Larry Smith Passes On. Sadly, America’s most
revered dive guide died in a Sorong, Indonesia hospital
in late March, presumably due to heart and respiratory
failure. Larry, an East Texan, spent many years in the
Caribbean before moving on to Indonesia in 1989. His
ability to find critters many people didn’t even know
existed led to a large coterie of divers making a pilgrimage
each year to follow him. A fund for his wife and nineyear-
old-daughter has been established. Get details and
view his tribute page at www.wetpixel.com.
What Is Kim Basinger’s Secret? In a new book
called The Black Book of Hollywood Beauty Secrets, Basinger,
the blonde actress from L.A. Confidential and 9 &1/2
Weeks, raved about “scuba-diver oil” for her face. The book editors bought this oil from dive shops, saying it
worked wonders for their complexions, but they didn’t
specify the oil or return our phone calls. While we
suspect they’re talking about silicone grease or gel, Sal
Zammitti, owner of Bamboo Reef in San Francisco, told
us, “I don’t know how silicone filler would work wonders
for the face. That stuff is awfully greasy.” Anyone know
what Kim’s dive-shop beauty secret is? Please e-mail us at
editor@undercurrent.org.
Dive Instructor’s Ice-Diving Death. The dangerous
thrill of ice diving is common up north but a recent fatality
occurred in sunny California, of all places. While ice diving
in Gull Lake near Mammoth Mountain last March,
Michael Dahan, a 41-year-old dive shop owner from Thousand Oaks, CA, went underwater
without the standard rope to the surface,
a definite no-no. Dahan ran out of air,
became disoriented and died before he
could find his exit hole beneath 16 inches
of frozen water. He had just finished
teaching an ice-diving class and then
decided to do a recreational dive when
the drowning occurred. Mono County
authorities needed chainsaws to cut holes
in the ice, and the search team found
Dahan’s body two days later.
Happy Ending. A few years ago,
Undercurrent exposed a dive operator in
Canada who was collecting money from
hundreds of Canadian and American
divers, then sending them to Cuba to
find that nothing had been prepaid. Our
articles led one of our readers, Harry
Hanes of Tombstone, Arizona, to pursue
Scubacan and he recently told us, ”We
have at last settled with Scubacan for
the monies they embezzled from our
group in 2001 for our scheduled trip. We
received all our monies that we spent
plus all our additional expenses we
incurred, including legal fees, plus interest.
Mr. Keith Bolender paid not only his
share but that of his partner Mr. Tony
Avella. Mr. Avella ‘skipped town’ after the collapse of Scubacan but his trial
for breach of probation is scheduled. We
hired a very good lawyer who obtained
a writ of seizure on Calendar’s home
and that gave him an incentive to settle.
Thank you for assisting us with your
editorials about Scubacan, and we did,
with your help, put one unscrupulous
company out of business.”
Bad End for Pot-Toting Diver.
When 35-year-old Joseph Campbell
left his home in rural Jamaica in early
April, he told his family he was heading
to Kingston to visit his sick father.
Instead, his body was found three days
later, floating in Kingston Harbour in
full scuba gear. A tool kit, including an
adjustable spanner, hacksaw, screwdriver,
bolts and nuts, was found in his possession.
The police said Campbell was
attaching a canister with more than 100
pounds of compressed ganja to the hull
of a ship when he was struck in the head
by the ship’s propeller. Apparently, divers
in Jamaica are offered up to $5,000
U.S. for each marijuana-filled canister
they affix to commercial vessels heading
for the United States and the United
Kingdom.