Maybe They’ll Listen to Jean Michel: In Moorea,
Tahiti, says subscriber Peter Joseph (San Anselmo, CA),
Top Dive “is destroying the coral reef with their anchor!
Rather than hire a skipper to man the boat during the
dive, they throw out an anchor to grab large staghorn
coral. During a swell, it snapped off a large piece. When I
mentioned this, the guide rudely said, “What do you want
me to do, eh? Lose the boat?” Memo to the owners of Top
Dive: While you many not give a hoot about the environment,
how about your business? If you destroy the coral,
you won’t have customers.
Outgross This: One of our readers — we’ll call him
Santa Monica Joe — reported to us on his June dive trip
to Divi Tiara on Cayman Brac. “Surfacing from a dive a
tad earlier than expected, I had the luxury of catching a
boatmaster giving himself a pedicure with the cooler knife used to slice oranges by guests during
surface intervals.” A call to fellow readers:
got any similar YUK stories to share with
us?
Who supports whaling? Some of your
favorite little diving nations, that’s who,
because Japan promises development dollars
if they join the International Whaling
Commission. You see, Japan wants to
end the moratorium on commercial
whaling. Currently, Japan, Norway and
Iceland kill more than 2000 whales annually
under a loophole allowing scientific
research (much meat turns up in markets,
some as sushi). At the June IWC
conference on St Kitts, Japan engineered
a 33 to 32 vote to pass a nonbinding declaration
that changes the commission’s
purpose to ensuring that whales are “not
over-harvested,” rather than from protecting
all whales. This sets up a vote next
year to legalize whaling and convert the
IWC from a conservation organization
to a manager of whale culling. Some
of your favorite Caribbean dive venues
are supporting whaling — Dominica,
Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St.
Vincent, Antigua. In the Pacific there is
Palau, Solomon Islands, Marshall Islands
and Kiribati. Boycott anyone?
Cozumel: A longtime diver-oriented
hotel, the Barracuda is no longer, says
Jerrord Harrision (Austin, TX), who stays
there because “we prefer a laid-back,
quiet vacation. It now has a pool with
swim-up bar that serves snacks. They have
knocked out walls through the hotel to
create an entrance from the street to the
bar. Therefore, tourists constantly flowed
from the street. My wife and I had room
#104, literally 12 feet from the bar. Now,
if I were 19 and on spring break, it would
have been great, but I could never get
away from the noise. Every time I went
into my room on the weekend, I had to
clear people off my patio because they
treated it as part of the pool area. The
crowd got downright rude, loud, drunk
and obnoxious.” Be forewarned.
Pardon our narcosis. In a May article
on diving health issues, we misquoted
DAN’sTM Joel Dovenbarger as saying that
many central nervous system meds contain
nitrogen, so risk is relative to depth.
Before Dovenbarger had a chance to correct
our error, subscriber Damon Martin
MD, Ph.D. (Colstrip, MT), emailed us
to say that no medicines contain nitrogen
or the nitrogen molecule (N2), nor
do any have a biochemical metabolism
in the body that converts the nitrogen
atoms in the medicine to a nitrogen gas.
Dovenbarger concurs with Dr. Martin
that the side effects of medications can
worsen at depth, “but it has nothing to
do with nitrogen in the molecular makeup
of the medicine.”