Archive for February, 2007

Wreck diving in the Sound of Mull, 17th Feb 2007

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

What a superb days diving and a great weekend away drinking, having fun and socialising with fellow Cumbernauld Sub Aqua Club Divers.

I drove my new Scuba Bus up from Hamilton to Oban and with the help of modern technology (SAT NAV) right to the door of the great value Woodhouse Hotel & Hydro lounge bar.

The woodhouse is a small back street hotel (one star) however it is friendly & has a couple of fun bars with clean, basic rooms, is great value at £25 for a single room with ensuite.

A few quick drinks with the rest of the BAWBAGS then off to bed.

Up at seven thirty, headed along to the Oban Tesco for a big fry up with Billy & John then over to the North Pier to be picked up at the slipway by our dive boat for the day.

Just after Nine am everybody started arriving, getting changed into drysuits, setting up Scuba gear and generally having a good laugh, Bod complete with Intercity 125 car horn. Sponge Bob, Fran the Gran, Tall Jim, Redneck Chris & the budding Cameraman Stew to name a few.

The weather was forecast to be sunny and clear but as usual the rain was coming down from the skies although the clouds where moving inland so we kept our hopes up for the day.

Just as the rain stopped the MV Silverswift docked at the slipway and we started loading up our kit.

The Silverswift is a great wee boat (37′ Feet), plenty room for the twelve divers, with lots of deck space, racks to clip our gear too, seats and a large awning to let us keep out the rain or sun.

A large cabin with plenty seats with a downstairs cabin and toilet. Paul the skipper was very chatty, knowledgeable and very keen for us to have a great days diving, he insisted that we would not be rushing about and that we would have at least a two hour surface interval.

Once everybody was on board (we had the Silver Swift to ourselves as we had twelve divers from CUSAC) with Pauls expert knowledge helping us choose a dive site to match conditions of the day and our divers experience we discussed that we should do the the Breda, Rondo or Hispania as our first dive as we could make slack tide from Oban to any of these sites. After a quick chat we all agreed that the Hispania was the wreck to dive first with probably the Thesis after a good surface interval.

Off we headed, and the Silver Swift may be small but she is blinking fast with twin turbo diesel engines blasting us up the Sound of Mull at up to 24 knots!

The Skies had really cleared up, the weather was lovely and when we arrved at the site of the Thesis another boat (The Peregrine) was just collecting her divers, we kitting up, done checks and off we and went down in our buddy teams…….

Dive one: Hispania Start Time: 11:42 Duration: 27 Minutes.

Having never dived the Hispania before and having heard that she is one of, if not the best wreck in the Sound of Mull I was really looking forward to diving this, I was buddied with Gerry & Fran. Down the shotline we went, fantastic visibility (15 – 20 Metres).

The shot line took us to midships where we stopped and checked everything was good, Gerry was a little unstelled for a moment or two as he hadnt been in the water since November, When we all gave the OK signal, the three of us went across the deck and towards the bow along the starboard side of the wreck.

The soft corals and sponges where just fantastic, we came across a large Wrasse and a group of gorgeous Pollack, we finned through the open companion ways and made our way to the pointy bit of the wreck.

We turned from the bow and headed back along the port side with the wreck listing slightly to starboard the effect was a little strange, when we reached the companion ways Fran stopped in front of me and Gerry was stopped dead in front of her…..

After a minute or so I wondered what was going on so I finned outside the companion ways to be alongside Gerry, he looked a little less calm than his normal horizontal mode and was desperatly trying to dump air from his suit, we looked at each other and I knew something was up, I indicated a thumbs up and he gave the thumbs up back.

We where midships and the shotline was within a few easy finstrokes of us. I pointed to the line and we all headed for it, up we went, using the shotline for our safety stop just as we got to the six metre point the current picked up as the slack left us to turn to a flooding tide, we hung on the line like clothes blowing on a washing line on a warm windy summer day, up we went safely to the surface, Gerry was picked up by the boat, Fran was trying to tell me something but I couldnt mnake her out, she poped back under for a look and I was a little worried, I let go of the shot line and finned to the ladder as Fran followed me.

It turns out I had my hand on top of Frans on the line and had squashed her fingers, she ended up pulling her hand so hard out from under mine that she ripped her new gloves, eek! my bad :( Sorry Fran!

A great dive, one I cant wait to do again with less incidents. It turns out one of Gerrys weight puches from his ND weight harness must have been pulled free becuase he went very bouyand and thats why he was frantically dumping air.

Stew had his video camera down with him and has posted a movie of the dive on “YD with a video of the boat and the dive on the Hispania, it is well worth watching!
Profile:

Hispania Profile

Max Depth 22.7 Metres
Water Temp: 8-9 oC

Air in: 187 Bar, Air out: 118 Bar. SAC: 19.3 LPM (I am not normally as high as this for my SAC but it just goes to show what a little bit of pressure does to your air consumption rate)

Surface Interval:

Hot mugs of Tea & Coffee, home made yummy Shortbread! (Pauls wife runs a company that makes and sells, handmade shortbread) & tall tales of heroism and deep penetration…

Paul cruised up to the Isle of Mull and moored up at the Tobermory harbour (to a rapture of whats the story balamory! where we all dipped deep in our drysuit pockets and borrowed money from Tall Jim & Sponge Bob, off he headed to the fishermans pier and the great wee chippy van (also owned by Pauls wife)

After a nice relaxing wander round the village we got back on the boat and headed back down the sound of Mull till we reached the next dive site.

Dive 2: The Thesis Start Time: 14:59 Duration: 30 minutes

Having dived the Thesis once before with Billy & John I was looking forward to it again as I have done a lot of diving since then and my own in water confidence has improved lots.

This time John had split his cuff seal so wasnt diving and due to Gerry loosing half his weight he had decided not to dive again so Billy joined Fran and myself for a wee guddle around The Thesis.

With a flood tide the Thesis is sheltered from any fast currents and the visibility was at least as good as we had on the earlier dive. a stonking dive with lots of life shoaling mackerl, a great wreck with an exposed super structure, lots of dead mans fingers and plenty of nooks and crannies to look in.

Easy penetration due to the hull plates being off around the bow section.

Once again Stew had his video camera in with him and has put together a great wee movie, you can see me at 50 seconds, with the white regulator in my mouth.

Profile:

Thesis Profile

Max Depth 30.3 Metres
Water Temp: 8-9 oC

Air in: 108 Bar, Air out: 50 Bar.

Other Notes:

I was diving my new frog midnight wing for the first time and found the inflator hose a little short for comfort, I am used to the longer inflator on the OMS wing.

I used the Frog wing with the my OMS comfort harness and homemade SS backplate.

I’d spent some time adjusting the comfort harness and the buckles are in a much better position now.

Adendum:

Forgot to add that I took this picture of John having a going at being the skipper…..

John & the Boat

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Kenmore Point, Loch Fyne & The Fairy Castle 4th February 2007

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

As my car is away getting the front bumper realigned after I pulled it out of shape reversing over a bollard Stewart & Fran agreed to come pick me up for a days diving :) What a great pair of Bawbags (thats a technical term) they are! We got off to a later start than planned due to Frans inability to get out her bed after a heavy night babysitting, personally I think she had a night on the fags and wine so just couldn’t handle getting out her scratcher!
So off we head in Stew’s wee RAV4 loaded to the brim with two twin sets, two single 12’s, a pony (neigh!!) and an O2 kit and a ali stage bottle along with all the necessary dry-suits, fins and under-suits (Chuckle, right Stewart, wink wink!) for three tough divers to have fun in the cold sea Lochs.

An easy drive to Arrochar and a hot breakfast at the Pitstop (met up with Billy & Boab) then another drive off to Furnace village and down the back road (AKA the mud and pot hole filled road, 4×4 with decent ground clearance is almost essential!) to Kenmore, stopping to wave at the Atlantic Divers mob just kitting up and to have a quick gab with Ding of www.finstrokes.com

Parked up at Kenmore which could have used a parking warden as it was almost as busy as a big busy street!

Parking

We got chatting to Budgie, James (YBOD Diver & Instructor) and the other guy that I forgot his name! (sorry)
After all the faffing about Stewart left his house at the back of seven and we got in the water just after twelve.

Dive: 1 My dive: 118 Start 12:18 (Twin 10’s) AIR in:197 Bar AIR out: 109 Bar Max Depth: 31.8 Metres Avg Water Temp: 10oC SAC: 17.5 SLM Duration: 35 Minutes
Walked down fully kitted to the entry point.
Kenmore Point

We did a buddy check prior to getting in the water put our fins on sitting in the edge of the water and gave each other the submerge signal to go. Diving in a three is not my favourite however if I have to do it then Stewart and Fran are great to do it with.

Down we go in the cold waters and fin slowly down to the top edge of the wall, we gather together check for bubbles and fin over the edge into the abyss……
The wall is pretty today as normal and visibility is stunning at around 10 metres unless you get in the silt kicked up by each other!

Down we go, the water gets darker and there are plenty of small scallops, squat lobsters, blennys and crabs. Down at the base of the first wall I spy a dogfish off to my left just a little deeper than planned but I decide to go have a wee look, he is a cracker around half a metre in size. I kick up the silt a bit and my SAC peaks (have a look on the graph!) I relax and swim through the silt to the shallower area where my Buddies lights are shining from.
Fran stays above and behind me most of the dive and Stewart stays just in front and about my depth most of the time, everybody’s torch is working great and Fran has a play with a free swimming scallop. I spy a cracker of a big brown striped wrasse (I so need to learn proper fish ID), we come to the end of the wall and the sandy slope back to the shallows, we slowly work our way up the slope doing a safety stop & looking in all the nooks and crannies at the macro life, enjoying watching all the crabs and small fish enjoy life in the sea. I watch a crab chase a small shrimp across the rocks trying to catch its dinner.

We surface and take our wings/ cylinders off and leave them lying on the shingle beach of the second bay, wander up the long path back to the cars for a good gab and huddle round the camp fire that one of the other groups has built, we all enjoy a nice sunny (but cold) surface interval gabbing to various groups discussing the merits of future PADI specialties in camp fire building and pissing in the woods then discussing rebreather try dives with James.
Profile:

Dive 118 - Kenmore Point

Dive: 2 My dive: 119 Start 14:20 (Twin 10’s) AIR in:103 Bar AIR out: 17 Bar Max Depth: 26 Metres Avg Water Temp: 10oC SAC: 17.9 SLM Duration: 35 Minutes

After a nice surface interval we walked back down the road and over to the shingle bay.

The Bay

Kitted up near a group of six divers (at least a couple of where trainees) and got in the water just after them, it was a little silty but once we adjust our depth we managed to clear the silt and enjoy a nice 5-10 Metres of visibility once again.

Down over the rocks and onto the wall, I beckoned Stewart over as his backup regulator must have came off its loop and was floating about behind him, we sorted that out and descended down to the gnome garden, noticed a couple of new gnomes including a diver one! We had a nice wee guddle around spotting a couple of cod in one of the fissures and when we nearly got ran over by the other bunch of divers we turned around and spent some time working our way up in to the shallows.

I found a weird sort of Siamese crab that looked like it had one set of legs but had another body latched on underneath upside down, it looked very strange and called Fran over to have a look at it.

I was monitoring my Air closely and held my buoyancy no trouble even with the air in my twin tanks below 30 bar. Last time I had done a weight check it was with the arctic jumper on however as Stewart had a loan of it and was meant to be using it in preparation for his submarine dives next week I only had my normal under-suit on so was overweighted even down at 20 bar. oh did I mention Stewart left the lovely warm arctic under-suit lying on the floor of his wee sports car not the 4×4 he used to bring us up to the dive site…..

Profile:

Dive 119 - Kenmore Point / Bay

After the dives we get the car loaded up (just about!) and head off down the rough road, a mile or so along the road Fran starts screaming in the back of the car “Fairy Castle! Fairy Castle!“, at this Stew and I turn to each other and just give each other a look that says in an unspoken way “What drugs is she on and how the hell can she be narced after a dive….” Stew stops the car and we all get out to see what the fuss is about.

Fairy Castle

Well here we go, we found a large tree stump with little holes all over it with a sign that clearly states “Fairy Castle” and toy fairies attached. Surreal!

We all get back in the car and head off to the George Hotel in Inveraray for soup and a pint.

Now things got even more psychedelic here as the George has fairy lights all over the ceiling in the main bar.

The George

Another superb day diving in the sea lochs of Scotland :) Yehaaa! I love it, brilliant and unexpected & with great buddies!

Directions to get to Kenmore Point can be found on www.congeralley.com

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