The Diving Equipment and
Marketing Association trade show,
held in Las Vegas last October,
rebounded from the previous year’s
calamity. In 2004, DEMA staged its
annual show in Houston, one of
several ill-conceived decisions that
led to mass defections by exhibitors
and buyers alike. Scrambling to salvage
the world’s largest diving expo,
DEMA hit upon what may be a winning
formula: from now on the venue
will rotate between Las Vegas and
Orlando, FL.
Last year many key manufacturers
boycotted the show, many saying
the cost of exhibiting wasn’t worth
the return. This year Scubapro and
Mares/Dacor remained among the
missing, but the Sherwood Scuba
Group (Sherwood, Genesis and
Akona) returned, along with Cressi-
Sub, Aqua Lung, and Underwater
Kinetics.
Compared with Houston, the
aisles of the Las Vegas Convention
Center were as packed as a Florida
Keys cattle boat, with buyers checking out displays of scuba gear, travel
operators, and ancillary dive services.
More than 5,000 buyers registered
for the show, according to Nicole
Russell, DEMA Communications
Manager. (DEMA tries to exclude
lookie lous, who they believe get
in the way of bona fide buyers.)
Although attendance may still have
been down from DEMA’s peak years,
exhibitors I spoke with seemed
pleased with both the quality and
quantity of this year’s turnout.
Eight booths displayed rebreathers or related equipment. Silent
Dive Systems, maker of the popular
Inspiration rebreather, introduced
the lightweight Evolution CCR with
a head up display for monitoring the
system mounted on the mouthpiece.
Thermal protection continues to
evolve. Pinnacle Aquatics showed
off its line of wet suits with linings
woven from soft Merino wool, which
retains its insulating properties when
wet. Pinnacle claims its Merino suits
go on easier and stay warmer than
traditional lined suits. Henderson
Aquatics introduced Insta-Dry wet
suits with a nonabsorbent outer skin
of durable micro mesh and two layers
of neoprene around a hyper-stretch
material. With a black version of
Henderson’s proprietary Gold Core
lining, the suit can be towel dried,
then reversed and hung up to dry
the interior quickly, so traveling
divers don’t have to pack a damp
suit. Henderson claims the material
loosens with use to fit the owner’s
form; even the joints have a memory.
Thirty brands of wet and dry suits
were displayed including UTC Sports’
ultra-felxible Northern Diver THORD
Vulcanized stretch rubber dry suit.
New fin designs were everywhere.
The Mor-Fin’s two-part blade patterned
after a fish’s tail may look
weird but Scuba Diving Magazine
awarded it “Best Innovation in Gear
Design,” at the show. Other “finnovations”
were even wilder, such as
FreedomFins, with wings that attach
to the lower leg rather than the foot,
supposedly allowing them to operate
in undisturbed water and to absorb
body drag. Deep Outdoors’ Six Gill
fins feature gill-like slits in the blade
to channel water. For those more into
appearance than performance, there
are Funky Fins, with clear blades
imprinted in a choice of colorful
designs; they’re packaged, as you
might expect, in a clear plastic bag.
We’ll just stick to our Mares Plana.
A host of unique diving accessories
also debuted in October, some
more practical than others. Aqua
Sketch is an underwater writing and
drawing device, similar to your old
Etch-a-Sketch. But if you want to save
your doodlings, you can scan and
print from it. Another offbeat communications
aid was a DVD from Sea
Signs teaching an underwater signing
system. For emergencies, Scubuzz offers a two-way signaling device that
pages your buddy with both vibrations
and flashing lights. Imagine the
fun you could have with that.
Food products tailored to divers
also made an appearance. Dive Bar
is not some crummy beer hall, but a
tropical fruit flavored snack item that
promotes digestive health. Diversitea
is an herbal supplement that allegedly
helps reduce nitrogen in the
body. Well ....
Stan Waterman graciously autographed
copies of his memoir, “Sea
Salt.” John Chatterton and Richie
Kohler, who burst into national
prominence as the central figures of
the book Shadow Divers and now cohost
the History Channel’s Deep Sea
Detectives, were everywhere. But Joe
Burnworth, author of the best-selling
No Safe Harbor about the fatal capsizing
of the live-aboard Wind Dancer,
found himself locked out. Burnworth
told Undercurrent he’d arranged to
share booth space to sign copies of
the book, but found when he got
there that DEMA had banned its sale.
A DEMA board member stopped by
the booth and commented that the
book, which is highly critical of the captain of the Belize-based Wind
Dancer and Dancer management
decisions during the blow, was “not
in the best interest of the diving
industry.”
Is this form of censorship really
in the best interest of the industry?
Of course not. Especially when
Burnworth’s book pointed out serious
judgment errors made by the
captain of a live-aboard and what the passengers might have done to
prevent their ultimate deaths. Maybe
the atmosphere will be more hospitably
Disneyesque next November 8-11
in Orlando.