18 November 2009

Recharging Desiccant


I'm just hours away from my next trip... departing to Cozumel, Mexico for a stay of a little over two months! Camera is ready, dive gear (including a whole lotta cave gear) is packed, everything looks good to go. BUT. While packing my desiccant I noticed I hadn't dried it in a while. Probably not since last year's Cozumel trip. Here's some notes on when you should dry your desiccant and how to do it.

I use SeaLife "Moisture Munchers" which come 10 to a pack for about $8. SeaLife part number SL911. The main reason I use these is because they are rechargeable, and have a built-in dye indicator to show their condition. They are bright blue when fully dry, and eventually fade to a dull pink when they are used up. Typically if they are starting to look between purple and pink is when I stop using a Moisture Muncher capsule.

The picture above shows three capsules successfully recharged, and three that blew up probably because their holes were too small to let the rapidly expanding moisture escape. Note the deep rich cobalt blue colour. This is your goal!

To recharge, follow these directions:

  • Set oven temperature to 275 F (135 C)
  • Place used capsules between two pieces of corrugated cardboard, and put the carboard on a baking sheet
  • Place baking sheet in the middle rack of the oven
  • Bake for 20-40 minutes, checking every 10 minutes or so for that cobalt blue colour which indicates they are finished
  • Bake additional 10-15 minutes, to be sure the desiccant in the middle of each capsule is done


Important!

  • Do not use a toaster oven. They are very bad at regulating temperature and you will either melt the capsules or cause the cardboard to catch on fire!
  • Do not leave in oven longer than 1 hour
  • You may need to poke larger holes in some of the capsules especially if they are wet
  • The reason you use cardboard is to protect capsules from radiative heat and to avoid contact with the metal baking pan. You only want convective heat to remove the moisture. Radiative heat will melt and deform the capsules!


In some cases, if the capsules are saturated or you use too high a heat, they will blow up like balloons. If this happens you can still use the capsule (as long as the desiccant isn't leaking out of them) but they may not fit inside your underwater housing anymore. I just throw 'em out if they get deformed. They're pretty cheap and I buy several packets at a time.

Remember! Desiccant is a drying agent, not a sponge. It will absorb small quantities of moisture in ambient air trapped in your housing. It will NOT protect your camera if visible moisture gets in there (such as flooding).

I don't know if there is a limit to how many times you can recharge your desiccant capsules. Probably as long as they recharge to a blue colour they are still usable. I have recharged mine at least 5 cycles now.

09 November 2009

Ready for Cozumel (Almost)


Yes! Take a look at this beauty. Looks like a monster, no? It is my new Aquatica Pro Digital housing for the Canon 5D Mark II. Top-of-the-line equipment. And I've fully tricked it out for both still and video use!

I received the housing about 2 weeks ago, just in time to fabricate a slew of parts to retrofit the video lights. The lights themselves were borrowed off my Stingray II video housing, since they still work extremely well. I fabricated a mounting plate for the light arms, and a battery tray for the battery pods. This has taken me about 10 days to do, an hour or two per day. Lots of measuring and adjusting for this custom job.

I also made a carry handle (in blue) to make it easier for deckhands to grab the housing safely when I pass it up at the end of a dive. However, after weighing the whole rig and learning it was about 29 lbs fully loaded, I am thinking that it will need to be moved from water to boat in more than one step. It will weigh closer to 40 lbs if I ever decide to outfit two Ikelite 400's instead of one. Very likely, I'll choose only one mode of shooting for a dive (video or still) and leave the unnecessary hardware at home.

Working with this housing has presented a few new challenges:
  • There is no eTTL coverter available for the Canon 5D Mark II. I had hoped to use my old Heinrichs-Weikamp eTTL converter but all my tests showed it just doesn't understand what the Canon 5D/II is trying to tell it. The strobes simply don't fire. The Aquatica 5D/II housing has the strobes wired straight, without any converter. This is good enough for manual shooting so I'll have to adapt.
  • Nobody makes an external color compensation filter for a 5" port. So I'll be doing a lot more manual white balancing. I'm not sure how well this will work for video, however.
  • Since the Canon 5D/II will not autofocus while shooting video, it would have been great to have a manual focus ring for my lenses. Unfortunately, the focus knob in the flat port is too far away from the focus ring of the lens. Any gear would interfere with the lens rim. This is something I hope to work on when I get back from Coz.

    So... what's next? 70 glorious days in Cozumel Mexico where I get to learn how to take stunning 21 megapixel photos with this rig. Add video to that and I'll be very, very busy!

    Oops...

    Just after the photo shoot, I broke the light arm mounting plate by grabbing one of the arms and pulling upwards. I had made the plate out of plexiglas and apparently the stuff is too brittle for what I'm trying to do. Good thing I learned this now! I still have plenty of time to fabricate a new one out of polycarb, which should be significantly stronger.
  • 18 October 2009

    What I Dive With and Why

    I now have 9 years of scuba diving under my belt, still young by the standards of many in the industry who've been diving all their lives. Neither of my parents have any clue why I do cave diving. Come to think of it, neither do any of my friends.

    I thought I'd share a brief list of the equipment that goes with me cave diving, while mentioning good (and bad) things about the specific brands and mods I've chosen.

    Wetsuits


    Caves in Mexico are typically 75-77 degrees F. I layer two wetsuits: a 3 mil full length Henderson and a 3 mil shorty Mares. The Mares has been with me my entire 9 years of scuba diving and it's still in incredibly good shape. Henderson is crap/cheap dive gear, this is my 3rd piece and probably my last. They just don't keep up their thermal properties after 100 dives. My plan now is to get one of the new WaterProof W1 front-zip 5 mil wetsuits, as soon as they come out next year.

    Regulators


    All 3 of my regulator sets (2 x DIN for doubles, and 1 x Yoke for stage tank and open water) are Atomic Aquatics B1/B2 sets. All were purchased off eBay for really good prices. I've had minimal problems with any of them. Performance is as good as everyone says. I highly recommend Atomic Aquatics.

    On 2 of the 3 second stage regulators I have a SeaCure mouthpiece. This is made of a special plastic that is made moldable when exposed to very hot water. In this way you can customize it for your mouth the same way that wrestlers' mouthpieces are molded. It adds a LOT of comfort to the regulator, and I find my jaw almost totally relaxed when diving with it. This is extremely important in cave diving, when you want to be 2 or more hours at a time breathing off your regs.

    Lights


    My primaries are a Dive Rite H10 10 Watt HID and a Dive Rite 500 Lumen LED. I now wear both when cave diving so I have a primary primary and an alternate primary, in addition to my two backups. The H10 has been good to me but lacks the power I desire for cave dive videography.

    During all last week I was using Sandra's 21 Watt Sartek, usually instead of my H10. But sometimes I carried both the corded HIDs. The Sartek was sometimes difficult to get lit, either the battery connection would be loose or there would be a problem with the switch. But once running it was a fine piece of equipment. Until the 3-year old batteries died. The light would suddenly start to flicker, go blue and purple, then dim quickly. From flicker to dead was only about 45 seconds. Not much warning! I always had an alternate primary so it was not much hassle. It died on me in Labna Ha, Dos Ojos, and Pet Cemetery. I never once had to resort to my backups.

    I'd like to upgrade to a 35W or 50W model HID (probably not Dive Rite) but LED technology is catching up fast. That makes purchasing decisions on a new light rather difficult. If Salvo were still in business I'd be buying their 35 Watt HID light about now. As things are, I don't know what light I'll be diving with a year from now.

    Fins


    The two most popular models of fins among cave divers are Jet Fins and Mares Quattros. Sure, there are others used but these are the two I see most often. I am a dedicated fan of Mares Quattros both for cave and open water. My fins are configured with spring heel straps. I recommend spring straps for ANY fins used for ANY kind of scuba diving.

    BCD/Wing


    Dive Rite Transpac II with Rec Wings (51 lbs lift). I like this combo because it easily configures for both single and double tanks so I only have to carry one BCD for both cave and open water.

    Computers


    My primary computer is now the Suunto HelO2, so I can change gas mixes during a dive. Definitely important when staging bottles of Nitrox in cave diving! The HelO2 has a radio transmitter so I have one less hose to tangle me for open water. For cave diving I use a regular SPG (standard pressure gauge) in addition to the radio transmitter, for redundancy. I find myself almost never looking at the SPG. The exception was when I used Sandra's 35 Watt Salvo. I think the high-frequency ballast in that particular light interfered with the receiver. The only way I could get tank pressure on the HelO2 was to hold my right arm behind my back, away from the light head in my left hand. During that dive it was inconvenient to hold my hand back there the entire dive so I just used the SPG instead.

    My backup computer is a Suunto Vyper which has also been with me for all nine years of my diving. It became my primary computer for only one dive this week, at Tux Kubaxa, because I accidentally left the HelO2 back in my hotel room that morning.

    The HelO2, the Cobra it replaced, and my Vyper all have a user-replaceable CR2450 lithium battery. Replacing the battery myself instead of sending the computer in for service has saved me $tons$ of money. Sometimes, though, CR2450 batteries are hard to find in resort locations.

    Picture from The Chapel


    (c)2009 Sandra Haars. All Rights Reserved.


    The picture is of me floating on my back in the The Chapel Room of Ponderosa, as we'd surfaced for a 20-minute break. I really enjoyed drifting slowly, watching stalactites slip by like inverted skyscrapers. Sandra Haars gave me permission to post this picture on my blog; it is one of very few that I have of myself cave diving.

    09 October 2009

    Nohoch Nah Chich

    And so... so... suddenly it seems! The last full day and last dives of the trip. Connie always seems to do Nohoch on the last day of her cave dive weeks. As I've mentioned before on this blog, I've probably done cave diving at Nohoch more than any other cave except for Aerolito on Cozumel. So I don't have a lot new to say.

    For the first (very long) dive, I went in the large group of six divers led by Connie up Charlie's and Parker's lines. Up past the small cenote back on the main line where you can still find the coffee cups left as markers by the original explorers. The dive was turned at the cenote (on end-of-plan) and back down the main line, with a quick stop at the NatGeo platform. Then nine minutes back to Nohoch main entrance. The dive time was a short 89 minutes.

    Jim and I wanted to go back in and do a different line as a team of two, with possible adventuring on side passages as we came across them. As only one other team of two were going for a (different) 2nd dive, and that we were going to use the same tanks it was to be a shorter dive... but of course I wanted to make the most of it! (Hey... it was going to be my last cave dive for a few months and this was the first opportunity for just Jim and I to go on our own. The others who didn't dive could just get eaten by skeeters while I enjoyed the cave!)

    First things first, Sandra's 21 Watt Sartek was assuredly at the end of its battery life. It had been typically quitting on me after about 100 minutes so I needed to change out. My 10 watt corded light was in the van which would have meant 10-15 minutes delay to get it, but Sandra generously offered me use of her Super Power 35 Watt Salvo HID. Oh! What a light! I'd been coveting it since I first dove with Sandra two years ago. So, a quick switch on primaries while still in the water and off we went!

    Our plan was to do the smaller passage line that led downstream from the cenote, with me as lead diver. Starting gas was a bit over 2,000 psi. This is the same line that I discovered with Glenn several years ago by accident. We had a great time! I passed about three jumps, including the reach-gap I recognized as the one that led to a very shallow and moderate flow downstream. Flow like that we really didn't want to get caught in -- I'd warned Jim about watching for the reach gap and I referenced it when we passed.

    We passed about two more jumps that went right, then arbitrarily I chose the 4th jump to the right as a change in our route. Jim agreed and soon Sandra's 35W sunbeam was showing me new passage I'd never seen before. We went thru a stalactite/stalagmite restriction, then came across one of the weirdest speleothem formations I'd ever seen. It looked like honeycomb lattice into which delicate stalactites had grown and woven their way through. Then the bottom of the lattice washed away so the whole wall of the stuff was suspended from the ceiling. Awesome!!! Yet another place I have to bring a camera next time.

    We took several more side jumps in rapid succession, ending 20 or 50 feet from the previous jump. Twice I am sure we hit the main line and then I realised we were in the same maze of jumps that Bill and I visited last January. We exhausted these as reels allowed, having lots of fun, for another 15 minutes or so then called the dive on time. We both still had lots of air time. We hit the main line one last time, on a long jump very close to the NatGeo platform. This is where we officially called the dive on end-of-plan. I think this jump had been cut back several feet from where it used to be. It wasn't a reach gap before, but now it is difficult to spot from the main line. I wonder why they cut it back so far...? And who is "they" anyway?

    On the way out we passed a group of snorkelers touring the cavern zone with flashlights. They seemed obnoxiously excited to see cave divers in full gear. (Note: snorkelers are not permitted to have fins in Nohoch, I guess so they can't get themselves in any real trouble in the cave.) I honored their shining lights in my eyes by patently ignoring them as we passed. We returned to the cenote after 61 minutes, maximum depth of 21 feet and a temperature of 77 degrees F.

    08 October 2009

    Tux Kubaxa and Minotauro

    Originally Connie planned for us to go to Tux Kubaxa for two dives, the most remote cenote of all the sites she normally visits during her cave weeks. Tux Kubaxa is what she calls a Power Cave which I think means a cave with very large and highly decorated passageways. Two dives would mean we spend the day in heavily mosquito infested jungle, but we'd only have to do one long van ride. A ride so punishing that I now pad my seat with my two wetsuits and a towel to reduce the jarring impact on my glutenus maximus when we visit this cave.

    A poll taken the night before showed most divers would rather do two different caves instead of two dives at Tux Kubaxa. I was in favour of two different systems, mostly because I'd done Tux Kubaxa several times before and didn't see getting two dives with enough variation to keep it interesting. However I loved Jim's answer to her poll most: "I just wanna dive." Connie suggested Minotauro for the afternoon dive which was immediately met with enthusiastic approval.

    On to the cave dive report!

    Tux Kubaxa

    Mosquitoes were particularly bad at this site, as I expected. In anticipation of this, I had taken off my T-shirt back in the hotel room and sprayed the back of it with Ben's 100 DEET, as well as hitting my legs and arms thoroughly with the stuff. Compulsive application paid off for me, but everyone else on the tour were madly swatting skeeters as soon as they got out of the van.

    One of the feature attractions of Tux Kubaxa are piles of prehistoric animal bones, in varying states of completeness and condition. I'd seen the mastodon bones every other trip so I was hoping to do something different. Fortunately, my dive partner Sandra was up for splitting off from the main group, and I wanted to see the sloth bones found in another passage. We made a team of 2 and were last into the cave system. Sandra ran reels because she'd been there before. So... Left at the "T" intersection, then two righthand jumps just past the first cenote we encountered (beautiful azure light streaming through a large breakdown area) and a mere 200 feet later through surprisingly small (for Tux Kubaxa) and HIGHLY decorated passageway and there was the pile of sloth bones! They seemed rather big for a sloth, at least judging by the vertebrae. Or maybe it's that "Objects appear closer in water than they actually are" phenomenon. I tried to see a jawbone or skull but it looked like those could have been removed. All the ribs, vertebrae and other bits seemed to be there though. I hear rumors that cave divers are becoming more brazen about taking "trophies" from caves for their personal museums and mantles. What was funny about the sloth bone site is that I did not see any of the Mexican INAH preservation/identifier cones.

    The passageway was so entrancingly beautiful! After gawking at the bones for several minutes I checked my time (52 minutes) and air (300 psi above turn point) and showed Sandra my gauge, with a question as to whether we could continue down the line. She indicated she was cold (her semi-drysuit had been leaking progressively worse as the week went on) so we turned the dive and were out of the cave again at exactly 100 minutes. I *loved* the tour and these new passageways are another place I will have to take my camera with a wide-angle lens. And lots of strobe power.

    Minotauro

    This cave is often on Connie's tour weeks because it has a little bit of everything: halocline, restrictions, speleothems, breakdown rooms, solution cave,... everything except big rooms. The first 10 minutes of passageway you traverse from the cenote are a nightmare for anyone who doesn't have their buoyancy down to experienced cave diver standards. Or any cave diver who might get claustrophobic. If it's not narrow vertically, then it bends or squeezes horizontally.

    Minotauro's main line is a circuit, ending back on itself pretty much where that narrow entrance passage ends. Connie likes to close the gap to complete the circuit, then proceed on the main line counter-clockwise. There are many side passages that radiate outwards from the circle made by the main line. Connie's team of 5 divers went ahead of ours but took a different jump to cenote Escalera which was before our jump to cenote Estrella. Because of this, our team entered the deeper part of the cave with the halocline first. As 3rd diver on the team I didn't get the best view of the halocline, but in some of the wider sections I was able to move a bit left or right of the other divers' wake and get the full effect. As a test, I pulled out my Dive Rite LED 500 lumen alternate primary to see the difference of colour temperature between LED and HID. (I had Sandra's 21 Watt Sartek HID for this dive.) Hands down, the HID pierces both fresh and salt water better, and the HID renders prettier (truer?) colours in the salt water layer. LED's still have a way to go before I will want to replace my HID primary.

    About 200-300 feet before one reaches cenote Estrella, there is a bedding plane restriction that is a mere 18-20 inches tall and maybe 30 feet long. It is not difficult for an average sized diver in back-mounted doubles to negotiate. But it does take patience, proper trim, good technique and shallow breaths! It's probably a good place for a valve roll-off too, if you're not paying attention to your tanks. On my way to Estrella I tried to do a clever sideways traverse thru the bedding plane. That sort of worked but it wasn't smooth. On my way back, I paid much more attention to where the plane seemed thickest. I was lining myself up both mentally and physically, by stretching my arms out in front of me and dropping my heels. Then I start hearing someone singing the Mighty Mouse theme! It was Jim, right behind me commenting on my simulated-Superman pose.

    Anyway, the way back was easier, and it wasn't long before we were back on the main line looking at the white mouse, the black mouse and the plastic skeleton that one of Connie's group members from years ago left on a stalagmite. (If you don't know what I'm talking about, don't worry about it.)

    Total time in Minotauro: 84 minutes not including the minutes spent relaxing in cenonte Estrella. Water temperature: 77 degrees F.

    Kicked Off the Team

    I am rarely pushed to such measures, but where safety is concerned such actions are necessary. One of the divers with us this week is what I'd call "below par." Not in terms of equipment or fitness or even training... but in technique and safety awareness. I was not the only one with this feeling, but I was "voted" to be the Bad Cop: the one to talk to Connie about it.

    And so it was. Connie traded the team members a bit for our two dives today and it made a difference in terms of our comfort and enjoyment. Sorry if I seem an ass, but when safety is in question I don't cut corners... or take unwarranted risks. If those unwarranted risks come in the form of a diver who doesn't know what he/she is doing, then I'm not diving with them. Simple as that.

    07 October 2009

    We make it to... Cenote Princessa!!!

    We were privileged to have the opportunity for a second dive from Pet Cemetery, because Aquatech had enough doubles available. I think everyone went on the second dive except Connie, who took a well deserved break from the rest of us "customers."

    The dive plan this time was to go about 50-60 minutes from Pet Cemetery to a small infrequently visited cenote called "Princessa," not so much to see the cenote but to see the amazingly decorated passageways near it. I still count reaching the cenote as my goal for success, though.

    One of the dive shop owners near Dos Ojos who leads tours of the Pet Cemetery cenote and cave system is Luis Leal. He led our group of four (myself, Sandra, Jim and Doug) and gave us quite a briefing before we went. "Keep line awareness - there are a lot of side passage lines and they terminate very close to the main line." "Watch for my cookies on the way out, we will also be doing several jumps." "On the way back if you are in passage where there is clear water, you probably made a wrong turn."
    This last comment is with respect to how the cave reacts to the passage of divers. Our air bubbles rise up and hit the ceiling. Not gently as you might think, but abruptly and turbulently. The ceiling (which hasn't been dry in over 10,000 years) gets hit with the rush of air and particles break off and fall in our passing. This is called "percolation." Depending on the composition of the cave and how often divers pass it (along with some other factors) the return through a passage where percolation occurs can be minuscule to totally blinding. In this case the passage we were taking is not often dove, but the percolation will be just enough to see the entire way back. So if I take a wrong turn, the clear water will be a very clear indication I'd done so.

    I mention all of this because the responsibility of going back the right way... was on my shoulders. I was caboose again the way in, so I'd lead the way back out. Let me just say that although my line awareness was spot-on, having the percolation always in front of me was comforting.

    Getting to the Cenote Princessa was straight-forward. Well, not really. There were three or four spools and three "T" intersections, if I recall correctly. That's quite a few by the way - lots of opportunities for a wrong turn. We got to Princessa in 47 minutes. The best part of the dive was about 100 foot of passageway not far from Princessa, a most incredibly decorated room absolutely filled with stalactites, elephant ears and pillars in pristine condition!!! It was so beautiful it puts Room of Tears in Car Wash and the Cuzan Nah loop to shame! It may have been the most beautiful section of cave passage I have ever seen in my life. There was one formation which looked like a huge chandelier made up of evenly sized elephant ear stalactites. Oh, I wish I had a camera with me... still or video, I'd have used it there. Next time, next time.

    The only problem on this dive... my ears! No surprise. After forcing an equalize in Blue Abyss they were naturally cranky about doing another dive with rollercoaster depth changes. Well, the pain was mild and tolerable but it did make me concerned about diving the rest of the week. (Two more days of cave dives, by the way.) I wasn't the only one with ear problems, two others suffered in varying degrees. As I write this, four hours after exiting the water, my ears seem fine so I am optimistic about tomorrow.

    Luis is a great cave diver and leader. I look forward to diving with him again at this site someday.

    We make it to... BLUE ABYSS!!

    Today, ah, today was the big day. I had posted a request months ago to (re)visit the famed Blue Abyss, a huge underwater vertically cylindrical cave that has a ceiling at 15 feet and goes down to about 236 feet. To get there is a long 45-50 minute swim from Cenote Pet Cemetery, and is often done as a stage dive due to the depth at Blue Abyss. Not everyone does a "depth charge drop" to the bottom, but having the stage bottle in the dive plan makes the option very easy.

    My last visit here in February of this year was successful, and I hit 113 feet on my drop. That depth was a conservative calculation based on the fact that I had nitrox in my back gas with a M.O.D. of about 138 feet. Today my plan was to have a stage bottle filled with 32% nitrox, but only 21% air in the back gas. Maximum planned depth was, oh, whatever I felt like doing when I got there.

    I was in Team #2, led by Connie. I was, as they say, the "caboose" or the last diver in the team. And the last diver to enter Blue Abyss of a total of 10 divers. To put it simply, everything went well. Very well. Until I reached the Abyss itself. There I was, getting really excited the last 200 feet of line or so, recognizing all the turns and restrictions and knowing I was really close. I pass the precipice, and... BLAM! Ear squeeze supreme! Totally unexpected. I'm screaming in my regulator "SHIT! SHIT FUCK!" as I'm trying every trick in the scuba diving handbook to get my left ear to equalize. I can't pass 35 feet... let alone drop to below 100 feet like I planned. At the same time one hemisphere of my brain is trying to deal with the problem, the other hemisphere is going "WOOOOWWW! Look at all the divers below me!" It was an amazing repeat of last year, with that beautiful almost cobalt-blue shine of the divers' lights as they tooled around the Blue Abyss. I wanted to join them in the depths... and couldn't.

    Finally after about two or three minutes, I got it cleared up enough to descend. DEPTH CHARGE away! Down, down down down... down... I am watching my gauge, watching the walls slip past me... I hit 120, then 130, then 135. Then an interesting discussion started happening in my brain between the superego and the id. One side said "I feel great! Let's keep going." The other side said something like "don't be a risk taker. Put some air in that BC before you hit the bottom at 236 feet." I do some simple tests to see if I'm narced - I check my pressure gauge to see what it reads and see if I understand the number. 2500 psi. I check my pulse. Sort of racing, but I know that's from the excitement of being in Blue Abyss. I check my breathing rate. Slow, very normal. Certainly not fast enough to use up anywhere near the enormous amount of gas I've got. I check my ears and hearing. Yep, still good and I still know what that means. Very few, if any, signs that I'm getting effects from nitrogen narcosis. But common sense kicks in (darn that common sense!) and I start popping air in the BC. I hit 143 feet, and take a moment to look up at all the divers lights. Up, this time, not down!!!! Wow. I'd made it.

    The trip back up Blue Abyss was uneventful, though I did get flagged for a deco obligation and did a required stop at 34 feet for a few minutes. For this dive I was using a Suunto HelO2 as my primary computer, which handles up to 8 gas mixes. I also had a Suunto Vyper set only to standard air (it won't switch mix during a dive). By the time I'd gotten back to cenote Pet Cemetery I expected the Vyper to be in error lockout, but I guess the combination of deco stop and the long 30' average depth of the passageway leading to Blue Abyss satisfied its deco algorithms.

    I could've gone down further. Thinking back to it now, I wish I did. But I am here to tell the tale so I guess that is best.

    To hear this tale you might think that Blue Abyss is the only thing worth seeing on this dive. That's far from the truth. The passageway is well decorated as are most of the permanent lines in the Nohoch system. Beautiful stalactite columns, pillars of rosettes scattered about. Great stuff to look at.

    06 October 2009

    We don't make it to....

    (post for Tuesday, Oct. 6)
    Today was a disappointing day for cave diving, but having said that "disappointing" is a little too strong a word. The dives were both enjoyable in their own ways but I did not get that sense of Accomplishment that comes from a successful cave dive. What is "successful?" To me, in cave diving, it means that if you have a destination as a goal for the dive you actually reach it. Today's dives I did not reach the planned destination on either one. On previous trips, I had seen these places so it is not like I am still waiting to see them.

    Our first dive was in Dos Ojos, to do the l-o-n-g stage dive from the west eye of Dos Ojos all the way (4,500 feet) to cenote Tikim Chih. I'd done this dive last year so I remembered most of the markings and turns. Because of this (I guess) Connie put me as lead diver of Team #2... laying reels, markers, etc. It was our same team of four, Sandra J, Sandra H, and Dave. We make it to the air dome in approx. 45 minutes into the dive, right on time. A brief pause to drop stage tanks, and some grouping changes. Our two teams are split up into four, to account for different air consumption rates. The plan now is to do the 2,000 feet to Tikim Chih in pairs and turn (as a pair, not the 4-team) if thirds are hit. My partner typically has as good air consumption as I do, so I was uber confident we'd make it. But...

    The dive continued from the air dome and within the first three minutes the other pair of our 4-team calls it and returns to the air dome. I think there was an issue with a gas leak or ear problem... can't remember which. So the two of us continue on. 15 mintes later we pass the half-way marker. We pass another half-way marker 150 feet later (there's a story there, I'm sure!!) At 28 minutes into the dive, another dive pair ahead of us calls on 3rds and turns around... this didn't surprise me as I knew their consumption was higher. But two minutes later, my partner calls the dive which was a surprise as I didn't suspect anything could be wrong. Well, the golden rule of cave diving applies here as it does any other time: "Anyone can call the dive at any time for any reason." Turned out that her inflator hose had been leaking and she'd lost a few hundred PSI over the course of the dive. We were just four minutes short of the goal, but calling the dive is irrefutable. Connie was surprised, as her mini-team of 3 were the only ones to make it to Tikim Chih. Se la vie.

    Second dive was at Calimba, a very small (and murky) cenote right on the main highway out of Tulum. One of the things I love about Calimba is the landowner's welcoming attitude towards the divers. He will light a candle for us in the shrine entrance of the cenote, as a blessing to wish us safe passage. I think Simone Lipscomb posted a picture of the candle-lit shrine on her blog last year, if you want to see a picture. To pass by all the idols while wearing scuba gear, and then to see the candle lit for us... well, for some reason it feels humbling.

    My dive team this time included Sandra and Tommy, one of the divemasters(?) working at Aquatech. Our plan: follow Connie's team as they wind their way to Bosh Chen cenote. The best parts of the cave are in the large highly decorated rooms leading up to the cenote exit. I have nice video of this dive from last year, a snippet of which I posted on this blog back then.

    I won't go much into diving Calimba itself, as I've posted about it at least once before. But I will mention that it is narrow most of the time, and has more minor restrictions (tight spaces) per kilometer than other parts of the Sistema Sac Aktun I have visited. Not that this is a deterrent... not in the least! I enjoy the challenge of restrictions whenever I encounter them. The Calimba line has the world famous "Boa Constriction" minor restriction. You don't remove gear to navigate it, but it is pretty bendy.

    Well... as the title of this blog goes, We Don't Reach Bosh Chen. On this dive, Tommy was leading and though we reached the Bosh Chen line, he called the dive only a few minutes onto it. Problem with his inflator valve or so he said. Great disappointment as the best and most beautiful passageways were just ahead. We were nowhere near Bosh Chen.

    All in all, a fun day, but disappointing because the goals I set weren't met.

    05 October 2009

    Labna-Ha, yay!

    Another beautiful (though mosquito infested) day at Labna-Ha, diving Sistema Caracol. Both Pep and Sergio were on hand to welcome our group of eight cave divers with open arms and T-shirts to buy. The mosquitoes have been bad at most places, it is apparently their last big-bang before winter hits so they want to get all the human blood they can, while they can. Labna-ha is not better or worse than other sites. But boy, they are bad! I came prepared this year with two bottles of 100% DEET, a head net, and a bed canopy net. The latter I haven't had to use yet, thankfully.

    This being my fourth visit to Labna-Ha, I wore for the first time a Labna-Ha T-shirt which I bought on my third visit. Pep was quick to say "Oh! You have the old design. You need to get the new one now!!"

    On to the cave dives.

    First dive my team consisting of myself, Sandra, Sandra and Dave, went with Connie up the main line. We went up exactly 60 minutes before the dive was turned on 3rds. I'd been this way twice before, so it was nice but not noteworthy.

    Second dive we were allowed (*gasp*) to take teams in by ourselves! No guides! This I thought was unheard-of. So was taking cameras inside the cave, but one of our team had a camera on the first dive and Pep only gave some extra cautions in its use. I guess that Labna-Ha is relaxing their very strict rules on cave divers. Or maybe it was because all of us had dove there before at one time or another.

    Sandra and I went by ourselves, one of only two pairs to go back into the cave. Two people just did the cavern dive, and two others didn't dive at all. Our plan was to find the side passage at the 3rd jump to the right, and follow it until we either hit the main line or 3rds or until the time seemed to be getting late. I'd been up this passageway too, last year with Sergio and Michael M. So it was also nothing new. But being in a team of only the two of us (and no guide!) made it seem much more intimate. We had a little trouble (6 minutes' worth) finding the side passage but once on it the way was easy going. Sandra was lead diver. I found the tiny cenote that Sergio pointed out last year, at about the 30 minute mark. At 46 minutes Sandra called the dive on time, since she didn't want the dive to run longer than a total of an hour and a half.

    Our total time that dive was 87 minutes, and very enjoyable. I discovered we were the last out of the cave system... by a long shot. I tried not to think that the other divers were not giving us evil looks because they were being eaten alive by the skeeters. At least no one said anything about it, so I feel no guilt. It was an excellent day of cave diving!

    Thanks again to Sergio and Pep for being excellent hosts, and making this beautiful cave system available to us.

    04 October 2009

    Ponderosa and Gran(d) Cenote

    Hello again, I'm back in Aventuras Akumal staying in Villas de Rosa on another of Connie LoRe's cave diving weeks. This is a larger group (9 divers total, split into two teams) and competence level on both teams appear to be pretty good.

    Our first dive this morning was at Ponderosa (as cave divers call it, or "Garden of Eden" as it is marked on the signs) which is a relatively large cenote and a rather plain cave. There are virtually no formations along today's route, but our destination which is called "The Chapel" made up for that, and more! The Chapel is an air dome formed from a breakdown. The water is about 20 feet deep, and the dome itself is a mere 3-4 feet above the waterline. The roof is totally coated with stalactites! Thousands and thousands of them. And they are still growing. It was an awesome experience to lie on my back in the water and float around, watching a whole carpet of stalactites drifting past my field of view. Connie said that the cave diver legend is that if you catch a drop of water in your mouth as it drips off the end of a stalactite, you'll be blessed with long life. I was able to get drops to fall, but only by blowing on them to agitate them. That may have been cheating, I dunno.

    Our dive time at Ponderosa was 86 minutes, almost exactly 43 minutes in and 43 minutes out. With a 20 minute break inside the air dome. Dive was called on end of plan, and thirds. One of the most memorable aspects of this dive was the water temperature! The salt water layer, which starts at -38 feet, was measured at a scorching 84 F ! That may be the warmest water I've ever experienced in a cave. There was not a well defined halocline in this cave. I don't know if it was because of all the divers agitating it, or if the freshwater flow is just stronger in this cave.


    The afternoon dive was at Gran (or Grand) Cenote. Here the two teams went mostly the same plan: Gran Cenote, past Ho Tul Cenote and then around Cuzan Ha Loop. Both teams were supposed to go up the line in the middle of the Loop, but since we were the first team in the water and the last out, I didn't see Connie's group. Our team also did a jump up the La Boca line (which the other team didn't plan to do), to go until 3rds were called. We made it maybe 500 feet along the line before 3rds, which is respectable considering the distance and tight passageways. We did the Cuzan Ha loop clockwise this time, which was maybe only the 2nd time I'd gone that direction. I have to say that going counter-clockwise is more dramatic.

    Tomorrow is Labna Ha day. More later!

    20 July 2009

    More Beautiful Passage

    Well... not much time to write today so I'll summarize by saying the week in Cozumel diving Aerolito was a lot of fun! With 3 aluminum 80's filled with nitrox, you can really go pretty far in there. So far I have exhausted only a few of the many lines. And the further you go back beyond Wonderland the more amazingly beautiful it is. These two pictures will give you an idea of some of the rooms found there.

    Both pictures are (C) 2009 Brad Reynolds and published here with permission.




    Both of these pictures show me without the stage bottle. This is because we staged them before the entrance to Wonderland, roughly halfway into the cave where these pictures were taken. The large orange object in my left hand is my Ikelite Substrobe 400 set up with one of Brad's slave sensors. I used it to do profile/shadow lighting on formations for Brad's photography. When Brad was taking pictures with me in frame, I had to remember to turn off the strobe, then turn it on again afterwards.

    10 July 2009

    What Not To Do on a 2 Hour Cave Dive

    This may be a long blog, so I'll get to the punchline first. What not to do? Don't go diving without adequate thermal protection! In cave diving the problem is compounded because you cannot simply leave the water when you first notice you are too cold. You have to stay cold and finish your dive... COLD.

    I'm in Cozumel again, lovely beautiful Cozumel. Aaahh. Nice place, but humid and hot in the summer. I'm unabashedly indulging in air conditioning every chance I get. While here, I've already made arrangements for my winter trip to stay in the usual departmento (a mere $450 per month) and bought round trip plane tickets. American Airlines was having a sale up until July 7th, and I got my tickets for the unbelievable low price of $319 including taxes. And that's for a 2-1/2 month stay. Normally the tickets are closer to $550.

    Yesterday Brad and I did two dives in Aerolito de Paraiso with stage tanks. We did both dives down Sulfur Falls and then in both directions at the "T" in Wonderland. Pretty much the same kind of plan Glenn and I did last winter. Brad has a knack for finding these nifty side passages with tons of speleothems, so I saw many more beautifully decorated parts of Aerolito than ever before.

    Our first dive used standard air in our back gas and 36% nitrox in the stage bottle. Maximum depth was 71 feet with most of the profile in Wonderland at around 55 feet. Water temperature seemed to hover mostly around 82-83 F, with most of our time spent in the salt water layer. Brad had two Ikelite 400's on his camera (the really big really powerful strobes) and I had a 3rd one with a remote sensor on a 3 foot pole. He would find a wall of stalactites or some other feature he wanted to photograph, I would watch his cave light to see where he wanted me to aim the strobe. I would then hold the strobe at about a 60 degree angle to his lens port and wait for him to focus and shoot 2 or 3 shots. Then move on. This is how most of the dive went. Total dive time: 116 minutes.

    The second dive we had 36% nitrox in both stage bottle and the back gas. I decided the water seemed warm enough, why not ditch the extra 3 mil suit and dive only with one 3 mil. As soon as I jumped in the water I realised it might have been a bad decision and it was. At around the turn-around point I thought I was getting tired, and on the way back I could tell my energy levels were flagging. By the time I got to the safety stop in colder water above the halocline I was visibly shivering. Fortunately we had no deco obligation any time during the dive (great stuff, nitrox) so I only suffered through an 8 minute safety stop and then got out. Total dive time: 122 minutes, maximum depth: 78 feet.

    We were back into town by about 7:15pm, a very long day. I was totally exhausted that evening. I even took today off diving. But tomorrow and Sunday (my last two dive days of the trip) I expect to be back at it, full strength. And with a full 6 mil of thermal protection!

    19 June 2009

    What the Future Holds

    Been a while since I've posted, but not because I haven't been diving. During May I took a planned-at-the-last-minute trip to St. Croix for a week and had some fantastic shore dives at Cane Bay and the Frederiksted pier.

    In July, I will be going first to south Florida to visit Kathleen and Gianni, our wonderful friends in Ft Lauterdale. We'll tour around some of the Florida Keys and maybe do some diving there as well as hang out at their beautiful villa in Plantation.

    On July 6th I hop on a plane from Florida to Cozumel for a 6-day cave diving trip with Brad Reynolds. I've mentioned Brad before in this blog, I think, as a fellow underwater photographer with whom I've dove with several times in Aerolito de Paraiso. This will be my first time ever in Cozumel during the sweltering hot summer months. Though I'm not looking forward to the heat, I'm thinking ahead to exploring more of Aerolito.

    Cave Diving seems to be a constant drain on my budget. True, diving with Brad in Cozumel costs next to nothing compared to most forms of diving, especially cave diving. But I keep upgrading my gear and to get the good stuff you gotta pay the bucks.

    For this trip, I now have a *new* dive computer, the just released Suunto HelO2. With great thank-yous to my favourite east Caribbean Dive Shop Dive Experience of St. Croix, I now have this new top-of-the-line technical diving computer. Its main features include:

    • Wireless tank pressure transmitter (one less hose to carry!)
    • Deco and No-deco dive tables built in
    • Up to 8 gas mixes, trimix or nitrox
    • Ability to switch gas mix during the dive


    It's overkill for most of the diving I will be doing, but next time I go on one of Connie LoRe's trips (more on that later) I'll be ready for the stage dives she leads.
    I hope we get to visit Blue Abyss again.



    After owning a Suunto Cobra dive computer for eight years and a Vyper for ten, I found the HelO2 to be somewhat confusing. It wasn't intuitive at all in how the menus are organized, at least not if you're expecting it to be like a Cobra. It took several consults with the instruction manual before I had gas mixes, time/date, PO2 setting, and even my personal dive profile adjustment set how I wanted it.

    One nice feature on the HelO2 is the new settings for the personal profile adjustment. The Cobra and Vyper have P0, P1 and P2 settings, with P0 being the least conservative. However even on P0, the Suunto computers tend to be among the most conservative in the dive industry. That's good if you want to play it safe all the time, but not so good if you've got excellent air consumption and your computer won't give you the bottom time to match.

    The HelO2 adds two new settings: P-1 and P-2. They are, as you'd guess, less conservative settings. The manual describes them as for "Ideal conditions, excellent physical fitness, highly experienced with a lot of dives in the near past." This, I like very much. To give you an idea on the difference: at a 60 foot profile you get 50 minutes on a P0 setting. P-1 gives you 54 minutes, and P-2 gives you 58 minutes. That's not a whole helluva lot but it is extra time to spend underwater. I'll take it.

    04 February 2009

    Map of Aerolito


    The map above is a very old one of Aerolito de Paraiso dating back to 1989. To my knowledge not much exploration of Aerolito has been done since then although it is believed that there is more cave passage to be found.

    I've marked the journey Glenn and I took last Saturday on this map as a thin red line, with some annotations related to my blog post (text in a darker red). In order to see the line and all detail, click on the image for a full-size copy.

    Cave maps are drawn using many different styles. As with most maps, this is a fair representation of the passages one will find in Aerolito. But passage size, depth and character cannot be adequately depicted in this 2-D medium. This is why progressive penetration is the safest technique to use when exploring a cave without a local guide. Or even with a guide.

    Copyright note: This map was emailed to me from a friend. I am not aware of any copyright on the map itself nor any conditions for its distribution. If you are the copyright holder and object to its being posted here, notify me and I will promptly remove it.

    03 February 2009

    Eagle Rays and Moray Eels

    Another glorious day on the waters of Cozumel! We were invited to spend a day with Blondie and Donna, and their son Renee. Donna is one of the manager/owners of Aqua Safari, Blondie often works as a boat captain usually for fishing charters. They own three boats of which the Belinda is one (the dive boat I most often dive from when on Cozumel). Today we went out on their largest boat "Gypsy" which is a comfortable shallow-draft boat outfit for both scuba and fishing charters. The plan was to do a one-tank dive at either Eagle Ray or Barracuda (deep diving sites, but still within recreational limits) to look for eagle rays cruising the reef.

    To make a long story short: we saw 11 in total, or possibly 2 groups of five which may have been the same five twice, and one solo eagle ray. I'd been having some minor problems with the video housing but today I was able to get it working flawlessly the whole dive.




    Also on this dive, Renee spotted a full-grown Green Moray Eel. I am posting this video of it specifically for Walt, because he once commented on one of my pictures "this is why I don't swim in the ocean." I'll agree that Morays look like one of the nasty monsters of the deep that you really don't want to tangle with, but so far I haven't been bitten by one. (I do know someone who has... in the neck... but she is still alive!)


    31 January 2009

    Wonderland and Broken Lines in Aerolito

    For my last cave dive of this winter's trip to Cozumel, Glenn and I took a really fascinating tour up the Sulphur Falls line and then down to the Wonderland passage. This is an area I had only once before visited, but this time I penetrated well beyond and into areas of indescribable beauty... places I could not imagine Aerolito possessed!

    Our plan today was fairly complex but logical: We would take the main line down to the 4th set of double-arrows and do a jump to the right to the Sulphur Falls line. We would go about 200-300 yards until we hit either a "T" or a jump that I remembered, and then take that to a right-angle right turn down to the Wonderland passageway. Brad and I had visited Wonderland two years ago and I remember having seen a "T" in the line there, but we did not go beyond it. Glenn and I hoped to penetrate one, if not both of those directions off the "T".

    I would be lead diver today, running reels and determining when to turn on one of several possible scenarios: Out of Reels, Out of Bottom Time, 3rds, Line Ended, Sidemount Territory, etc.

    Our dive went off without a hitch. The jump off the 4th set of double arrows is much shorter than it was two or three years ago, and visibility along Sulphur Falls line was excellent. The halocline here was extremely well defined today, almost hypnotizing to watch. The saltwater (lower) layer we were swimming in was still, clear and warmer. The fresh/brackish layer above us had a noteworthy current and lots of debris. I popped up into it several times to check on visibility but the cold-shock was enough to make me want to go back to the salt water. I kept out of the fresh water for three reasons:
    1. it was an upstream current so I would be fighting it all the way up Sulphur Falls;
    2. it seemed MUCH colder even though I was wearing two 3-mil wetsuits, and the temperature difference was probably only 2-4 degrees F, it seemed a lot more!
    3. passageway height was variable and I would have to go up and down through the halocline layer to avoid it, whereas the floor of the cave was pretty consistent.
    In fact, the only possible advantage of swimming in the freshwater was a slight reduction in air consumption, but that would have been cancelled out by having to fight the current.

    Sulphur Falls area itself was beautiful to behold. In places where there were ledges just above the halocline, the freshwater rippled in tiny rapids like an inverted brook dancing over pebbles. Our fin-strokes, though optimized to keep from stirring the halocline, left wakes of oily-looking water where visibility went from 50 feet to zero in an instant.

    At the turn to Wonderland I found the line was no longer a "T" but hooked the sharp right to Wonderland passage. There was a jump to the left, but I will have to save that one for another day. Almost immediately we descended from 35 feet down to 60 feet into Wonderland. Aaah! Those beautiful stalactites Brad had photographed two years ago were still as I remembered them -- plentiful, but dark and brooding. The "T" was there too, just as I remembered it, so with approval from Glenn I put a cookie on the exit line and went right-wards. The passageway opened up to a glorious large room reminiscent more of caves around Akumal than other parts of Aerolito. Grand stalactite formations covering both walls, but still very dark, almost black.

    Then we encountered the first section of broken line. Some repairs (recent?) were notable but there was still a gap where part of the line had broken, the loose section trailing into the canyon. I pulled out my last jump spool and bridged the gap. The line then takes a sharp turn to the left and down deeper, but I also saw a jump here to go straight. Not having another jump spool, the direction was clear. Down we went! Almost immediately I encountered a minor restriction. I squeezed through it quickly, but it gave Glenn several minutes of frustration to get through. I watched him carefully for any signs of panic or needing assistance, but he seemed okay... just stuck. Meanwhile I check my gauge and read "75 feet, 22 minutes remaining no-deco time" though plenty of air time before hitting 3rds. I guess all that practice in minor restrictions at places like Calimba, Blue Abyss and Minotauro paid off -- watching Glenn struggle with what was easy to me made me thankful for all the cave diving and rock climbing experience.

    The passageway here changed radically. We were now in a very tight passage only 6-8 feet wide and maybe 4 feet tall. The bottom was covered with a super-fine bright red silt that stirred exceptionally easily. There were stalactite formations here of indesscribable beauty like none I'd ever seen anywhere else on earth. Though the floor and walls were coated with this red dust, the formations were icicles in size, color and appearance. Against the red they virtually reflected green!! And boy, they looked fragile.

    I continued on the passage very slowly, taking note of the condition of the line (it was okay) and trying to minimize how much my actions stirred up the silt. Even with my most delicate motions I knew that we were going to lose visibility. Not far later, maybe another 200 feet, the line simply ended at a wall of stalactites, though I could see the cave continue on, though much smaller than a diver could fit. I turned the dive on "End of Line."

    And then it happened. Total silt-out. Glenn's turning around followed by my own in that tiny passageway stirred up so much that I lost all visibility. My bright 10 watt HID light made the water glow red but I wouldn't have been able to see the fingers in front of my eyes! Here again, proper cave training paid off. Anticipating the silt-out, I already had my fingers on the permanent line before I lost sight of it. Remembering where it was positioned relative to the cave just before I turned, it was easy to follow the line gently by touch alone for about 20 feet until the silt-out cleared up almost entirely. I exited this beautiful passage reluctantly, admiring all the delicate formations one last time. But the bottom time clock was ticking and I was down to 7 minutes before facing deco obligations.

    Back thru the minor restriction (Glenn got thru much faster this time) and then back up to the 60 foot depth. Whew! We retraced back to the "T" at the beginning of Wonderland. After brief discussion, we agreed to try the other direction of the "T" which was leftwards, for a brief time. This quickly became a very tall and relatively narrow passage with formations mostly in a crevice below us, and then suddenly opened up into an E-n-o-r-m-o-u-s room that I never would have suspected in Aerolito!! It could have been 150 feet across, easily. And maybe 30-40 feet from floor to ceiling in some places. In the center of the room the line was tied to a stalagmite and made a sharp jump to the right. I could see a short jump from this point to a line straight ahead. I turned right and continued as it went to the edge of this huge room.

    Shortly after reaching another passage from the room, the line was obviously deteriorating with more sections broken down. I turned the dive on "unsafe line" and we unwound our way, back to the huge room, back to Wonderland, back through Sulphur Falls, back down the main line, and out.

    Total time in the cave was 86 minutes, with a maximum depth of 78 feet. I used approximately 1550 psi in my double 80 c.f. steel tanks. Not bad for a long dive where most of my time was spent at or below 60 feet m.s.w!!

    Footnotes


    I'm writing these footnotes a few hours after having written the above. I realise I may have understated the seriousness of a silt-out event. If you read accident analyses on scuba diving and particularly cave diving accidents, silt-outs are a major contributing factor to underwater fatalities. All too often, divers are either unprepared for, or subject to panic when a silt-out occurs. My cave instructor (as I'm sure all reputable cave instructors do) was strict in teaching "Line Awareness" at all times while cave diving.

    When I saw the silt-out happening on this dive, it was practically a second-nature reflex to reach for the line, then gently swim through as if I were on one of my "Lights Out" training drills. Absolutely no panic, or even a concern. It wasn't the first time I've been in a silt-out and it certainly won't be the last time. To me it was just a noteworthy event on the dive. However it truly stresses the point that in order to engage in cave (or wreck) diving, you really REALLY need to get proper training for it.

    The only concern that we faced on this dive was the bottom time. Although we were within a few minutes of hitting deco, it was all calculated into the plan, including when I would turn at the 70+ foot depth to avoid deco. Glenn pointed out to me after the dive that deco isn't a big deal, but I had to point out to him that we did not factor deco time into our gas planning and thus it was most prudent to avoid it. That of course was the primary concern and really the predominant limit to how much time we spent in the cave this dive.

    26 January 2009

    Nohoch Nah Chich

    Our last dive of the week was in the highly decorated Nohoch Nah Chich ("Giant Bird Cage") named probably because of the rooms separated by walls of stalactites found along Parker's Line, which is not far from the Rancho San Felipe cenote entrance.

    Connie usually takes a group up Parker's line to Charlie's Line, then past Drippy Dick and eventually meeting up with the main line for a return back to the cenote. I've seen Parker's and Charlie's a number of times so my desire was to go explore elsewhere. Part of my goal was also to have a longer dive than Connie would likely plan, so partnering with Dusan and/or Bill would mean more air time and possibly new things to see. Dusan opted to go with Connie as he wanted an easy and shorter dive, but Bill was keen to try an adventure.

    Bill and I made our plan to go straight up the main line to about the 4th arrow where there is a jump to the right at a distinctive formation I would recognize. I knew from past dives there were awesome formations on this line but hadn't taken it very far. From there we'd just wing it, deploying and reeling up to 2 more jump spools as air and interest dictated.

    It'd been a year since I last led a dive in Nohoch so I was very pleased when my memory of how to find the main line was spot-on. It is in the cavern zone but pretty far from the entrance. Along the main line we went, past the Nat-Geo platform, past Disneyland, past enormous rooms filled ceiling-to-floor with every large and small stalactite/stalagmite combination imaginable. The 3rd arrow was at a reach-gap I remembered well, but continued on to the 4th. I referenced the formation to Bill and then spooled the gap to the right as planned.

    Ten minutes later we were passing what looked like a statue garden. Odd-shaped stalagmites in bizarre shapes appeared out of the darkness to awaken the imagination. One looked like an eagle or a hawk, beak forward and wing back. Another looked like a horse and rider. Then... my spiney spines! I'd taken pictures of these last year but there they were in all their glory. These are thin stalactites with spines that stick up and out of them like upside-down pine trees. And yes, the spines actually pointed upwards towards the ceiling!

    On we went, and more stalactites had even more unusual bits "growing" on them. The line wound around, and I used both spools jumping to "T"s both times. We investigated all directions but these were all loops or dead-ends. I hit the main line twice. Doing all this back-and forth was totally enjoyable, not monotonous at all in case you were wondering. I could tell Bill was enjoying the maze as well.

    Eventually the dive was called on "no more reels" or "no more lines we hadn't visited" and we un-jumped, un-spooled and started heading back. We opted for one last deviation when we hit the 3rd arrow (the reach-gap I mentioned before) but it turned out, as I suspected, to go right back into the same maze a short way in.

    Total time on the dive was 97 minutes and Connie's group was already out of the water and mostly finished disassembling their gear. Amazingly I still had 1800 psi in my doubles when I was done! We accomplished all the goals of the dive and had a GREAT time exploring.

    Footnotes


    On this dive I had my yoke-type regulator on the right post, to replace the regulator I suspect is in need of service. Everything was flawless -- no leaks, no hisses, no problems whatsoever. Now I have to decide whether to have the DIN regulator serviced here in Cozumel or wait until I return home and send it back to the manufacturer.

    I wasn't concerned about having one yoke regulator on this dive because Nohoch nah Chich is generally a big cave and I was sure there were no restrictions in the areas we'd be exploring. This was a safe bet, but I wouldn't want to take yoke regulators to Calimba, Blue Abyss, Minotauro or Labna Ha.

    23 January 2009

    The Blue Abyss

    Often talked about as one of the most spectacular cave dives a certified full cave diver might do in Mexico, the Blue Abyss is this amazingly HUGE cave room filled with salt water (below 50 feet) with depth ranging from about 15 feet all the way down to 240 feet. The nearest open-air entrance is over 2,500 feet away. Clarity of the water is unbelievable and is what gives Blue Abyss that stunning azure glow in our bright HID lights.

    There are many ways to get to this room, but if you don't want to use scooters from the Nohoch nah Chich cenote, then the best way to do it is to go from Pet Cemetery cenote. We followed the Pet Cemetery cavern line then jumped to the main line which I think is initially part of "X"-line. From there we jumped onto Diaz line which took us within one short jump to Blue Abyss. We did this as a stage dive, not because of the distance but as an added safety precaution because of the depth we would encounter in the Abyss itself.

    Diaz line has the "King Pong restriction" which although short, does tend to cause some divers more difficulty than one would expect. Even with a stage rig on my left hip, I had no trouble negotiating King Pong in either direction. In fact, I had so much fun doing it that if I were by myself I would've turned around and did it again... several times. I was thoroughly enjoying this dive!

    Sometimes when I tell my friends what cave diving is like and describe cave passage restrictions like this in detail, they start looking at me like they're thinking "There's something fundamentally wrong with this guy." Whatever. Some people like watching basketball. Other people like visiting museums. I happen to love negotiating very small holes in a water-filled cave, 1000 feet from the nearest exit to air and sunlight.

    After a long swim you arrive at Blue Abyss from a passageway at a shallow 15 feet or so. There is tannic fresh water there which somewhat limits visibility, but then you float over the precipice and ... whoa! The edge of the world drops off and there is this gorgeous blue water below you.

    The dive to Blue Abyss is now in hot competition for being Best Dive of the Week -- it was way cool. As agreed before we started the dive, Bill and I were to partner together once we got to Blue Abyss since we were the only two using non-enriched air. (For those who don't understand, if you use an enriched oxygen mixture in your tanks a.k.a. "nitrox", it limits the depth you can dive. On regular air, you can "safely" dive to about 210 feet -- with nitrox, it is less depending on how much oxygen has been added.) Bill stated only that "we can go down deep, but if there is nothing more to see when I reach a certain depth, I'm going to stop descending." Seemed sensible to me, so that is what we did. So on arrival, all six of us went to different parts of this enormous sinkhole knowne as Blue Abyss. Bill and I sunk down to a depth of 117 feet at which point he signaled that was enough. Up we went slowly, back to the only entrance at the top.

    Apparently the bright lights from all of us touring around was a spectacular sight for anyone who was on the upper levels. The cave is very, very dark and the walls not so reflective but with that many bright lights it apparently looked like a disco. I didn't get to see that spectacle from my point of view, or not exactly, because I was on the bottom level. Still, I couldn't help but be in awe of the sheer size of this place, and admire that there could be a place on land over 100 feet wide and 240 feet tall, all filled with water.

    I would have been happy to stay longer, but everyone started heading out as if the dive had been called (I don't know if it actually was); we just started shuffling out slowly like the curtain had been closed and it was time to leave the theater.

    Total dive time was 97 minutes and because of the time it took to drive to and from Pet Cemetery, it was the only dive we did today.

    Blue Abyss is a "must dive" for any full cave diver. Five Stars. I will be back.

    Footnotes


    When I said I was diving on non-enriched air, it wasn't exactly true. I picked up my set of doubles from the standard air pile, not from the nitrox stack. Because I anticipated diving as deep as 200 feet, I decided to test the air with my nitrox tester "just to be sure" and GOOD THING I DID! Turns out that I had a 26% mix in there! It could have been a fatal error if I'd only assumed the tanks contained 21% and dove to 200 feet on that mix. According to the tables, the 26% is only safe to 138 feet on PO2=1.4 or 156 feet on PO2=1.6. I usually dive 1.6.

    My right post regulator apparently has been going bad for some time now. My first clue was that it "hisses" (almost imperceptibly) when you first open the valve but it does it only for 15 seconds then never again the whole dive. However, my 2nd stage/inflator was leaking a little bit (only when 10 feet depth or shallower) and I'd always thought it was the inflator that was just being finicky. On my way in to Blue Abyss my 2nd stage was leaking ever so slightly more than it usually does and down to 19 feet. Well, after some diagnosis tonight I determined it was the 1st stage which is probably over-pressurizing the low pressure side. My 2nd stage/inflator worked fine on another 1st stage regulator. Tonight I'm going to swap out the questionable 1st stage and replace it with the one on my open water regulator, which I'd been using for my stage bottle. Today was the last day for stage dives so I don't need 3 regulators anymore this trip.

    Even though Blue Abyss and cenote Pet Cemetery are part of Nohoch nah Chich (which is, effectively, part of Sistema Sac Aktun now) the cavern is accessed from the Dos Ojos main entrance from highway 307. It's a l-o-n-g way into the jungle on a rough road. I sat on both my towel and my wetsuit to cushion the bumpy ride, which probably saved my backbone from a trip to the chiropractor.

    The fees to visit Pet Cemetery may be the highest of all cenotes in the region at a whopping 200 pesos. Fortunately with the current 14:1 exchange rate that means it is only about US $14. However that's still pricey compared to Grand Cenote (120 pesos), Dos Ojos (120 pesos) and Nohoch nah Chich (150 pesos). However the new facilities there are excellent and very cleanly maintained. They were still under construction when we visited today and the electric lights didn't work yet, but hey, the toilets flushed and they even had a high quality toilet paper in the stalls. Sure beats a hole in the floor of a palapa with four see-through walls and a can of sawdust!

    22 January 2009

    153 Minutes, 9000 Feet

    Today's dive was a stage dive starting at Dos Ojos, to cenote Tikim Chi. I won't say a lot about this dive because most of the details are extremely technical. Stage diving is when you carry one (or more) extra bottle of air with you, to the left of your torso. The reason for "staging" on this dive was to extend our dive time beyond what we'd normally have in our two back-mounted air tanks. There are other reasons to stage, but this one was for the distance.

    Tikim Chi is a whopping 4500 feet away from Dos Ojos. That may not seem like a lot to you, but try swimming that distance underwater with 130-150 lbs of gear! And I should mention there was a slight, but noticeable upstream current pushing against us.

    I didn't realise the distance when we were first told of the dive, and didn't know it until I passed by two opposing line arrows which read as follows: "Dos Ojos - 3250 feet" "Tikim Chi - 1250 feet" Fortunately we had a break each way at a not-quite-halfway point, an air dome right on the main line. It was at this air dome that we stashed our stage rigs before the final push to Tikim Chi.

    Of the six divers on the team, four made it to Tikim Chi. Two others who knew they may not have enough air before they started, called thirds and turned although they were a scant 150 feet or so from the goal. Normally we don't break up a team when a dive is called, but this had been discussed before we left the air dome and we were in effect two teams heading in the same direction. After a few minutes of quiet reflection at the Mayan Temple at Tikim Chi, we swam back. All six reconvened at the air dome before taking the 45 minute swim back to Dos Ojos.

    When we initially arrived at Dos Ojos for our dive at 8:30am the place was deserted. We were the only ones there. When we returned on the dive to the West Eye three hours later, the place was packed with divers and snorkelers. There was even another team of three going in with double stages. Dos Ojos is a diver's playground. A bit expensive to visit, but well maintained and good facilities.

    The majesty of Calimba

    Calimba (sometimes spelled Kalimba or Kolimba) is a tiny entrance to Sistema Sac Aktun, the same cave system that Grand Cenote is part of. Calimba has had its run of bad luck recently: a collapse of the entrance (due to natural causes or landowner carelessness I am not sure) and subsequent problems with the quality of the water have made it a questionable place to dive. Although it is easily accessible from the highway, the landowner is not usually there and special arrangements must be made in advance if you want to do any diving. Fortunately, Connie has this down with military precision and our plan to do Calimba to cenote Bosh Chen on Wednesday went off without a hitch.

    Now, those of you who have read my blog from last month and last year will note that this was my 4th time into Calimba, and my 3rd attempt at getting to cenote Bosh Chen. The other two times I ended up in groups that turned the dive far short of the goal. Today... YES... Today, I saw Bosh Chen for the first time and it was absolutely glorious -- not to see it, but to have finally accomplished that goal. And there are two large rooms full of the most beautiful stalactite formations I hadn't seen before that... well... gasp... were truly breathtaking.

    On this dive there were only four on the team. The other two opted to do a land tour which left (in this team order) Connie, myself, Dusan and Bill. As seems to be the case with me, the smaller the team the more fun I have on the dive. I think with very little question even though the week is not finished, this will be my Best Cave Dive of the Week.

    Not only that, I have spectacular VIDEO of the dive!! What a fantastic souvenir to take home after the trip. Almost 30 minutes of digital video, mostly from the jump from main line to Bosh Chen and arriving at Bosh Chen itself, and then a good deal on the way back. I know most of my friends reading this probably aren't into this Cave Diving thing, but if you're at all interested to see it, it's quite good footage. Really gives you a feel for what Cave Diving is like. Dusan watched it today and wants a copy. I will probably edit out the part when I got impaled on a stalagmite because I was distracted filming. :-)



    This little blip of video shows us going down the Bosh Chen line back to the Paso de Lagarto line. Although it is difficult to tell in the video, I am making a drop from about 25 feet to 40 feet here.

    Passageways in this cave tend to be VERY narrow and quite often we have to squeeze between two stalactite pillars barely a shoulder width apart, all while trying not to touch either one, the floor, or the ceiling. (There are special techniques you learn in cave training for this kind of thing.) While I am in this cave, my attention is first and foremost on my body movement and maintaining perfect buoyancy. Filming and attention to the camera is always, always secondary. The quality of the video suffers because of this, but it is very important for the preservation of the cave.

    Footnotes

    • Cave Diving is dangerous! Please don't dive into a cave without proper training. Or at least make sure there is water in the cave before you dive into it.
    • Cave Diving involves encounters of Spectacular Beauty. Please remember to breathe while you are underwater.
    • Don't get impaled on a stalactite or stalagmite. It can hurt. (Fortunately I was only mildly surprised, not hurt in the least. The stalagmite is OK too.)
    • If you plan to take a camera into a cave, I strongly recommend two things: (1) get familiar with your camera/video gear in open water FIRST -- if you can manage your gear in coral caves with no problem you are probably good enough to do it in a cave; (2) don't take a camera on your first visit to a cave. Tour the cave first to know what to expect, then take the gear on the 2nd visit.
    • I want to add this advice: (3) If you want to take good pictures in a cave, practice your photography / videography on night dives first. The conditions on a night dive are much closer than daytime diving in terms of exposure, lighting and dealing with switches/knobs/bells/whistles on your housing in the dark.

    Statistics and Facts

    • The dive time was 92 minutes. Calimba to Bosh Chen was 44 minutes, Bosh Chen to Calimba was 48 minutes which included a 3 minute safety stop.
    • Maximum depth was 45 feet
    • There is a section we passed on the Calimba line just before the Lagarto main line called the "Boa Constriction" and as you can imagine, it is a series of minor restrictions. They are quite fun to negotiate. Remember playing "limbo" where you cannot touch the bar? Imagine doing that in 100 lbs of scuba gear while cave diving.
    • There have been two deaths in Calimba that I know of, and photography was a contributing factor. This fact is consciously on my mind every time I dive here.
    • There was one primary light failure on this dive. Dusan's quit probably because of a low battery.
    • I now carry TWO primaries after learning from last month's fiasco.

    Does Cave Diving make your hair shiny?

    It could all be my imagination, but my hair seems to be shinier than it has in many, many months. Is it something about the high mineral content in the water? Does it have to do with spending hours at a time diving in a cave? Have I been blessed by the god Chac Mool? Dunno. But I wish it would look this good all the time!

    20 January 2009

    Labna-Ha revisited

    Second day of cave diving and my third visit to the famed Labna-Ha. The owners are expanding their development of the land for tourists so someday soon I might have to call it "Labna-Ha Resort and Spa." For now they do mostly snorkeling, jungle tours and a Zip line. I'm not sure exactly what else they are planning but it does look enterprising. They're currently building a welcome center and 20-car parking lot on the main highway.

    Their property is 3-4 miles back on a very bumpy Mexican road. Its more like a limestone trail that cars can ride on, but I suspect as Labna Ha and Nohoch nah Chich (which shares the same road) gain popularity/prosperity, the road will improve. It sure beats the donkey rides through the jungle that the first cave divers had to do. That was a few years before my first visit to Nohoch.

    Anyway.

    This week being a small-ish group of only six divers, Connie took us in one group down the main line. Dive was called predictably on 3rds, by the same diver who always does, exactly 60 minutes into the dive. And according to Connie, called only 15 feet short of our goal which was a "T" in the line, though I didn't see it myself. It was a fun dive and long at 119 minutes, but wasn't as enjoyable as having gone with Micael with Sergio leading last month. Smaller teams just make better cave dives.

    We did lunch made by Labna-Ha staff, which was good as always; then the zip line into a dry cave cenote which was fun (but short) as always; and a tour of the dry cave led by Sergio. It amazes me that I have been on his tour of the dry cave three times now, and each time he talks about completely different aspects of cave geology and history.

    Footnotes


    Footnote 1: Hmm... I was off by my estimation of this week's median age. Everyone else is well into their 60's. Being decades younger in a sport predominated by an older crowd, my ability to estimate age has been thrown off somehow.

    Footnote 2: I played with the Dive Rite LED 500 some more in this cave. Yes indeed, the light does not penetrate through the water as cleanly as my HID. I am pretty sure the reason is the colour temperature difference! HID is a broad spectrum light with strong output in blue and near-ultraviolet. As these are colours that water filters out last with distance, HID simply goes further. However I should note that not all LED's run at the same colour temperature and there are some LED that are more blue-ish. But my initial impressions of the Dive Rite LED 500 are: It makes a truly excellent back-up primary or primary substitute but it can't replace a 10 Watt HID.

    19 January 2009

    Cave Diving Wow!

    I am delighted, and very privileged to be on a 2nd week of cave diving with Connie LoRe during my vacation. It is my 3rd trip with her so far. This trip was sort of a last minute arrangement which involved changing my plane tickets, extending stay in Cozumel and working logistics of getting to and from Akumal without renting a car. I *hate* renting cars in Mexico, and hopefully will never do it again. But that's another story for another day, and I really don't want to spout a bunch of negative energy after having such a positive day.

    On this trip there are five of us plus Connie. Thus it is the smallest group I've done on one of Connie's weeks. There's Lori and Ken whom I met last year, and Dusan (pronounced Doo-shAN) and Bill. Everyone except me appears to be in their 50's. Unlike the other groups I've been on, this one seems to be pretty good on air consumption which means longer dives and more complicated plans. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

    Also staying in the same hotel is Rick Rowett, a cave diver I'd met two years ago on a different trip (not with Connie) who is the general manager at Dolphin Scuba, and a really personable diver. He'd just finished hosting a week of open-water scuba diving for 30 people with his store and was taking a few extra days to cave dive in Akumal. I've just gotten back from catching up with him and two of his friends, talking of cave this-and-that and where to cave dive tomorrow. I think I've sold them on the idea of visiting Nohoch nah Chich (tomorrow is their last day diving) so I wish them an enjoyable dive. Hopefully we'll get some cave diving arranged for next year.

    My cave week with Connie just started yesterday, with first cave dives today in Grand Cenote. Our first dive was up Paso de Lagarto. On my last trip there the dive was called due to light failure (not mine). This time we got all the way to the Bosh Chen jump before dive was called on 1/3rds. Yay! I was enthused because it showed our group had much better air time than average. I still had 300 psi penetration gas or so. (In Layman's terms, that means with my double 80 cubic foot tanks I could have gone about 30% longer before having to call the dive myself.)

    And best of all.... No primary light failures!! ** (See Footnotes, below)

    The second dive, however, was the cat's meow. Connie decides during lunch that because our group seems to be good on air, she will take us beyond Cuzan Nah to a side passage that leads to cenote La Boca. This was apparently the line that Lena wanted to take us to, on my last visit, but she couldn't find the jump point.

    This trip was a complex series of jumps involving one primary reel and six jump spools. I did a nearly identical dive with Glenn last year here to the same passageway but only had five spools and a primary. In my log book the dive would be listed like this:

    * Grand cenote cavern line, then guideline to main (permanent) line
    * Left jump to shortcut towards Ho-Tul
    * Jump off shortcut back onto main line, towards Ho-Tul
    * Cross Ho-Tul gap with a long jump reel (80+ feet)
    * Right jump to close gap to Cuzan Nah loop (circuit)
    * Right jump off far end of Cuzan Nah loop to unnamed passage (Really Beautiful Section!)
    * Left jump to passage towards La Boca
    * Dive called halfway to La Boca on 3rds

    The same person keeps calling the dive on 3rds. Hmmm...

    The passageway towards La Boca was small, tight, pristine, and very highly decorated. At one point we reached a small room that had all the effects of a halocline layer and when I asked Connie about it she confirmed that is what it was. Now, how you can get a halocline at 20 feet depth in a cave that is fresh water... I don't understand! But sure enough I was in it and saw it. Visiting this new section of Sac Aktun was really exciting for me and really accentuates what Cave Diving is all about. It is a feast for the eyes, a challenge for the mind, and joy for the soul.


    Tomorrow we are off to Labna Ha at Cenote Caracol. This was my favourite dive of the trip last month, so we'll see how it goes this time. Can lightning strike the same place twice?


    Footnotes


    Last month's trip with Connie had something like 14 primary light failures. Read my earlier blog on the subject to see what that was about. That week, though I did not experience a failure myself, really made me think twice about how to prepare. And so I decided to buy one of those new fangled LED lights, but one bright enough to not only serve as a backup, but a primary as well. Thanks to Connie who arranged the purchase, I now have a Dive Rite LED 500 lumen primary, which is supposedly as bright as my 10 Watt HID. In the cave it isn't quite as strong, but that may have more to do with color temperature than actual brightness.

    It is small enough that I can mount it right next to my HID primary's battery canister. On my first dive today I carried both lights and tried them out against each other. Later this week I may write up a report. But for now I feel very comfortable carrying TWO primaries in addition to the two backups. Now, if my HID primary were to fail, I could pull out the LED primary and keep going, without having to call the dive. Awesome!

    11 January 2009

    Teasing Toadfish



    OK, swimming with Wild Dolphins wasn't the only fun thing I did on Sunday. During the 3rd tank dive at Paradise Reef I also got to tease a Splendid Toadfish out of its hole. You've probably seen my pictures of these ugly/beautiful fish in my photo albums and what you usually see is only the head with its chin tentacles. I'd heard from friends and divemasters that you can tease them out by wiggling something yellow'ish in front of them.

    So... today when I came across one and had the video with me, I unhooked my safety sausage (it was the only loose object I had at the time except for my video housing!) and squirmed it in the sand in front of the toadfish. At first it came out a little bit, but then stopped. So, while holding the camera as steady as I could with one hand, grabbed the sausage and teased some more. What you see on the video is the thing coming out of its hole about 3/4 of the way! What great fun!

    If you want to see what the whole Splendid Toadfish looks like, just do an image search on that name.

    Swimming with Wild Dolphins



    This week has been filled with small miracles. First, I went a whole week without getting a single mosquito bite. Then, my video housing which had been broken for over a month... started working again! (Much to my relief, I found that the irreplaceable electronics are fine, the main connector just had some corrosion on it.) And then a new gym opened up nearby so I could resume a work-out schedule while in Cozumel. Now, today, I got to swim with WILD DOLPHINS. I am not making this up.

    Even better, I had the (now working perfectly) video housing with me on this trip, so I got in-water video while I was snorkeling. No, unfortunately I wasn't in scuba gear at the time we came across this pod of 5 adult dolphins, but what I got on video still looks pretty good. These were B-I-G dolphins. Easily thrice my body weight. The story played out like this:

    We had just finished our 3rd tank dive on Paradise reef and were heading back to the dock. It's about a 15 minute boat ride. Suddenly the divemaster shouts "Dolphins!" and everyone scrambles out to the bow of the boat. I grab my video on the way there and sure enough, el capitan has set the boat right on their tails. Or they swam up to under the bow of the boat... I'm not sure which. So there I am on the forward pulpit over the bow, shooting video straight down of these lovely creatures as they pace the boat, leaping out every now and then. They soon wandered off in a different direction.

    That wasn't all. We were then told el capitan was going to race ahead of them and we could jump in the water with snorkel gear. Nemecio was extremely generous to loan me his snorkel since I don't have one. So - In the water we go! I get a few distance shots of them and then suddenly the whole pod swims right underneath me. What a great experience!!! The moment is over all to quick, but thankfully captured on video.

    We went two more times to jump in and snorkel with them but the first encounter was the best. This was such an amazing trip! The capitan and crew of Aqua Safari's "Ocean III" were incredibly generous with their time and accommodating to the five of us divers who enjoyed this trip beyond words. We all tipped well today.

    About the Video


    I just learned today that Blogger allows me to post video. This is my first attempt doing a blog with a video snippet. All told I have about eight minutes of video, most of it above water as they danced among the three boats that were there at the time. Trying to handle the camera while snorkeling is much harder and much more restrictive than while scuba diving as I quickly learned, but for a spur-of-the-moment encounter I am pretty happy with it.

    Some still shots


    Here are a few stills extricated from the video using Pinnacle Studio. They are grainy but the best I can do with what I've got. If you see me in person anytime in the next few months be sure to ask to see the whole video.


    The image above was captured from the video when I was on the bow of the boat, as the dolphins paced us this one turned to "look" at me as I was filming it.

    The following pictures are excerpts from the video above.