I waited for Molly on the line, a pair of large barracuda passed near the rope. At the bottom we were in the aquarium with its schools of snappers and parrot fish and sergeant majors. In the sand there I got her through the skills ok while Dan and Bobbi wandered off on their own. We caught up with them soon enough and found a puffer with one eye, and Bobbi and Dan found pipefish, morays, and a flounder in the sand. But Dan went up early, cold he said, so Bobbi and Molly and I drifted with a steady current over the shallow rocks looking for big stuff, finding plenty of small, and generally enjoying the dive. We got barely lower than 5 meters, and at the end of the safety stop, Molly and I ascended on alternate air source, as required in that module.
Overnight, and after another communal meal and civilized sipping, Marian reflected on what she would need to do to improve and emerged next morning a stronger diver than the day before. She is analytical and matter of fact, and if she surfaces prematurely, sometimes it’s to ask a question that will help her to better understand what she should be doing to correct a problem. I try to keep students underwater to the extent possible, but it’s Marian’s learning style to do it her way, and with patience, it seems to be gradually working.
So Saturday we arrived at the dive center a little after eight and when the boat left for Inchcape for the first dive of the day (to 30 meters, not for us) my group were in shallow confined water by the breakwater for Molly’s module 4. Marian decided to observe and practice the basic skills, which was the best way for her, but after helping Molly through her hover, we took the tanks back to shore and Marian succeeded in duck diving with air control through snorkel breathing at the surface. So she accomplished a good start on Module 4 training, and Molly completed hers.
Molly disassembled and reassembled her equipment and we returned to the pleasant water off the beach for her final module where she removed and replaced weights and scuba unit at the surface and again at the bottom, to complete her pool training. Marian came along for the experience and managed a mask clear competently. We exited the water in time for the scheduled noon dive at Dibba Rock.
We had to wait a while till the boat returned from Inchcape, and during this time we ate and I explained the compass to the two ladies, and they did their 200 meter swim tests out to the end of the breakwater and back. We were thinking to enter the water to do some flexible skills when the boat arrived, so we boarded instead, and went to the east of Dibba Rock where the mooring is a bit deep for concerned beginners, 8 meters, but at least there was a mooring line to descend on, and no current. Vis appeared good from the surface but at depth it was cloudy. Marian was uncomfortable with these conditions but descended part of the way with us, and when she decided to return to the surface it was in a safe and controlled manner. Molly was working on her ears to 8 meters and on arrival at depth orally inflated her bcd. We were about to do a mask clear when Bobbi started banging her tank, shark! I instinctively focused on the shark for the seconds it took to pass us, Molly saw it and got excited (she said later, with pleasure I hope), but the change in breathing took her to the surface in no time, and we had to work through the ears again to return to the same depth. Again we managed it, and as we resumed our dive, again we saw a black tip, and again another. I got a good shot of one of the sharks and panned to Molly and Bobbi in the same segment. In all we saw 4 sharks, a real treat to see them back at Dibba Rock. And to top it off, as we passed along the reef to approach the aquarium, finding pipefish and lion fish along the way, Bobbi found a huge barracuda at just 3 meters and was trying to get our attention when a turtle came meandering toward her, again on video. Great dive
It was almost 2 p.m. when we regained shore and went back to switch our tanks to the ones we’d been using earlier with still 150 bar remaining. Acting on Alla’s suggestion that we try the jetty at the far end of the beach which had a reef extending from it to the north, we plotted our last dive there, with intent to get all our flexible skills and surface work done in the water as we snorkeled out. So the four of us, Bobbi, Molly, Marian, and I kitted up, buddy-checked, and walked down to the far end of the beach where we entered the water over the rocks. I remember the time, because it was just an hour before high tide at 4 p.m. We did the surface exercises en route and dropped in at around 3:30 to just 3 meters of water near the point, so I led us to the north, looking for suitable depth and a place where we could set up a controlled emergency swimming ascent. On the way I found impressions in the sand of an odd-looking ray so I wasn't surprised when a cloud of sand kicked up and I saw a guitar shark shoot into the haze to scoot out of our way and vision. We carried on and soon came on the same shark (presumably) lying in the sand – must have been the same as he hadn't had time to bury himself. I was pointing it out to the others and fumbling for my camera when he performed his quick escape trick, leaving us in a puff of silt. But now my camera was ready so when he re-appeared skimming the top of the reef to our right I got him on flash memory, I think.
The guitar shark made this dive a memorable one, and a great end to the weekend. Afterwards I had the ladies do an underwater compass heading round trip, which they did just fine, and Molly removed her mask and replaced it and hovered on the reef. Marian did great and stayed down at over 5 meters for almost 40 minutes. At that time I rigged my reel with a marker buoy to the surface and we all surfaced together, Molly in CESA mode. We came up in balmy conditions with a long swim back to the beach but everyone happy and coping well with the exertion.
Molly thanked me for pushing her and called me a legend. Marian was happy with the weekend and appears to have surmounted the hurdles that were preventing her from truly enjoying herself. Molly got certified and Marian will be back to finish the job. Thanks to Alla and Slava, personable owners of Blue Planet Diving, Dibba, Fujairah, for facilitating things with their flexible and professional services, and looking forward to diving with them again soon.
My logged dives #1308-1311 More diving this weekend, this time to train Greg Raglow and Omar Ibrahim in the wiles of PADI Open Water diving at our favorite dive center Nomad Ocean Adventure. Our group at one point included four o/w students plus a refresher diver, so Nomad were kind enough to allow me to engage a divemaster for a weekend of free diving. The one who jumped up and said "Me, me, pick me!" was Nicki Blower. Meanwhile attrition took its toll as we counted down the days to the course and we were eventually down to just two students, Drs. Greg Raglow and Omar Ibrahim, plus Bobbi and Nicki and me, so it turned out to be a comfortable grouping, as pictured below:
Having just two students is just right. It gives us lots of time to deal with the vagaries of getting the students to NOA, getting them in the water (till midnight first night), getting a few hours sleep and up at dawn for two more pool modules, then two dives on Friday, back to the dive center and more pool work till dinner time. Next day was easier; after a good long sleep, we just had the final two dives on Saturday. Happy divers at the end, the two on the left both newly crowned PADI Open Water certified.
Diving Friday Sept 19 at Ras Morovi and Lima Headland
The first day it was just us in a boat with another instructor Pierre and his one student so we were able to tailor our dive sites to those most suitable for an open water course. We noticed a lot of brown algae in the water on the way out but at the bay north of Ras Morovi conditions didn't seem so bad, so we started there, and found decent vis at 5 meters. We didn't go below 12 meters.our first day. I wore only a full lycra and a rash vest, and didn't feel the chill except at our deepest points. We motored over to Ras Lima for the second dive and after the usual lunch of mystery meat wraps and delicious pasta salad we decided vis wasn't so bad there, so we did our second dive from our lunch spot. Here is the video.
Diving Saturday Sept 20 at Lima Rock and Octopus Rock
Diving next day was quite good for an open water course. Two divers on our boat had been to Lima Rock the day before but said it was awesome and were eager to repeat it despite the fact they had got caught in current off the east point. Sea conditions the previous day had been choppy but motoring up the coast of Musandam was smooth on the Saturday and we decided after checking out Lima Rock to go ahead and dive it. We have to be careful of currents there, but if they're not ripping, sticking to the center is usually ok, as long as you make your turn around point appropriately. We started the dive near the west tip and found a surface current pulling us in that direction, so we went down not knowing what to expect but found it much reduced under water so we were able to make our way easily to the east. I was planning a 15-16 meter dive but there was a huge honeycomb moray at 18 meters so we went on a 56 minute NDL, but the dive for the students was shorter than that, and I delivered them to the surface at 45 min while being harassed by batfish. Bobbi and Nicki waited below, where I rejoined them. The most interesting moments are in the video here.
We don't normally do Octopus Rock on an open water course, but Antonio who was managing the divers on board had been there yesterday and found decent vis and mild current conditions, so to my pleasant surprise we ended up there for our second dive. It's one of my favorite sites in Musandam. We did some skills including compass work at the beginning of the dive, so didn't start our tour until 15 minutes into our time below, and we encountered a slight current against our northerly direction, so more air was consumed than in ideal conditions, and 40 min into the dive I broke off from the group with Omar and let Bobbi and Nicki take Greg as their buddy. Omar and I went to the top of a reef where we were entertained by schools of trevally and batfish getting the wrasse makeover. The others surfaced 15 minutes after we did, well to the west. Everyone seemed happy, those with greatest success were crowned for their achievements, and we hope to see them back in the water again soon.
We met our friends at the new Euro Divers center at Al Sawadi Beach Resort and headed onto our boat. Sea conditions were choppy and hindered our progress and spray washed into the boat on the trip outbound, but the weather was warm so all was very pleasant. We were clamoring to go to the Aquarium but the boat put in at Three Sisters not far from there to let the weather calm down a bit.
Here's the video from our two dives on the first day ...
Friday, September 12, 2014 - Three Sisters and Aquarium
Saturday, September 13, 2014 - A lovely pinnacle and Sirah Island
I called the pinnacle Rays' Reef because of the rays living there. It was on our way out to Sira Island from the resort, the nearest thing diveable. It was a great place, check out the video. I'll try and find the proper name for the reef.
And finally, I got the video mix made of our last dive of the trip, on Sira Island just short of Jun. This one included all of us somewhere, I think, Bobbi and me, Jay Fortin, David Muirhead, Doug Cook, Jana Hanova, and Dino Savva. This video contains the video of all of us taking the turtle for a walk. Enjoy ...
How did we get here?
Jay Fortin had a meeting in Dubai and asked us if we could join him for diving since he had a weekend free not to prepare for it. Gail was away in Uganda, so Dave Muirhead arranged that on this designated weekend we would hook up in Oman and dive the Daymaniyat Islands, one of our favorite dive destinations in our area. Doug Cook decided to join us from our Waspes HHH running group and he brought a UN staff member named Jana Hanova. David added a colleague named Dino, whom we also know from the Al Ain running group, making us 7 in a group that converged on Al Sawadi Beach Resort for 8 a.m. diving Friday September 12.
Jay flew in the night before from Bahrain where he works now and after 2 hours waiting to get through Seeb airport managed to find his rental car and drive the hour to the resort. David and Dino drove down from Al Ain all the way to Al Sawadi where they over-nighted in the resort for $189 a night including two dinners. Doug and Jana opted to fly from Abu Dhabi to Muscat since they got nearly free tickets for air miles and a cheaper deal on the hotel, only $113 a night for two, with meals included, but they faced the two hour airport wait on arrival in Seeb plus the car rental plus the hour’s backtrack in the UAE direction to reach the resort (plus Doug could do only one dive Saturday because he was flying that evening back to Abu Dhabi).
Bobbi and I converged in the normal manner. I got off work early Thu afternoon and found Bobbi at home, we checked emails and packed, and left the house at around 5:30 p.m. By around 8:00 we had reached our favorite restaurant on the Batina coastal towns stretch, don’t know its name but I can give you its coordinates, and it’s to the right of a restaurant more obviously called FAMOUS. That one might be better known, or might not be, but the one we always stop at has chicken karai to die for. This stop is easy to find because the roundabout is always chocked with traffic, so we pull off the road into a chaos of vehicles playing bumper car on the slip road. We always head for the ATM around the corner from the gas station on the slip road, return to tank up at the pump, and then end up at the restaurant.
We were having our meal there when I got a call from an Oman number so I took it. It was Kiwi Lunden who had just discovered from something I’d posted online that we were diving Daymaniyats next day. She was diving there Saturday using Global Divers in Seeb, but was trying to see if she could join us. It was too late to book anything the next day so she’d have to join us in the morning on spec. Plus she was in Muscat, 2.5 hours drive from where we were having dinner. Too bad we hadn’t known earlier or we could have arranged for Jay to pick her up on his way from the airport. Long story short, we didn’t manage to work things out but we’ll see her weekend after next when she comes through Al Ain on her way to Dubai.
We had another hour to drive to reach the place we were staying, our favorite Batinah coast hostel the Suweiq Motel. It has clean rooms, and since the refurbishment, quiet too, no more backbeat bleed from the bars, which are something from a Felini film, or from Tatouine in Star Wars. If you like cold beverages and a change of scene, and are on your way to dive from UAE, it’s a great place to stop for the night, and just half an hour from Al Sawadi in the morning now that the sweeping elevated u-turn over the highway has finished construction.
I wrote that on the ride back to UAE from Oman, just pasted it here.
My logged dives #1300-1303
No one, not even me, seemed to notice that I made my 1300th logged dive with Bonnie Swesey, the kind lady who put Bobbi and I up, or put up with Bobbi and I, in her flat for Bobbi's last year teaching at ACS in Abu Dhabi while we both resided in Al Ain and Bobbi commuted occasionally, but not every day, thanks to Bonnie's hospitality. In return I offered to help Bonnie get back into diving with an intensive refresher course. We didn't do an official course, I just took her diving, and by the end of it we had restored her to compos mentus with her basic diving skills.
Also in our group were my lovely wife Bobbi, our best dive buddy Nicki, and a newcomer to our team, Kelly. We dove for two weekend days, Friday and Saturday Aug 29-30 from Nomad Ocean Adventure in Dibba Oman, always a relaxing place to stay, eat, and check Facebook.
We joined with MSDT Rosien and two of her student divers, so our dive spots were conservative, but still enjoyable. Our first dive was at Ras Morovi where in the cove where we usually begin fishermen had strung a net right up against the reef so that Bonnie and I had to go over it. That was the easiest way without risking damaging it, pull it down to our level and then ease over it. There is some tension between divers and fishermen. Nets on the reef are not good for it, and what's not good for the reef is not good for the fisheries. Still the fisherman has to feed his family, so despite the fact that fish are caught helplessly there, best not to interfere in the local economy, so we left the net alone. Bobbi and Nicki and Kelly were lagging behind Bonnie and I (we were going at Bonnie's pace to let her get comfortable) and I'm not sure what they did at the net, but we didn't see them till after we had come to the surface. It was a pretty dive as usual. There is a cave at the start of the dive, an alcove really, that used to have a couple of crayfish in it, but then there was just one, and last few times I checked, none. Eaten I supposed, until on this dive I found more big ones thriving in the rocks nearby. It's a pretty part of the dive, swirling with fish from the top of the reef down the wall to the blue. The video above begins with that view.
Our next dive was at Lima Rock, the north side, which was calm relative to the south, which was getting swells. The north was calm enough for Rose's students, but she put us in with the usual warnings about currents at either end of the rock. We didn't see much on the dive (as I commented on our exit, which I put at the end of the video) but we did see the nudibranch there, and as we came to the eastern edge, we had some excitement as the current picked up. There is a point of no return there where you either go back or go with it. I was ahead of the group buddied with Bonnie. The others I thought were following but they went conservative and turned back. It wasn't a strong current, just a mild sweep toward the point, and with just Bonnie in tow it was easy to keep an eye on her. Often we find barracudas there, but not this time, not much to see on this trip. We hugged the reef as we went around the corner to where the wall begins to the west, but Bonnie was low on air and it's a sheer rock wall for 5 minutes, so I guided her through the gap back to the north side where we surfaced and picked up the others, as you see at the end of the video.
Next day the seas had calmed a lot though not enough for us to dive Lima Rock south with beginners, and maybe not that pleasant for experienced divers challenged by rolling seas. Many are susceptible to seasickness, so we dived the more peaceful Lima Headland and Ras Sanut on the way home. We saw rays in both places, cowtail or feathertail (is there a difference? we debated this over lunch on the boat). On Ras Lima Bobbi called us all over to see a large coronet fish, and I found a large lionfish with whom I practiced buoyancy skills while I hovered next to him getting GoPro closeups. We saw a lot of crawfish as well and I ended the Ras Sanut dive at a shallow ledge where I found some crayfish and then panned to a swim-through where some batfish were sheltering. I swam through and on the other side found another crayfish. It's all on the film.
Not the best diving we've experienced here but good enough for a few video souvenirs. The weather was fine and sea temperatures amenable to shorties, though I was comfortable in 3 mm. It was great to get Bonnie back into diving and to dive with Nicki again and Kelly from ACS. Hope so see more of these people under water in the near future.
Vance certified Emanuel Jech and Sandra Gorman as PADI Open Water divers over a two day weekend Friday June 20 and Saturday June 21, 2014
My logged dives #1296-1299
Another great referral dive weekend, people I'd never met found out about me and booked a course that went wonderfully for all concerned.
Bobbi had her last day at work Thu June 19 so she drove down to Al Ain from Abu Dhabi and we thought we would lag behind Emanuel and Sandra, who left Abu Dhabi (where they live) an hour before we could escape Al Ain. But they got lost so we arrived at the border before they did. But the border was busy with (of all things) hay trucks, dozens of them, loads of hay, and expats trying to get across but turning back for whatever reason due to the real possibility of thorough searching. So we awaited Sandra and Emanuel at the border so we could give them a lift (since their car was not insured for Oman). We left anything we thought might compromise us at the border in their parked car and drove across clean. We arrived at Nomad after 8, dinner was served, so we ate and did paperwork and then went to the equipment room and pool and finally completed module 1 well after midnight.
We were up at 6 for coffee and briefing and we completed the next two modules in the pool before 9:30 next morning and we down at the boat harbor by about 10:00. People were patient with us, no one upset, and by 10:30 we were motoring to Ras Morovi for a nice dive on the north side of the headland. Vis was good and it was a typical first dive with buoyancy issues managed well by the students.
On the second dive we went to Lima headland, north side, where we put in at a bay where a dhow was moored. We set up CESA, controlled emergency swimming ascent, where I was accused by the French instructor accompanying us of breaking coral in this exercise. I was using a sand valley between the coral but the instructor, who came by with his discover scuba students, said later he saw broken coral near where we were, and told me "maybe you kicked it." I was keeping a close eye on my students and on myself, and didn't appreciate being accused of breaking coral in a bay that dhows use for day trippers, and where fishermen had thrown their nets and strung rope all along the bottom, not good for the environment. However, I will follow the advice that in future, for CESA exercises, we steer clear of that area with its exquisite table coral.
On return to the dive center we had just two more pool sessions to complete that part of the course. We were done by dinner time and settled into a twelve hour break, just eating and relaxing and sleeping for eight or nine hours, great!
Saturday morning Emanuel and Sandra did their swim tests in the pool and we were first on the boat for a relaxed departure to Lima Rock. As the video shows, the weather was fine, we were dressed for warm water, there was much to see on our dives. Most importantly, the new divers gained in confidence and buoyancy control (you can see that in the video as well :-) and clearly had a great time, leading to the photo above, which Nomad intends to put in their next newsletter.
Here is an 11 min. video compilation of all 4 of our dives
Congratulations to Emanuel and Sandra, certified June 21, 2014
Vance Certified Joanne Meads as a PADI Open Water diver over a two day weekend
Friday June 6 and Saturday June 7, 2014
My logged dives #1292-1295
Write up may follow, but first the videos
PADI Open Water Dive #1 June 6 at Ras Morovi
Spent some time with a turtle
PADI Open Water Dive #2 June 6 at Ras Sanut
Cow tail stingray cruised the reef (in the first scene in the video
the rest of the video is from our dive next day at Ras Lima)
PADI Open Water Dive #3 June 7 at Lima Rock
Moray eels and schools of jacks
PADI Open Water Dive #4 June 7 at Ras Lima
Several sting rays, including this one which Vance filmed as Bobbi filmed Vance filming
Vance conducting the last 3 dives in a PADI Advanced Open Water course
for Sérgio Simões,with Bobbi Stevens riding shotgun
My logged dives #1289-1291
Sunday was declared as an Islamic holiday in UAE and this gave us an opportunity to complete the Advanced O/W course I'd started with Sérgio Simões on July 13, 2013. Since he needed three dives to complete the course, we decided to do them in one day. Sérgio lives in Al Ain so we met at my house at 6 a.m. and all rode up together. We were at Lulu's in Dibba by 8:30 so we had time to stop off for breakfast prior to rolling up at Freestyle Divers at 9 in the morning.
Our first dive of the day was the deep one, on the Inchcape 2, a wreck that Bobbi and I have dived dozens of times, but is always appealing, and the ideal challenge for an advanced deep or wreck dive. It's a set piece 20 minute 30 meter dive. It has a mooring buoy so is easy to find and descend on. Back in the day there were two resident honeycombed morays living there we used to call Fred and Frederika, so accustomed to divers that we used to stroke them. They disappeared after Gonu struck and were replaced by two small offspring who unfortunately succumbed to the months long red tide, and since then honeycomb sightings have not been common. Sometimes there are rays there, but none today, probably chased off by the crowds of divers on the small wreck. Still, it's a great experience for someone doing his 7th dive ever, and first time to 30 meters.
Next on our list was the underwater navigation dive, and next on Freestyle's schedule was Dibba Rock. This shallow site can be ideal for navigation unless there is current tugging at the shallows, as there happened to be on this day. We were dropped in at the aquarium and started our navigation at the marker buoy tied off on one of the rocks there. I led from the aquarium 30 meters to the southwest with the reef on our left, except it wasn't a good 30 meters because we were swimming against the westerly current and when Sérgio turned around to lead us back he went past the marker because it was by then only 15 meters away. We then tried a compass heading to the west and return to the east but again the return leg was much shorter than the way out (that is, 20+ kicks out and only 10 kicks return). Realizing we'd have to factor in a significant current Sérgio and I worked out on the slate that we should try the square 10 kicks to the north and 21 to the west, and so on. This worked except that on the third leg the current pushed us back onto the buoy line, so we ended up doing a triangle, not a square. It wasn't Sérgio's fault, his navigation was good and up to the challenge, so I congratulated him and we went off on a fun dive.
We went looking for sharks, like this one Dro Madery found recently and posted to Facebook. As can be seen in the photos, the sharks like the very shallow water close in to the rock, so we let the current nudge us to the east as we looked into the likely places. We turned up a few barracuda but nothing much else by the time we were in what appeared to me to be the shadow of the rock to our west. On this assumption I went looking for the gap leading to the back side of the rock but kept coming into shallow wall. We were in the shadow of the current as well so now we could push to the west but when we got more resistance in only two meters of water I decided to surface and see where we were. Surprise, we were to the west of the rock, not the east, as I had thought. so we had made a big circle around the front side. The thing to do now was to head north, which was seriously difficult into the current, but eventually we found the aquarium and with deeper water got some relief from the current. We continued to the back side where we found a few morays at 12 meters depth. The current was pushing us along now so we went with it drift diving until Sérgio got low on air, so we went higher on the reef and burned off our three minute safety stop, with coronet fish serving as entertainment.
For our last dive we had requested the artificial reef that Andy had laid down some years before and which had been attracting animals ever since. For Sérgio it seemed an appropriate place for his underwater naturalist dive and his final dive for certification as a PADI advanced open water diver. Sami Al Haj gave us a briefing that described perfectly how we would follow the artifacts from a set of balls and geodesic structures to a line leading to a submerged boat and a pile of triangles with lots of places for fish to hide. At that place we found a delta ray, the kind that remains immobile even if you wave your hand over them to blow off the sand. There was no current here so I found a corner of the reef where we could do a square pattern. On the second leg Sérgio suddenly stopped and I thought he had become confused but we later found it was because he had seen a huge ray swim by just beyond our field of view. I was focused on the square because we were in sand now, no idea how to get back to where we had started apart from a perfectly executed square. It was a great feeling of accomplishment when we ended the exercise in exactly the place we had intended! Congratulations to Sérgio Simões on completion of his PADI Advanced Open Water Dive course, Certification Date May 25, 2014