Our Latest Book Pick. The 2007 Diving
Almanac and Yearbook by Jeffrey Gallant
is perhaps the best single reference book
ever published for divers. This 470-page
paperback provides capsule glimpses of
virtually every diving topic, including diving
medicine, diving history and records,
navigation, bios of notables, oceanography,
absurd stories, even military diving. Plus,
plenty of hard data about
population, water
temps, and vaccinations needed for all countries
Essential for any serious diver’s library.
$18.95, plus $5 shipping and handling for
US and Canada, $7 for other countries.
Order at Undercurrent.
Diver Survives Stingray Attack. Joe
McKnight will no longer laugh at any jokes
about Steve Irwin’s death. That’s because he
survived his own encounter with a stingray.
While diving for crayfish in New Zealand’s
Okiwi Bay, McKnight, 35, swam over a crevice
and suddenly felt a stab on his leg. He
looked down to see a three-foot-wide stingray
attached to it. The stingray pulled away
after five seconds, and there was a squirt of
blood. McKnight described the pain as
“having a dead leg with a bee sting on top of it.” He thinks he provoked the sting
by accidentally cornering the stingray.
McKnight was released from the hospital
within two hours with three stitches and a
hole in his wetsuit as a souvenir.
New Options For Frequent Fliers. Undercurrent reader Jose Kirchner
(Carmichael, CA) sent us a note that Japan
Airlines has joined the oneworld airline
alliance (including American Airlines,
British Airways, Cathay Pacific and Qantas).
Japan Air adds 47 new airports to the oneworld
map, meaning divers can use their
AAdvantage miles to some new Asia-Pacific
destinations.
Fainting and Free Diving. A study in
the International Journal of Sports Medicine says
competitive free divers commonly faint or
show other signs of poor oxygen circulation.
In major free diving events held between
1998 and 2004, about 10 percent of competitors
were disqualified due to severe signs of
brain hypoxia, such as confusion, spasms
and difficulty standing. The study’s author,
Dr. Peter Lindholm of the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm, said free diving is
risky compared with tennis or chess but not
especially dangerous within the realm of
extreme sports.