Archive for April, 2007

Clyde Wrecks onboard the MV Clutha: Just a little deco but what a great days diving!

Monday, April 30th, 2007

It all started with a seemingly innocent txt message one warm Tuesday afternoon” Some spaces on the Clutha at the weekend, fancy some diving?” This was the txt I got from Stevie, “yes” was my response, I can do Saturday as long as I can get back in time for the club curry night!

Friday night I went to see the excellent Mac Floyd, a Scottish Pink Floyd tribute band at Rutherglen (Ruggie) with my mate from work Lazzerbyjan (he’s actually from Kazakhstan and he is not a terrorist, in fact he is a respectable chess player & Project Manager, pause, NOT!) & Ian from the west end….
The gig was excellent, the band played like a dream, the venue brilliant although the crowd where a little on the wild side. One guy being ejected by the stewards & his girlfriend didn’t even notice, during the interval we all got put outside till the fire service could give an all clear as the fire alarm went off…..Anyway I had agreed to not drink on the Friday to make sure I was fit for some Clyde Wreck diving on the Saturday.

My Alarm went off on Saturday morning at 6.45am, I had a quick shower and headed off to Stevies. We moved my kit over to his car and he drove us down to Greenock McDonald’s for breakfast. Stevie’s hint was to get a bacon and egg McMuffin and keep it for lunch, this sounded minging but just had to be tried.

We arrive at Inverkip Marina with time to spare, grab a trolley and get our gear down to Elaine and the MV Clutha.

The sun is shining the reports of ten metre visibility keep us smiling and the joy of being the youngest on the full boat by 8-15 years makes Stevie and I have a good laugh as we get introduced to the rest of the divers.

We have a good gab with a Guy up from Lincs, solo diving (Tim), a nice lad well clued up and sorted. I start having some banter with Dave from Queensferry sub aqua who has plenty of life experience being a chiropractor, joiner and Hypnotherapist, the only career missing was Royal Marine or special forces, I am sure he probably was but would have to have killed me if he told me :P The boat had a good friendly crowd on today with everybody gabbing and having a laugh with each other.
The day is shaping up nicely with Elaine announcing our first dive was going to be on the Beagle and Stevie having dived it before agreeing to led the dive for us. We agree that I will call the dive when we get into as much deco as I am comfortable with, I suggest about 15 minutes and Stevie says this fine with him.
We headed out of Inverkip marina with all the sailing boats behind us.

sails on the sea

28/04/2007 10:39 Dive 136: The Beagle
Buddy: Steve Hickdive Max Depth: 34.5 Metres Duration: 41 Minutes Water Temp: 8oC -11oC
Back Gas: Air In: 216 Bar Out: 119 Bar Deco Gas: EAN50 In: 150 Bar Out: 90 Bar

I had never dived the Beagle and Stevie agreed to lead the dive. Stevie and I kit up and do buddy checks on-board, Elaine tells us to start kitting up as we are on site, two divers go in before us, then we jump, check on the surface and descend down the shot line, the shot is pretty clear in front of us and the wreck starts coming into site before we get near it, around eight metres of visibility which is just great, Stevie hits the deck area first, gives me the Ok and we head down to the sea bed inside what is left of the Beagle, over the boilers at around 34 Metres crossing back to the starboard side with me trying the camera sans flash but getting lots of jittery movement icons on screen. Stevie checks my presence with torch signals, i respond and feeling comfortable we have a nice look around the wreck, find the collision damage and coming to the bow section, which is very picturesque.

We turn around at the bow and head along the port side, enjoying the lovely clear views, the deep green waters and glow from other divers torches, before dropping to the inside and fish around in the silt for any glass tumblers, Stevie finds a couple of broken ones, we find a large edible crab just in front of the boilers and we head back to the shot line, as we reach the shot line Stevie asks me if I want to head up the line, I check my computer and it says 8 minute ascent time, meaning we have accumulated around 5 minutes of decompression stops, not a lot but enough for me to call the dive, we head up the line and both pause at 18 metres for our one minute deep stops (I am diving a D9 & Stevie is diving a Vytec DS both of us running one minute deep stops) I change gas to EAN50 then make a couple of mistakes setting bookmarks on the computer before realising what I am doing wrong and get the D9 switched to 50%.

We ascend the line with the D9 telling me I have 4 minutes of stops at 3 metres however we choose to scrub off the stop at 6 metres and do it based on Stevie’s back up computers requirements (which only has air set as a breathing gas and no deep stop algorithm) meaning we actually sit at 6 Metres for eight minutes and two divers that had just caught up with us on the line pass us after they complete the stops showing on their computers (VR£’s by the looks of things).

We slowly ascend from six metres to the buoy and wait on Elaine coming round to pick us up. We swim towards the large open ladder of the Clutha, conscious that the visibility is clear and we can see the prop at the back of the boat churning away at the green sea.
I really enjoyed this dive and was happy with my performance under water, gas switching could have been more smooth on the computer and my photography skills could have been better however all things considered, this was only my third decompression dive and around my tenth visit below 30 metres. I wasn’t stressed and don’t think my buoyancy was bad at all considering I was using my camera most of the time. It shows that taking the stage in on dives where its not needed and doing gas switches for practice means that when its actually needed it works becuase you’ve invested the effort into the dummy runs, although Stevie had the last laugh when I rushed to get de-kitted and get my drysuit zip undone as I was bursting for a pee, I need to look into one of these Pee valve things!

One of the other lads on the boat opens up a big tub of home-made chocolate cake his wife made and shares it with us, it was just brilliant, went very well with yet another mug of tea.

Unfortunately none of my photos from this dive are worth using, even at a push. :(

Profile:
Beagle Profile

Elaine & Drew bring the Clutha back to Inverkip after making sure everybody is back on board, has had warm soup, a mug of tea and the coastguard have been informed we are all safely back on-board.

We dock at Inverkip and I eat the cold McMuffin left from this morning (don’t tell everybody but these actually taste better cold), I lay myself down on the dock and tune into my ipod, chilling in the lovely warm sun for an hour or so before Elaine calls us all back to the boat and lets us know we are heading out to dive the AKKA, having only dived the AKKA once before around mid march I was looking forward to this large wreck again.

28/04/2007 14:32 Dive 137: The AKKA
Buddy: Steve Hickdive Max Depth: 27.5 Metres Duration: 53 Minutes Water Temp: 8oC -11oC
Back Gas: Air In: 226 Bar Out: 110 Bar Deco Gas: EAN50 In: 90 Bar Out: 30 Bar

Again Stevie and I are kitted up ready to go as the second set of divers into the water, this time there is a current running and we are advised to go in negative and sort ourself’s out, if the need arises on the second buoy at 4 metres.

We enter, descend and head down the shot with the AKKA looming into view from around 20 metres, the life on this wreck is simply stunning, I had agreed with Stevie that he would guide again and that if possible we should do the bow section as when I dived it previously I had only managed the stern.

The shot is on top of the bridge area, we drop through the roof and down into the darkness, Stevie has a look around and signals for us to about turn, we then go through the companion ways along the deck before dropping inside and through the the galley area and the freezers.

We go through a hold, into the another one, we find some line that somebody has lain previosuly, the glow from the torches and the eerie green water is comforting, I focus the camera and eventually I get the odd mediocre usable photo.

Super Structure

We reach the bow section and come back along the port side, this side of the deck and hull is gorgeous, a living carpet of anenomes, deadmans fingers and other soft corals, This dive is fantastic, a large wreck and a lovely wall dive all rolled into one.

I am on the outside of the hull and surrealistically a mackerel swims vertically to my side, we come along the port companionways and go back into the quarters & structures on the deck, we find the line and start our ascent, again I switch gas at 15 Metres and we work off our small decompression penalty at 6 Metres.

Profile:

The AKKA Profile

Elaine & Drew provide us with Tea & biscuits as all the other divers start surfacing, we head back to Inverkip and enjoy a laugh at one of the sailing boats grounded around the channel marker buoy.

All in a brilliant days diving for only £30 plus £3 for the air fill, you just cant beat that for value for money, I highly recommend the Clutha and look forward to my next trip, hopefully in the last quarter of this year when I get back from Mallorca.
I do wonder if I can handle this type of diving and more technical diving if something went wrong, am I too reliant on my buddy? Do I actually practice the skills needed enough? Would I be OK with a camera and a free flowing regulator with a jammed reel on a dsmb in a current in poor visibility & with a failed torch? All we can do is prepare, practice and take our time diving within our comfort zone, slowly pushing the envelope of our personal experience, dive safely.

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Loch Long

Monday, April 30th, 2007

Dive 133: 17/04/2007 Conger Alley

Buddy: Gerry O’brien Start Time: 19:59
Duration: 45 Minutes Water Temp: 8-10oC Visibility: 3-5 Metres
Max depth: 27.5Metres Air in: 232 Out: 121

Profile:

A Wee after work guddle, Gerry spotted a dogfish on the way down to the reef at about 6 Metres. We went down found the reef and had a gentle drift up the reef, a lovely orange & white sea cucumber, plenty of life and I had the D9 in two minute deep stop mode for the first time.

Cucumber

The top reef had lots of life on it, anenomes, crabs, blennies, overall this dive was just a nice easy wee guddle.

doggy

I did feel overweighted on this dive and after it I discovered I still had 6kg in my weight belt which is what I was using at the pool where as I only usually dive with 5kg on the twin set)

flattie

Dive 134: 21/04/2007 29 Steps

Buddy: Gareth Wilson Start Time: 16:12
Duration: 46 Minutes Water Temp: 8-10oC Visibility: 3-8 Metres
Max depth: 22.2Metres Air in: 234 Out: 150 (STAGE BOTTLE EAN50: IN: 200 Out: 150)

Gareth & I decided to do a little check dive, so we agreed to head off late afternoon when the Lochs would be a bit quieter.It was a lovely sunny day and when we arrived at Twenty Steps we where the only car on-site with the usually busy Finnart only having two cars parked up at it as well. Fantastic all we needed now was nice visibility and some interesting life.

I took in my camera and stage bottle for the first dive, trying to load some tasks easily with Gareth warned I was on deep stop mode & I was to led this dive with Gareth navigating for the second dive.

The tide was up as high as I’d ever seen it at this site with a full moon the night before, the water was right at the bottom of the steps, I led and managed to miss the training platform all together but got us down and out across to the anenome garden which was actually very pretty if a bit dispersed across the various small reefs / boulders.

I did my deepstop while Gareth was looking at the rocks, again I was conscious my buoyancy was a bit over the place, Im never sure if this is becuase I am using the camera and trying to get close to the small living critters to get a picture or becuase I am just a bottom dweller, I might get the hang of buoyancy eventually…

Gareth signals he is going to put up his dsmb as we start coming back to the 8 metre point so I settle of to his right hand side to watch the dive god in action.

Slowly but surely Gareth manages not to inflate his blob and I manage to roll about laughing, using more air than a big air using thing, Gareth seems to be confused by the laws of physics, holding his dsmb under his exhaust port and breathing out sees all the exhaust bubbles gently rise to the surface while the blob hangs limply at his side.

I cant contain myself any longer and offer to assist, Gareth hands me the blob which I give one exhaust full of air to start the process and hand it back, Gareth then releases it only about 20% full from 8 Metres with it barely floating to the surface I cant help laughing yet again.

I masterfully navigate us to the surface and the exit point (for Finnart….) Gareth gets the last laugh as he realises how far out my navigation skills have taken us and we enjoy(obviously enjoy is used with artistic license in this case) the long swim back to the exit point and a relaxing surface interval.

Profile

Dive 135: 21/04/2007 29 Steps

Buddy: Gareth Wilson Start Time: 18:04
Duration: 31 Minutes Water Temp: 8-10oC Visibility: 3-8 Metres
Max depth: 20.7Metres Air in: 145 Out: 50

Gareth was to navigate and led this dive, so I dumped the stage bottle and Camera, connected up my H2O iriver IFP-799 and took some music in for this dive for the first time.

We where getting tight for time as I had to pick wee Taylor up from Ice skating at 9pm so we agreed to just do a short dive. In we went down to the right for five minutes with Amy Winehouse and rehab playing for me, such a great experience listening to music, it doesn’t need to be loud it just needs to be heard, Gareth gave me the OK so I gave him a wee dance :-)

We didnt find much life on this dive but I enjoyed it anyway, I came across a mask and snorkel that looked very fresh on our safety stop before yet another swim back due to Gareth learning from my navigation master-class…

Profile

The mask & snorkel where a kids size and had a slap strap on the back from deepblue scuba. I emailed deep blue and they confirmed a student had lost a mask, confirming the name written on the snorkel, Stew took the mask & snorkel to FYM for me and it has been re-united with its owner.

Dive site guides courtesy of www.congeralley.com

Editors Note: Spelling sorted & photos added, think I preferred the after work cuddle though!

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Three dives, two dive sites, one lost buddy and zero visibility went to mow a meadow.

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Not a lot going on just now, just the usual boring uneventful shore diving the sea lochs.

Wednesday 4th April, Dive 130:

Dived the Caves at Loch Long with Gerry & Fran (but mostly just Gerry). As the visibility reports have been very poor recently we agreed as part of the buddy checks that if anybody got separated we would look around for them for two minutes instead of the usual one.
Went in as a three with Gerry leading, got to six metres, did bubble checks, Fran had lots of bubbles coming from her A Clamp so we thumbed it.

On the surface Gerry replaced the O Ring from Fran’s first stage…

Gerry & Fran

I mucked about on the surface taking pictures, I got this nice one of The Cobbler.

We went back in and stayed close together, this time no bubbles, everything was fine and we went down to around twenty five metres, using lots of torch signals to keep in contact as the visibility was very poor, probably at best two metres with most of the time just being able to see torch light from each other. Lots of macro life, small star fish, soft corals, anenomes, dead men’s fingers, pretty rock face as usual at the caves.

We had planned to turn the dive after around eighteen minutes. I noticed Fran was deeper than both Gerry and myself and at that point Gerry started finning up the slope, ascending to shallower waters. I signalled and stayed finning with him, we reached the fifteen metre point and I signalled to Gerry we had lost Fran.

We stayed roughly at the area we had finned up and shone our torch beams down in the direction we had come from, after two minutes and no sign of Fran I signalled to Gerry he should bag off. Gerry and I started our ascent to the surface in free water, however at around eleven metres I lost sight of Gerry.
I found a pinnacle in thirteen metres, unleashed my dsmb and reel, launched the dsmb, my first attempt seen me not put enough air into the dsmb so I had to reel it in and do it again, this time using the exhaust gas from my second stage and putting a couple of breaths worth into the bag, this time the Bag flew to the surface with the reel spinning like a crazy Ivan.

When I surfaced, Gerry was waiting on me beside my dsmb with no sign of Fran, we both shouted and then seen her surface way down the loch.

Gerry and I did the surface swim back to the normal exit point, we collected Fran from the shore and gave in for the day.

Notes: We lost Fran at around 22 minutes, by the time I surfaced it was 39 minutes duration, Gerry had been on top for 8 minutes without site of Fran or myself, however he had my dsmb to mark my position. we both waited a couple of minutes to find Fran. It was not a nice feeling when you know her daughters on the shore reading a magazine and you don’t know where your buddy has gone.

In Hindsight I learned some lessons from this dive

1: Do not dive in three’s when the visibility is poor.

2: Ensure that everybody knows what the separated buddy procedure is.

3: Expand the lost buddy search time when the vis is poor and all divers are capable, experienced and self sufficient to a more suitable time lapse, our training says one minute, we agreed two, in hindsight Id probably agree five minutes.

Although this is a bit of a catch 22, if something is wrong you want to be on the surface ASAP getting assistance rather than continuing your dive for five minutes that could be critical to somebody’s life.

Saturday 7th April, Dives 131 & 132:

Met up with Stevie Hickdive. We headed off to Loch long and the A Frames for a couple of afternoon dives. Stevie has dived this site more than myself so he agreed to lead. First dive was almost dead on high tide and I took the camera in but didn’t have much luck due to poor visibility and my shaky hand. I felt heavy in the water and seemed to be adding more air than normal to my suit / wing. First dive we went down to around twenty five metres, had a bimble around the frames with Stevie using his new lightsaber HID torch and me being embarrassed as I hadn’t charged my greenforce. we found a whole dinner plate of prawns under the frames and a couple of sea snails, gobbi’s, star fish and lots of muscles.

Second dive I had to stop at six metres and let Stevie sort out my valves as I was getting a bad breath from my primary, I switched to my back up reg and all was fine. Stevie turned my right post valve on fully and my primary reg started to function perfectly (DOH!).

We had a shallower dive this time finding more structure and slightly more life, overall visibility was once again poor deeper than six metres.

I checked my weighting at the end of the second dive and found myself to be a little too heavy, when I checked my weight belt I was actually a kilo heavier than normal, this was due to me taking weights out for the pool the other night and not putting the right weights back into my belt.

Safe and sound although more lessons learned.

1: Charge my torch.

2: Check weights

3: Learn to sort my valves out properly myself!

I seem to be learning a lot of lessons recently, have I become complacent and just accepted my own diving? Its a question I need to think about and hopefully these minor issues will help me avoid anything more serious.

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