Drink Beer and Save the Reefs: Australian beer drinkers
will soon be able to help save coral reefs while they’re
at the bar, by diving into a new brew called Beeramundi.
The artwork for the beer shows a Barramundi Cod peering
out of the label with the slogan, “Saving the Reef One
Beer at a Time” It’s an educational campaign for beer
drinkers that includes a series of quizzes on coasters, with
the answers on the other side. A percentage of the profits
from every beer will go to Reef Check Australia.
Mission Accomplished! Three years ago, it was a tough
business climate, especially in the scuba industry. 9/11,
stock market plunges, etc. We recently came across a May
2003 piece in a scuba industry magazine that proclaimed:
“Now that the war in Iraq is over, many in the dive industry
are cautiously hopeful that better times lie ahead....
The hope is that the end of the war will mark the beginning
of good news and renewed consumer confidence.”
Cheeky Bugger: A English diver who
rented an underwater camera from a
dive store was shocked when he discovered
footage of a woman undressing. He
was more surprised when the footage
showed the face of Bear Diver’s owner
David Hepworth, as he set up the camera.
Leed’s police then visited the shop and
arrested Hepworth after they discovered
a camera on a shelf in a classroom that
doubled as a changing room. Film inside
showed a girl, 13, and two women, aged
26 and 39, undressing. On film Hepworth
told the girl that she should take off
her top before slipping on a dive suit to
ensure it fit properly. The girl ignored
him. Hepworth told one woman to take
off her clothes and put on her swimming
suit — which she did — to save time when
they arrived at a swimming pool. The
third woman was filmed in her underwear.
Hepworth claimed he had set up
the camera to catch shoplifters. In April, a
jury found him guilty of voyeurism. After
the case, a woman he filmed said: “He was
in a position of trust as a diving instructor
and what he did was disgusting.” His
other victim said: “I was shocked, dismayed
and appalled . . . I hope he won’t
teach diving again.” Hepworth is awaiting
sentencing. His PADI membership has
been suspended.
First Cozumel, now Belize, then Grand
Turk: For years, tour organizer Lascelle
Tillett had been leading tours to see rare
crocodiles, stately storks and other wonders
of Belize. Not long ago he visited
one of his favorite sites and says, “There
must have been 600 people in the water,
and the boats were lined up like cars. We
didn’t see a single ray or shark.” Last year,
more than 800,000 cruise ship visitors disembarked
in Belize City, nearly triple the
nation’s population. Although cruise travelers
each pay a $7 visitor’s tax, $1.40 of
which is earmarked for conservation, the
reefs are showing wear from the increased
visitation, said Anna Dominguez-Hoare,
executive director of the Belize Audubon
Society. “It’s not compensating for the
damage,” she said of the tax. “And a lot
of damage could be irreversible quickly.”
(Marla Dickerson, LA Times)
Alabama Wants its Civil War History: Diver Dennis King objected to an
Alabama law that gives ownership to the
state of all historical artifacts in state
waters. Though he hadn’t recovered any
items, he sued, claiming he had the right
to recover old bottles, Civil War artifacts,
arrowheads, and fossils from the river.
The State Supreme court said that his
complaint did not identify the source of
any such right, and the court was aware
of none. In September, the court ruled
that the cultural resources the diver might
recover would be the property of the State
of Alabama and threw out the case.