Hard-learned Lesson:A
Minnesota scuba class got a search
and recovery lesson they'll never
forget when they discovered a
woman's body in Lake Leander,
near Duluth. The class, from Tall
Pines Enterprises, first spotted Carol
Jean Gunderson's car in about 15
feet of water, then noticed her body
inside the vehicle and contacted the
local sheriff. Sheriff's deputies, local
police, and the St. Louis County rescue
squad pulled the vehicle to
shore. The victim had been missing
for two days, since going out for gas
and cigarettes. Preliminary autopsy
findings showed no indications of
foul play.
Uwatec Recall: As we reported
in August, Scubapro has recalled 6,000 Uwatec SmartPRO and
SmartCOM computers, telling
owners that once they return the
faulty units it will take 90 days for a
replacement. That's bad news for
any diver headed out to dive.
Spokesperson Cynthia Georgeson
told Undercurrent that the replacement
time has been less and when
divers "required a computer sooner,
we have worked diligently to
ensure they had the computer
they needed when they needed it."
She suggests that anyone with an
urgent need for a replacement
should call 800-808-4948 to request
priority service. The reader who
notified us of the problem, Paul
Stewart of Newton, MA, sent his
computer off the first week of
September. As we go to press in early October, he has yet to hear
from Scubapro.
Damn, Are You the Envy: In
preparation for a new TV show, the
British Broadcasting System surveyed
20,000 citizens to identify the
50 experiences they want to have
before they die. And yours are at
the top: 1. Swim with dolphins. 2.
Scuba dive on Great Barrier Reef.
4. Go whale-watching. 5. Dive with
sharks. 13. Escape to a paradise
island. 29. Explore the Galapagos
Islands. What beat whale watching
and diving with sharks? Flying on
the Concorde. Number 50, by the
way, was to go polar bear watching.
Diving and Terrorism: "There
is evidence that terrorists are learning
about diving, with a view to
attacking ships from below. The
Abu Sayyaf groups in the
Philippines kidnapped a maintenance engineer in a Saba holiday
resort in 2000. On his release in June
this year, the engineer said his kidnappers
knew he was a diving instructor;
they wanted instruction. The owner of
a diving school near Kuala Lumpur
has recently reported a number of ethnic
Malays wanting to learn about diving,
but being strangely uninterested
in learning about decompression."
(The Economist, October 4-10)
Bonaire Theft: As we've reported
many times, if you leave valuables in
your car when you're beach diving in
Bonaire, expect them to be gone
when you return. In fact, thieves even
hit hotel parking lots these days.
Here's a new twist, reports subscriber
David Smedley (Rialto, CA), which
occurred on his trip this June. "The
punks cut your gas line to steal your
gas, because of a locked gas cap. So
remove the locked gas cap. Cheaper
to buy gas then pay for cut gas line,
which insurance doesn't cover."
New Kind of Marine Conservation:
Two divers in California's Channel
Islands rescued a downed 4-month-old
female bald eagle that was about to go
under. The species was being reintroduced
to the Islands. She was malnourished
and dehydrated when Mark
Ferguson spotted her floundering eight miles off Santa Cruz Island. "We
saw something in the water and sea
gulls were circling, so we went over to
take a look," said Ferguson, of
Thousand Oaks. "It looked like it was
using its wing to do a breaststroke. I
could see the transmitter attached to
its back." After some debate, Ferguson
and his friend maneuvered their boat
close, and Ferguson grabbed the eagle
by the tail. "I was afraid of getting
scraped by its claws, but it looked pretty
exhausted," Ferguson said. "We put
it in the front of the boat. After 20
minutes it started to revive." They
turned the bird over to the Ojai
Raptor Center.
Divers Help Bust Shark Poachers:
The Majuro branch of a Hong Kong
shark fishing company has been fined
$110,000 for violating its fishing agreement
with the Marshall Islands. Dive
operators from Bikini Atoll Divers provided
videos and eyewitness accounts
of Edgewater longline vessels fishing
closer to the reefs of Bikini and Jaluit
than its contract allows. Divemasters at
Bikini report a 50 percent reduction
in the shark population at the atoll's
famous Shark Pass in the past year.
Jack Niedenthal, Bikini Atoll's trust liaison,
says that fines for illegal shark fishing
aren't enough and argues that the
company's license should be revoked.