Dear Reader:
“Welcome to Majuro, your stopover on the way to
Bikini. I’m Brenda from Bikini Atoll Divers and I’ve got
a surprise for you. You two are the only divers this
week.”
Wow. After months of planning and accumulating the
bits and pieces that form a technical diving rig, my buddy
and I were to get a personalized trip to the WWII wreckdiving
mecca, Bikini Atoll. We had completed our IANTD
Advanced Nitrox training five months before our September
trip and had two post-certification dives with double rigs
to our credit. My 582 dives before the advanced training
provided only basic skills to carry over to the radical
departure from sport diving to tech diving. And my financial
skills helped me figure out whether I should take out
a second mortgage to afford the jaunt.
Majuro, five hours west of Hawaii by 737, is a
wispy, elongated figure eight of sand, rock, coral and
palm trees. After overnighting in a bare-bones hotel, we
departed at 6:30 a.m. on Air Marshall Islands’ 12-seater,
the bigger Dash-8 being down with maintenance problems.
Aloft, I could see long stretches of blue sea sliding
by, then tiny wisps of atolls, dry brushstrokes of aqua,
green, and amber.
The Boat for Six |
Bikini is a
Cold War remnant.
In 1946, after
relocating the 167
indigenous Bikinians
against their wishes,
the US anchored
a flotilla of discarded
ships in the
lagoon to “test” the
effects of nuclear
blasts. When Test
Able, an air-burst, sank only five ships, the U.S. government
ordered Test Baker and suspended a
20-kiloton atomic bomb 100 feet below the
lagoon’s surface. The detonation sent
the ships to the bottom, including the
aircraft carrier USS Saratoga, battleship
USS Arkansas, destroyers USS Anderson and
USS Lamson, and others. The captured
Japanese battleship HIJMS Nagato, from
which the order was given to attack Pearl
Harbor, did not sink -- an embarrassment
to the US military. Four days later, it
mysteriously capsized and sank under the
cover of night.
After landing three hours later on
the grass strip on Eneu Island, we were
met by British expat Jim Akroyd, American
Gennifer Hansen (now Jim’s wife) and
Chris Storey (who has since left). Jim
is general manager and head dive guide of
Bikini Atoll Divers, which is owned by the Bikini government. Gen is a dive guide
and fills in with guest services. Each has long tech diving experience and is
immensely competent.
Their competence is needed. A week’s diving consists of 12 decompression
dives, breathing air, to depths up to 185 feet. The atoll’s remoteness makes
shipping helium too expensive, so there is no trimix. You can bring a rebreather,
as long as you bring all your supplies. The operation makes its own oxygen, using
75 percent EANx for decompression. If someone gets bent, there is plenty of oxygen
for the up to 24-hour’s wait for Air Marshall to take you to the Kwalajein
chamber, an hour flight away. While dive insurance is mandatory, Jim told us of a
Japanese diver, a heavy smoker, who suffered a hit and waited a day for the plane
to take her to Kwajalein, where she learned her dive insurance had lapsed. Her
symptoms did not resolve, so she had to charter a jet to wave-hop back to Japan.
Trip and treatment: $125,000. Getting unbent. Priceless.
Twin 85 cu. ft. steel tanks were outfitted with non-DIN valves, and never
had less than 3400 psi; I often had 1800 psi left when I got to the deco ladders.
Single tank divers get 104 cu. ft. steel tanks. Dive time ran up to 90 minutes,
with bottom time usually 20-30 minutes. Jim, Chris, and Gen were on all dives,
and everyone stayed together, a firm rule. There is a nifty set-up of horizontal
pipes roped down to 30, 20, and 10 feet with Scubapro R190 second stages dangling
from Nitrox tanks on the dive boat. Depending on the current, I could spend my
deco suspended over the wreck I just dived or hanging in the blue. Sometimes bat
fish or gray reef sharks circled the rack.
Each diver must carry two mixed gas computers. Models such as all Oceanic,
US Divers Matrix, Sherwood Source, Genesis, and Dacor computers aren’t recommended.
Jack Niedenthal, tourism manager for the Bikini Atoll government, says “they
were not designed for diving that involves substantial decompression obligations
on every dive. Dive computers like the Oceanic typically lock up after three
dives on Bikini Atoll.” Recommended computers are listed on their Web site.
The afternoon of our arrival, we made a checkout dive on the upright U.S.S.
Saratoga. Comfortable in a 3mm wet suit, I descended under a bright sun into
84F water with 60-ft. visibility. The flight deck stretched into invisibility.
Swimming past the bridge to the flight deck, we dropped over the side to the antiaircraft
guns at 105 ft. and did a modest penetration of the gunnery cabins. We
ascended to the pilot house, which held gas masks, speaking tubes, bottles and mugs, the ship’s clock, the ship’s bugle, and a bit of whimsy -- a clarinet hidden in a
low set of shelves. Here we took a convenient 80 ft. two-minute stop, then rose to
45 ft. to the top of the bridge for another two-minute stop, where I looked through
the contents of an open toolbox. We then hit the rack for five minutes at 30 ft.,
10 minutes at 20 ft., and 15 minutes at 10 ft. or until our computers cleared. As
my nitrogen loading increased during the week so did time I spent on the rack.
The second day we jumped into the back of the truck for the mile ride to
the dock. Twenty minutes later we hit the destroyer USS Lamson, upright at 150
feet. We toured the racks of loaded depth charge racks and continued to the torpedo
launcher, with four live “fish” in place. Speaking of fish, there are plenty:
three-banded anemone fish endemic to the Marshalls, titan triggers, grey reef
sharks, snappers, jacks, barracuda, Moorish idols, bat fish, and so on. But, when
my partner interrupted Jim’s briefing on the 16-inch guns aboard the HIJMS Nagato to ask about fish, he sputtered “You’re diving in the greatest wreck museum in the
world. We’re not here to talk about fish. We’re here to talk about the guns!”
And the guns on the Nagato, coated in whispery lavender rope coral, are massive
and dark, beneath the inverted ship at 165 feet, aged malevolence today aimed at
nothing. Look quickly, you won’t be there long.
The battleship USS Arkansas, like the Nagato, rolled over after the explosion
and lies bottom up. After visiting the 12-inch forward guns at 160 ft.,
we checked out a gunnery cabin with a dresser, its drawers still open. We swam
beyond the ship to the sand and turned to regard the bow looming out of the murk
like the blade of a giant ghostly axe. Reversing course, we swam up the hull to
the huge gash where the nuclear blast had pierced three layers of 12-inch armor
and sent the ship down. Inside the rent I could see naval fuel oil floating atop
captive sea water.
Between the morning and afternoon dives I read, hung out on the porch listening
to the Pacific lapping at the shore, watched videos in the briefing room, and
sometimes walked through the coconut groves to the beach to collect shells or follow
trails in the sand to turtle nests. Swimming in the morning or evening is
unwise. “These are shark-infested waters,” Jim said “and that’s when they feed.
If you must go, please tell me so I can take pictures.”
The Spartan air-conditioned rooms were cleaned daily and furnished with fresh
towels, shampoo, and soap. Amenities included such luxury appointments as a
dresser, and one lamp. (I borrowed a second lamp from an empty room.) The only
queen-size bed is in the “honeymoon suite.”
The dining hall (no A/C) is adorned with pictures of visiting dignitary divers,
charts and wreck souvenirs. Scientific studies find that radiation exposure
on the islands is minimal, provided visitors don’t eat locally grown food, so it’s
all imported. And don’t drink the coconut milk. Stick-to-your-ribs food seemed
designed to help you survive lengthy decompression dives –- except the chili,
which may have the opposite effect. Breakfast was eggs with bacon, ham, or sausage;
cold cereal; fruit; and toast. Lunch was build-your-own sandwiches, soup,
burgers; perhaps a stir-fry or pizza, and baked cookies. Dinner could be steak,
pork chops, chicken, fish, pasta, potatoes, and veggies. Guests staying there for
fishing often provided succulent Ahi sushi. There was fresh cake every night, and
a wheezy machine dispensed brown goo to the first person in line and chocolate
soft ice cream to those who followed. The outdoor barbecue had been discontinued
due to the hordes of cats that considered guests’ dinners fair game. The honor
bar serves Bud Light at $2 a can,
and when you hit 180 feet the
next morning, you’ll see why they
serve nothing stronger.
Jim, a former member of an
elite British antiterrorist unit,
briefed us on each ship, its
armament, strategic use, and history
up to the A-tests. He used
drawings and models to show the
location of mooring lines and
pathways to areas we would visit. We did three additional dives on the Saratoga, which Jim called “the greatest
wreck dive in the world.” One afternoon we descended through the forward elevator
to the flight deck and swam past an intact, but crumbling Curtiss SB2C Hell
Diver and its two wrecked brethren. Beyond the planes lay five Mark 64, 500-pound
bombs as though waiting for sailors to emerge from the darkness and load them on
the fighters. Rising through the aft elevator, we finned over the side where millions
of bait fish hid in the sea whips. Moving forward again, we mimicked planes
taking off the flight deck, humbled by the size of the behemoth ship. Back at
the number one gun emplacement, two eagle rays flew in from the port side as a
kamikaze manta ray strafed us from the starboard. Yes, this very well may be the
world’s greatest wreck dive.
We dived a tug at 65 ft, but only because my trusty Mark X Scubapro regulator,
although recently serviced, failed on a dive on the USS Lamson. I nearly
blacked out and was led to the deco rack by Jim. He later serviced the unit,
finding an interstage pressure of 100 psi against the Scubapro spec of 150 psi,
restored the IP, and recommended a shallow dive to test it.
We dived from an aluminum 26 ft. monohull with a flat diamond-plate deck and
drop-down forward ramp like a landing ship’s. The rides were bouncy, but no more
than 20 minutes long. With three guides, three boat crew and two divers it was
comfortable. Add four more divers in tech rigs and it would be cozy, at best.
For more than six divers, they deploy a second boat. We missed one dive when Jim
called it off due to wind. A larger boat or twin hull probably could have made
it in the 3-4 ft. seas. This is a long way to come for a lot of money to miss a
dive because of white caps.
And it is a lot of money. A week is $2,850, with reduced rates for groups or
for a second week. RT airfare from Majuro is about $550, and Continental from LA
is more than $2,000. Packages through dive travel agents get you better rates.
Niedenthal says Bikini Atoll’s dive operation is in jeopardy because rising fuel
costs threaten to price the destination out of the market; he says his fuel costs
have jumped from $290,000 to $400,000 and it has to come in by boat.
The fate of the atoll and its people is being decided now by the U.S. Energy Department and the courts, in a seemingly endless litigation over the relocation
of the Bikinians and the polluting of their home. Today, the 3,470 islanders
share in the profit from the dive program., Last year each got an equal share of
the $100,000 profits (about $29/person), and another $100,000 provided supplemental
food for displaced islanders living on nearby islands.
Besides increasing costs, another reason to make Bikini plans is that the
wrecks will not last forever. We saw some hull buckling on the Saratoga. These
ships will be there for a while yet, but not in their current condition.
--T.D.
Divers Compass: Our rome in the Majuro hotel, Robert Reimers (www.
rreinc.com) was Spartan and reeked of cigarettes, so we moved to a
nice bungalow facing the lagoon. The Marshall Islands Resort (www.
marshallislandsresort.com) is the usual hotel for an overnight .
. . Air Marshall Islands charges $3/lb, outward bound only, for
checked luggage more than 40 lbs . . . Bikini Atoll Divers conducts
no training on-site . . . If you show up without proper insurance,
you will not be allowed to dive . . . There is no rental gear;
you must bring everything you will need, including save-a-dive
kits, extra batteries, insect repellent, all medicine, snacks, and liquor. You
will be in the water for 3-4 hours daily. A 3mm wet suit is the minimum requirement
. . . Power is 120 VAC. Currency is the US dollar. . . There are six rental
Dive Rite Ni-Tek computers available at $65 for the week . . . www.bikiniatoll.com for more information . . . Several dive travel agencies offer trips to Bikini.
CEN PAC Dive Travel Services, 1-800-846-3483, cenpacdive.com, has the most experience
on Bikini. Also Mad Dog Tours, 212-744-6763, info@mad-dog.net, or East Coast
Divers 1-800-649-3483, travel@ecdivers.com. . . All flights go through Majuro, and
Honolulu is the hub. Majuro to Bikini on Air Marshall Islands departs Wednesday
at 8:00 a.m.-- arrives 11:00 a.m. The following Wednesday -- Bikini to Majuro 12
noon -- arrive Majuro 3:30 pm. Majuro to Honolulu -- departs Wednesday 7:30 am -
- arrives Wednesday 2:00 a.m. The airport is closed at this hour. You will need a
hotel or you will spend the night on a bench outside the terminal.