Yesterday I travelled down to the London dive show, not because I wanted dive kit but because I wanted to listen to Jarrod Jablonski give a talk on his recent world record cave dive with fellow WKPP member Casey Mckinley. Jarrod - CEO of GUE had attended the DIRx weekend last October but I had been unable to attend because I was away on holiday. So when I heard he was attending the dive show I decided to trek down and make a day of it, obviously it was great to meet up with friends and talk about diving, which right now is all I seem to want to do. Jarrod talked about their 26 hour dive which is about as far removed from my own diving as you can get, right now the prospect of spending 26 minutes in the water is daunting.
It is almost 12 months since I took my GUE fundamentals course and I have written about those experiences before, it is also almost 12 months since I was made redundant from a company where I had been for 12 years and ended almost 28 years of continuous employment, I decided I would relax during the summer and get in as much diving in as possible which didn’t really happen, the week day diving was now in the deeper depths and although I have been diving for 13 years I was now happier in the shallows learning and developing my new GUE skills, so the last 12 months have meant hours of diving inland sites with only a couple of ventures in to the sea.
In October I went on what was billed as the holiday of a lifetime, 16 of us headed for the Galapagos, we had spent two years saving and looking forward to it, in the end the holiday just didn’t press the right buttons for me and I really can’t explain why. I fell back to the old style of diving, ignoring everything about the importance of the team and minimum gas management I had learnt on my course, although I was able to dive the “right” gas that was about it, the dives were about spending as much time in “solo mode” and minimum gas on a couple of dives really did mean minimum gas.
When I came back I was able to do my fundies upgrade dive, I was very happy with the dive probably because I didn’t know it was happening, Clare Gledhill my instructor is very good at working out what is best for the student and not knowing something is going to happen is certainly the best way for me and I have since learned it is a trick she uses on other students. Since then I really haven’t been in the water that much which is probably due to financial constraints and also because I am not used to diving over the winter and really need to sort some different thermal protection out, as I haven’t found anything which works. This is where the frustrations have begun poor thermal protection means I am adding more gas than I should to the suit which then makes gas migration more difficult to manage, therefore the cycle of felling uncomfortable in the water begins.
I have become so frustrated with diving I just don’t want to do the one thing I need to do and that is to practice, a few weeks ago I was supposed to be diving at another get together, the alarm went off at 3am and for the first time I looked at the clock and decided not to dive, I tossed and turned for the next couple of hours and because I had arranged to meet someone I had to go anyway, I arrived and spent the day in the freezing cold talking and then we headed back to Gareth’s house for an evening of talking about more diving. We headed back to Vobster on the Sunday morning and I handed over the torch I was selling, and after a couple of hours of standing around I headed off back home, so 400 miles, 8 hours in the car and I had achieved nothing.
So what next? I took a decision last week, which will either be the right one or financially very silly, I have sold both my Faber twin sets, because I am sure these are adding to my problems if it turns out these were not the problem then I have just wasted quite a lot of money. I wasn’t sure when I was going to dive next, not having any cylinders makes life a little more difficult. I have been lucky enough to have received some kind offers of borrowing a set and going diving, once I have decided what is going to work then I will work out what I am going to do, if that means spending more money on yet another twin set then so be it, if it doesn’t come together I don’t know what I will do, because the thought of giving up something I have enjoyed for a number of years doesn’t bare thinking about, more importantly the friends I have made I don’t want to contemplate loosing. Just writing this upsets me to even think about it. I spoke to Richard Walker yesterday as he has been spending some time working overseas, but he is coming back to the UK soon and I don’t have the time to organise anything in the next couple of weeks, but this would have been just what I needed, to get away and spend sometime practicing my skills, so I can either do some training dives with an instructor in the UK or maybe what I need to do is find an overseas one – right now 5 days of practice would be great, until then Alastair and Clare have said I can join them next weekend for a dive – apparently no one is judging me, I just need to believe it.
March 9th, 2008
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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It was almost exactly 12 months ago when I sat in on a GUE fundamentals class and then got in the water with Clare. The dive was awful, frankly I was embarrassed at my lack of “ease” in the water, Clare was effortless and I was a shambles.
Over the following months, I got to dive with some experienced divers who seemed to be more than willing to take a Muppet like me diving. I did my GUE-F course with Clare in April and continued with my “diver education” over the next few months. Some skills were a struggle and I still hadn’t cracked the valve drill with any degree of slickness.
Around July/August I decided to bite the bullet and buy a new dry suit, which Clare arranged for me, I went for the fitting and she ticked all the options boxes. When the suit arrived I felt much better about myself, surprising what a new bit of kit will do. So I had a couple of dives in it before my holiday, some time ago I had offered to be Clare’s surface support on a forthcoming GUE-F course at Capernwray Quarry in Lancashire, we had made a tentative arrangement to do my upgrade dive at the end of the course, subject to time.
I didn’t have much time to practice in the new suit, so last week I picked up a diving day with Mark Emery at Stoney, he hadn’t been in the water for a while and when I volunteered to buddy him he accepted. The dives went quite well, the first not so good but for me they got better. So I was quite happy that I would be able to give it my best shot if the opportunity for a dive arose.
I headed up to Capernwray on Friday, arriving just as the guys were all finishing lunch, so they were soon off for their first dive of the day having spent the morning doing the kit set up. After their dives we headed back to Capernwray House where they were staying for another lecture and video de-brief, then headed off to the accommodation which had originally been booked for another candidate who couldn’t attend and I got his room, we also had a nice dinner there, although it was probably a bit late in the day for me to be eating and I didn’t do justice to my shoulder of lamb.
I met up with the guys again on Saturday morning at Cap. House and they were doing valve drills and S-drills in the car park, as my kit was set up, Rob used mine as their sets were at Capernwray being filled. After their first dive, I was ready to go and had a short dive with Garf, we descended and ran through valve drills and S-drills and a rather nice ascent – if I may say so myself. After their second dive if was back again to the B&B for another lecture and de-brief, then out again and as the food had been good the night before we headed back to the Kings Arms at Burton in Kendal for more food.
I woke up on Sunday morning feeling rather delicate, was I nervous about my potential dive – I don’t know, but I really wasn’t feeling 100%. Rob and Marty worked through their exam and then went in for their dive; this dive is for practicing something you need to have another go at. Clare’s suit had been leaking throughout the weekend and she looked really cold when she finished the dive, so a combination of this and me not feeling very well, I asked if we could leave my dive for maybe next week at Guildy. Clare agreed and we would see how we both felt after their dive.
Clare had asked me to play “3rd man” as there were only 2 of them on the course; I hoped I wouldn’t let them down, as it was their course. Clare said it would be fine. We got kitted up and entered the water from the beach area, Marty was number 1 and ran through the GUEedge and Rob was number 2, they had put me at number 3, which was where Clare had thought they would put me, this was because I would probably end up being snaffled during the dive to make sure they were watching the lights. We descended and ran through valve drills, I was quite pleased with mine which made a nice start, we then ran S-drills round the team and then started the “dive”, I was immediately stopped round the platform and within a few fin strokes Rob signalled Marty and they both turned to see me hiding being the platform legs, OK probably not hiding that well. A few failures later, I won’t go into too much detail, as it wasn’t my course or dive; I’ll leave the guys to post a report.
At the end of the dive, Rob and Marty were gas sharing so that leaves me to put the smb up, which goes quite nicely, just as I have finished putting it up but before I have chance to clip off a double ender, I see Garf coming at me OOG, so I donate to him and we ascend – sorry Garf it could have been a bit slower, I had developed cramp at the bottom and was trying to cope with it even before the bag went up, so I wasn’t having the best of times – lesson learnt eat more than a chocolate brownie even if you aren’t feeling well.
On the surface I am gathering myself when Clare comes over and tells me I have just upgrading my Rec pass, I don’t quite understand at the time as I didn’t even know it was happening. I don’t have time to feel pleased with myself as I am immediately told to “get back down and help the boys get theirs”.
Back on the surface I am told my smb was text book, I guess watching Clare’s video at least a hundred times must have helped then. Please don’t knock me for feeling more than a little pleased with myself - it has been tough 2 years 
October 29th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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Last week my new DUI TLS350 dry suit arrived and I was keen to try it in the water along with my new Scubapro regs just to make sure everything was OK. I arranged to dive with James from DIRx and then I got a phone call to say that I could dive with Rachel while the candidates on Clare and John’s fundamentals course were doing land drills.
Clare had a quick look at the suit once it was on and said it looked fine, so I got kitted and headed for the water with Rachel, we headed off to the platforms and did a valve drill. I think Rachel then asked which way to the other platform but I misunderstood and we headed off back to the entry point, just before the exit we went through another valve drill, sorry Rachel I should learn to keep still.
Back on the surface Clare asked if I would do a bit of surface support for them and then when they had finished their dive I could jump in and she would have time to do a short dive with me, sounded like a good trade to me so headed off to the far end kitted and armed with camera and log sheets. As soon as the guys surfaced I kitted up and even had enough room in the suit to crouch down and put my fins on, something, which would not have been possible in the old suit. For some reason on the surface I had a bit of trouble leaving the surface, I always feel like a small puppy when I dive with Clare.
We descended to the platform and I was asked to do a valve drill and that successfully completed I did the S drill and a bit of buoyancy practice, I am still moving a bit put apparently not as bad as I thought I was, I have a habit of reaching out for my “safety blanket” which needs work to correct. Clare then asked if I wanted to put up a delayed smb which I have found to be my best skill, I made doubly sure I checked above me before deploying, although thinking back I don’t know why I unfurled the smb before attaching it to the spool, just another one of those nervous moments I guess. Anyway I was feeling quite pleased with myself when Clare threw me an out of gas drill, I don’t think my brain works correctly because when I got to donate with the right hand I am not bringing up the secondary reg with the left but waiting for the right to be free – odd I know but I have always been very right handed. We do an ascent while sharing, which should have been slower, but we get there with an attempt at back kick on the way – that’s me not Clare.
Back on the surface we have a chat and Clare tells me I just need a little more confidence in myself and we plan a date for my fundamentals re-evaluation dive, the date is a course scheduled for the end of October at Capernwray. I will struggle to get some more “proper” diving in before then but have a whole 10 days of holiday single tank dives to practice the back kick.
I don’t know if I will pass – but I am going to give it a damn good go, the important thing is diving is starting to be fun again.:)
September 12th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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Almost two years ago I was part of a very excited group who met up at the dive show in Birmingham to meet up with a specialist diving tour operator to try and organise a holiday of a lifetime to the Galapagos. We met the operator and informed them what we wanted and as they could provide the trip we wanted we signed up and were given a couple of weeks to get a full charter and pay the initial deposit, this was back in October 2005 all we had to do was sit back and get organised.
As we were going such a long way I decided I would extend my trip and visit Machu Picchu in Peru, I did my research and found a travel agent who could organise the trip for me, MP is a popular destination so I had to commit to certain aspects of the trip quite early on. I had decided to stay overnight at MP and so chose a lovely hotel close to the site, I can’t tell you how many times I have looked at their website as I looked forward to the trip.
In the summer of 2006 we were informed there would be some changes to our booking and we had to pay what should be a discretionary staff gratuity up front before our trip, some of the group weren’t happy with this and were given the option to cancel, they did and I bet they are glad they did. The rest of us agreed reluctantly as another couple of hundred pounds wasn’t going to make too much difference. We then had to find a few more people to fill the boat, we managed eventually which wasn’t too difficult as the BBC were running some programmes about Galapagos and the region.
So yet again we sat back and waited, constantly checking the same websites and dive forums for trip reports to whet our appetite, July 2007 came round and we paid the balance for the dive portion of the trip, then on July 12 came a bombshell, I read on one the US dive forums that most of the boats had been confined to port as they weren’t operating with the correct permits. We contacted our dive operator for more information and where informed that they had been notified of the problems but these would soon be sorted out, our quest for information has been constant. We are told something will happen and then it doesn’t so we wait again, then I read that the President of Ecuador has lifted the “illegal” sale of shark fins IF caught accidentally – yeh right
so it seems he has declared open season on the sharks we are hoping to see. I certainly don’t want to see dead sharks lying dead on the seabed and I don’t think any diver does.
We heard that the boats could operate the southern islands only but then we hear that the boat we are due to be on has floated the current regulations and headed for the islands of Wolf and Darwin anyway, now they have been spotted and reported, jeopardising any future trips. We gave our dive operator a deadline for information on a go no go but they have once more come back and asked for an extension, we have no choice but to comply. I was due to pay the balance of my trip extension today (15th) but because they were not able to extend my payment date for a few days I have decided not to pay the balance and therefore have cancelled that part of the trip I was particularly looking forward to, not least that I was going to meet my friend who lives in Oz after the dive trip and continue our trip together.
I can’t explain how upset I am about the whole situation, the trip of a lifetime has turned into complete and utter frustration, the most frustrating aspect is the lack of accurate information we are getting and I seem to have more contact with a complete stranger on the other side of the Atlantic who is also in the same “boat”.
August 15th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving, Holidays |
one comment
Although I eventually managed to successfully do the valve drill on my course, I seem to have struggled ever since and these have been a source of frustration. On a recent weekend away I had the chance to dive with Alastair and we got talking after the dive. He mentioned that he also had a few problems with them and sorted them by just practicing while at home
So over the last couple of days my kit has been set up in the lounge and every so often, yesterday was every hour on the hour I went through the drill for about 10mins. I have no problems but that doesn’t mean I won’t have problems again when I am back in the water, although I need to sort my trim a little while trying to stay still. I don’t think my suit is helping, mainly because I do fill it and maybe it is a little more difficult with a rear entry suit. This week I am going to be measured for a new suit which hopefully will solve the problem together with some muscle memory exercises.
July 16th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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A friend of mine Mal Bridgeman had organised this trip last year but I couldn’t make it because of getting time off work. When I was made redundant I decided this was just what I needed and phoned Mal to see if there were any places available, lucky for me there was and I phoned the agent and booked my space.
The trip couldn’t come round quickly enough and I was looking forward to it immensely. Mal, Mike and Di had already decided to order twin sets, I wasn’t too bothered but agreed to dive them so we could dive together.
I drove down to Norfolk to meet Di and then we drove to Gatwick, the time pasted quite quickly and it was soon time to board, we arrived at the gate and boarded a bus to the aircraft, we had to wait for a couple of people and then missed our slot which meant we sat on the plane for about 90mins before takeoff.
The flight wasn’t too bad although as always it seemed to go on forever, even though it had taken the same time the week before to drive down to Dover, we arrived at Hurgharda and the transfer through the airport wasn’t too bad. We arrived at the marina and walked down the jetty the bags were driven down on the pickup, as normal everyone wanted their “pound” to load and offload the bags.
We boarded Hurricane and noticed there was only one twin set, don’t worry we were told they would arrive shortly. We went up to the main deck and met Thijse and Nicole the dive guides and paperwork had to be completed, all the usual stuff. Then we went to set up kit, which took longer than I thought it would, the bands on the twin set didn’t seem to be round and one of the rods wasn’t straight – anyway we got there in the end. I had taken my tail weight and 1kg V weight, I also started with a couple of kilos on a weight belt but soon ditched that, I should have removed the kilo V weight but really couldn’t be bothered.
Cabin was sorted and then it was time for a beer, the first dive brief was to be quite leisurely and wouldn’t be until 7.30am, a bell would ring for either a dive brief or a meal, you would know which by what you had just done. Time for bed and as usual a restless night. I got up early and headed for the main deck and cup of tea – routine never changes
The first dive was at a local site called Gota Abu Ramada, quite a nice little dive site for a check dive, we had been told the max dive time was 60mins but these seem to get extended by us just a little. Usual variety of reef fish, blue spotted ray, small moray, huge titan trigger fish and my favourite the masked puffer. A couple more local sites followed then a night crossing to Little Brother. This was a bad day for me as during the first dive of the day my knee locked and when I signalled to Di I had a problem she thought I had cramp and proceeded to try and stretch it for me, ouch and I continued the dive with only one working leg. Getting in the zodiac was interesting and so was getting back to Hurricane from the zodiac. Most of the afternoon was spent in my cabin and having been given strong painkillers by Di I don’t remember much about it. Nurse Di was great organising a huge bag of ice for me. I took it easy when I eventually got up as tomorrow would be Big Brother and I didn’t want to miss it.
The dive brief was of the Numidia and was my deepest dive of the trip at 38.6m, which was done on 28% mix. Unfortunately we were dropped in the wrong place and ended up on the Aida, the current was also in the wrong direction and Nicole the dive guide turned the dive. Nicole and another two guests surfaced soon after, so as she indicated she was ascending, I deployed my SMB so they would know where we were as we continued our dive. We arrived on the surface as a 4 and realised we couldn’t see Hurricane or the cover boats, we all deployed SMB’s so we had 4 on the surface. We got together and drifted with the current, the waves were quite big. We were on the surface about 10mins; I thought what a good decision a twin set was. The zodiac arrived and picked us up, Nicole and the others had been on the surface 30mins; we were on the opposite side of Big Brother to the one we should have been on. Two more dives on Big Brother including the Numidia again drifting over the Aida during the dive.
Another overnight sail to Deadalus which was like a mill pond when we arrived and the chance of hammerheads, we took the zodiac with Thijse the guide and dropped into the blue, we waited a little and then they came in the distance but none the less they were there about a dozen hammerheads, yes just what I had wanted to see. They must have gone round a couple more times and we also saw a grey reef shark. The entire dive was spent out in the blue, which was an odd feeling, as I had to keep checking on the position of the reef as you can soon become disorientated. The second dive was also done in the blue and as before we were to see the hammerheads; I also saw a large pod of dolphin’s way below.
Overnight to Elphinstone which was also flat calm, it is hard to imagine the same dive site where people were lost due to strong currents and big waves, we did have a current to negotiate as we made our way along the line down to north plateau and down to see if there were more sharks. There was one and a hammerhead out in the blue on the east side. Another dive on the west wall but there no more sharks.
We did a couple of local dives on the way back but these weren’t a patch on Big Brother, which has to be one of my favourite dive sites. Apart from the hammerheads, just as dinner ended one evening there were shouts and whistles from the crew - we had a pod of dolphins riding the bow wave :D. We spent about 15mins at the bow before I decided to try and get my camera which I hadn’t picked up, I thought they would have gone by the time I got back but they hadn’t and we must have had them with us for nearly 30mins :) Fantastic, hammerheads, sharks and dolphins what more do you need.
June 24th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving, Holidays |
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Yeh right, Saturday started with a few more lectures and then out in to the farm yard to set up our BP and harnesses, apparently mine is a little loose and is tightened up a bit, OK this is all becoming a bit of a blur so might not actually be in the right order. It’s time to go diving so we pack up and are off down to Vobster, the place is packed as they have a MCS charity event going on, but having booked a parking space I manage to park near the submarine. We haul our kit down to the pallets near the water and start to kit up. In the water Clare demonstrates the pre-dive checks and once in the water we do bubble checks. This is just a dive to see where we are all at, Fin has a complete set of borrowed kit except his BP and Mark is in a new suit which he is very proud of and has only used his kit a couple of times. We arrive at one of the platforms and Clare demonstrates fin kicks, Mal is ever present as video bitch they say the camera does lie and they are right it doesn’t. We move off the platform when an instructor and his students decide they want it :( It’s about time to surface so we do and this wasn’t one of my better moments, I am feeling restricted in my harness but that’s just an excuse I still haven’t got used to doing horizontal ascents after 12 years of vertical ones I find this a difficult skill. So I hit the surface first and my team follow shortly afterwards.
Second dive becomes a blur and I am not enjoying myself at all, my head has gone – the doubts are back and frankly I could quite easily go home, I am glad I am travelling on my own as I don’t want to be around anyone else at the moment. Back at Edenvale and we have some more lectures followed by a quick change – at least I did not sure about anyone else and we head off for some food, Mal doesn’t drink but thank god Clare orders one so we do. A nice meal and chat and then back to the farm, Clare suggests the 3 of us sit down and work through some of the work study sheets but after about 15mins it becomes clear to me I can’t get my head round the questions and need some quiet time to do them on my own. I head off to my room and leave the boys to it, I set the alarm for 5.15am but don’t need it and set about my work study exercises.
Sunday was to spend more time in the farm yard doing some valve drills on land but we have put our sets in for fills and out kit is at Vobster, so we set off and do the drills in the car park which must look amusing to those who don’t know what you are doing, then it’s time to kit up again and we are back in the water for valve drills and “S” drills. I am not concerned about the valve drills I have been reaching for them on each time I have done this year, OK now I have a problem the harness has been reset and while I can reach them I can’t perform the drill, I become frustrated and Clare recognises this stops the drill and I just become more and more annoyed at myself. Mark and Fin are doing an “S” drill and I am supposed to be concentrating on them, I can’t and want out. I signal to Clare that I have to go to the surface, we do and we have a chat. I agree to descend and complete the dive – I am annoyed with myself, nothing new there then.
During lunch Clare takes me for a post dive brief, she knows how I am feeling and said that I wasn’t doing too badly just need to sort my head and obviously complete the skills. The next dive I try again but this is almost as bad as the first time. I leave the water and decide to reset the harness, I know I can do it I just have to sort myself out. It’s the last night so we go to the local pub where we decide on a name of Team Beef as 4 of us decide on a Sunday roast, unfortunately there aren’t enough Yorkshire puds left so I change my order.
Monday morning was pay up and pack up time from the B & B, we hand over our exam papers and work sheets and Clare and Mal head off to mark them while we prepare our dive, with SCR, min deco and all the other information we have learned from the course. We have to prepare our dive and establish team order, Fin decides he doesn’t want to be 2 so he goes 3 and Mark is number 1, we plan our dive using a 5 min faff
luckily on the previous days dives we have all used almost exactly the same amount of gas so the calculations of 20LPM and 30 for emergencies are easy.
We start the dives with the diver lift which is very difficult and I almost scrap poor Mark and his new suit into the quarry floor apparently just where there is a dead rat, I am sure I would revert to type in a real emergency and do the face to face vertical one, yes I am sorry probably not what should be written here. We also practice a couple of things which need brushing up on and Mal takes me to one side for a valve drill, not quite as slick as it should be but I can do it, the one problem I do have is the set I am using has recently been O2 cleaned and I hadn’t noticed until last week that the isolator has been put back on the wrong side and has been offset to the left instead of the right – so I am not happy about this but do manage to shut everything down in the right order. Then I have to do is again for Clare and again it isn’t too bad, I get there eventually, we do “S” drills round the team and then set off for “our” dive. Fin is a bit of a wreck fan and hasn’t had his hands on any metal all weekend so we agree to go and find the aeroplane and have a look round, we set of Mark as number 1, me at 2 and Fin 3. Along the plane I loose Fin’s light and turn around, he isn’t there so I signal to Mark and he turns and we go back to find Fin apparently Clare has highjacked him round the other side, we set off again and Mark’s primary light “fails” so he switches to his backup and goes into number 2 spot. Mark is then hit with an OOG drill and Fin thumbs the dive, I deploy the bag we had scheduled in 5 mins of faff time and apparently we got from OOG to bag up in about 2 and a half minutes but spend more time on the ascent something I had been a little concerned about all weekend anyway we arrive on the surface together which was a first
That’s it all over and we head back to the entry point to de-kit and a group post dive briefing, we then get our individual briefings and road map. It has been the hardest few days I have ever put myself through, I was and frankly still am emotionally and mentally drained.
Thanks to Mark and Fin for being supportive and helping a numpty with fins and ladders. Tim and his team at Vobster, there aren’t many dive sites where all the staff smile
Mal for passing his video bitch speciality, I am sure the badge will be here soon and Clare for an incredible teaching experience.
April 24th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
6 comments
It was finally here, have I done the right thing in 4 days I would know the answer. I have been repeatedly told it’s only a diving course but I couldn’t help been very stressed about potentially failing. I have been very lucky over the last few months to dive with quite a few DIR trained divers and they all looked very much at ease in the water - then there is me
I arranged a dive with Gareth (Gloc) the day before as I hadn’t been to Vobster before and just wanted a little orientation around to familiarize myself with the location and where things were. I had arranged to meet Gareth about 11am and at 10.45 pulled in to the car park, into the shop and signed up for membership as I would be able to take advantage of the privileged parking and reduced daily rate. While I was completing the paper work Gareth arrived and we went back to the cars to kit up and chat, after about 2 hours we were ready to get in the water, Gareth took me through the DIR pre-dive checks and in the water we did a bubble check, at this point Gareth pointed out I had a problem with one of my first stages so we get back out and he retrieves Howard’s set from the car. Thanks Howard but I don’t like your mouthpiece
Kit sorted and we set off to the right and follow the wall along to one of the platforms, we had already had a walk round earlier. Apart from seeing where things were I really wanted to deploy the smb with a spool, I have only used one once before so we tried that out. I was hoping to use a small Frog 3’ one and once Gareth had shown me his way by dropping the double ender through the ring (never seen that before) I gave it a go, doesn’t seem to be working as well as it had done at home we ascended to retrieve them and went back down for another go, this time Gareth got me to do both for a bit more practice we went back down and returned to the entry point where I did a couple more bags. Then it was out for a chat, the obligatory hot chocolate. Back in the water we went for a “fun dive” apparently Gareth doesn’t have many of these at the moment his team is also training for something, hopefully he wasn’t too embarrassed to be seen in the water with me and at the end of the dive I do a couple more deployments. We sort our kit out and I wait for my set to be filled and Gareth has to get off home, so we say goodbye and I head off to find the B & B - EdenVale, Clare has booked us all in to.
After a couple of satnav moments I finally arrive and pointed in the direction of my room. I settle in with a cuppa and since I left home at 6.15am I have a bit of a rest. Later there is a tentative knock on the door and it is Mark one of the other course candidates, so we do the intro bit and we have a chat about the course exam. We don’t know what time Fin is arriving but Mark is hungry and we go and find the pub for a drink and some food, the pub is busy for a Thursday night so we have a bit of a wait but get some in the end. An early night is required so we head off back to EdenVale and say goodnight.
Breakfast is arranged for 8am and there is still no sign of Fin, during a rather splendid breakfast Clare, Mal and Fin all arrive at the same time. We finish breakfast and the table is cleared, I go and get my course work and make sure I have the first of Clare’s chocolate supplies, you really need to get in with the instructor early :) Clare goes through the course timetable and we do some introductions about our diving history and why we are here it was at this point I was asked to recall the last dive I had enjoyed and frankly I can’t remember when that was, maybe that’s why I am here, Clare quickly moves on.
We have a full day of lectures, which are only split by sandwiches appearing and then being demolished. The afternoon passes all too quickly and at about 5pm we are heading off to the swimming pool for our swim tests and fining techniques. I think the swim test is the only part I am not too worried about as I have timed myself a couple of times, I was however a little concerned over the breathe hold swim as I am not the most streamlined and when I have tried it I seem to have bobbed up about half way down. Mark goes first he swims like a fish, then Fin goes and that leaves me, I take a few breaths and just go for it, Mal is in the water as a waypoint and I was relieved to see his legs get nearer :wink:, I surface at just the right place.
We retire to the pub for something to eat and I think the 3 of us are pleased Clare has a proper drink because we certainly need one. The karaoke gets underway and we leave soon afterwards. It isn’t that late but I think everyone retires to their rooms. Today wasn’t too bad, tomorrow will be quite different.
April 24th, 2007
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Fiona |
Diving |
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It has been nearly 2 months since I decided to do the GUE fundamentals course and it is nearly here, this time next week and I will be about half way through, if I haven’t already given up and gone home
I have been trying to work through my kit wondering what I might need in the spares department just in case something goes wrong. I must have always been quite lucky people have described all sorts of things going “bang” and I don’t think I have had any major kit failures in the 13 years I have been diving but I know next weekend will be the day something goes “bang”.
Am I prepared for it - I don’t know but I decided to have a weekend off diving as Easter wasn’t the best trip I have had but then again it was Easter and it always seems to be the same. I have been preparing kit for a few days but today I realised I can’t find my Fourth Element Xerotherm trousers and I don’t know where they are, so planning has stuttered a little as I now had to find another pair and do the alterations on them before Wednesday, not the best preparation. I took my twinsets to be filled today but when I got there the compressor had been taken away for repair, hopefully it will be back on Monday and I can pick them up on Tuesday. Wednesday will be packing the car and I will be off first thing Thursday morning.
I am also a bit nervous about diving with 2/3rd of TFT on Thursday, I have read all their past reports and I just hope I am don’t look too much like a complete novice
This weekend I have been reading the course work we have been sent and I seem to be struggling with some of the minimum gas and gas management calculations, it is obvious my dives up until now have been based on “past dives” and nothing more. I haven’t thought about this before and I seem to be “out of my depth”, but they are simple calculations and I should be able to nail them. I am now frustrated before I even start the course.
April 14th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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I started to write this a couple of weeks ago, I wanted to put down as I went along why I have decided to do the GUE fundamentals course as I suspect a few people are going to ask why. I think my diving history is well documented so I am not going to repeat any of that, but just a quick note to mention that I have been diving 12 years and done about 650 dives.
However since late 2005 I have not enjoyed diving, I have gone diving but not really enjoyed it I know the reasons why but again I am not going to go into those. It wasn’t until I had the pleasure of buddying Mal Bridgeman on a trip to Cornwall in the summer of 2006, I looked at Mal during the dives and thought - god I am crap :( Mal wasn’t DIR at this time but dived in a DIR stylee, he was effortless and I was, not to put too finer point on it rubbish. During the weekend I suffered torch envy so when I returned home I was off to the dive shop for a bigger light, that was the first of many kit changes.
Mal and I had a long standing arrangement to buddy up again for a trip to the Farnes in the September, as I was going to be diving with Mal and knew I would have a good buddy I arranged to make some quite significant kit changes just to see what the difference might be, there has been much talk of bungeed v non bungeed wings for years so Mal said he would lend me a wing to try out. For those who don’t know I have been diving inverted twins for about 3 years which obviously wasn’t going to work with the wing and my hoses, so I suspect to much amusement of others on the trip I changed just about every piece of kit I could except the regs. Yes I know people will say the sea is not somewhere to try out kit changes, but I did give a few people a good laugh and talk of the dark side was covered over a few beers, my response was don’t be silly
The trip didn’t go quite to plan we only got 2 dives in as we were blown out on the Sunday, but Mal suspected I was over weighted and was good enough to arrange a day at Stoney the following month. Again I wrote about this at the time, taking 7kg off my weight belt was quite a shock but felt great. Over the next couple of months I was lucky enough to dive with some very experienced divers, Andy Woodside and Andy Carroll were very supportive and obviously Mal was still there with encouragement even though most of the time I didn’t think it was going to plan - what plan I don’t have one :wink: At this point I should mention Clare who was also giving encouragement from the sidelines, Mal was doing his GUEf course with Clare at the end of January with his friend Mike and Dianne (Madfish) and there was talk of me joining them but there was no way I was going to be doing that, after all I had only just started down this road and I had no idea where I was going.
I had a long phone chat with Clare on the way home from Capernwray one day, so long in fact I was home and I think we talked all the way. It was a this point I talked myself in to choosing a date but we agreed I didn’t have to commit until a planned weekend at the end of February, I would make a decision based on how much I had progressed over the last couple of months. The weekend didn’t go as well as I had planned and the targets I had set myself had not been achieved, I left the water in tears I hope nobody noticed. Mal and Dianne were there again telling me to just go for it, after all that is what the course is for - Clare would teach me the skills and I would try and show some progression during the course. I drove home feeling knackered and dejected, I went to work the following day not knowing what I was going to tell Clare, she wanted a decision - yes or no. I wrote an email and then left in it the drafts box until I plucked up the courage to send it, during the morning Clare posted that she had set up a new website and I sat trawling through the information when I came across an article, “Head games of Diving by B R Wienke, this one article changed my whole mindset. The decision was made, the date is April 20th.
March 13th, 2007
Posted by
Fiona |
Diving |
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