Don’t Tattle On Your Buddies. Jason Carey, a
British scuba instructor, was too tired on June 6 to get
out of bed and answer a late-night knock on his door. It
was Derrick Bird, a pissed-off member of his dive club.
According to the London Telegraph, when Carey didn’t
come to the door, Bird walked into the street and shot
and killed two strangers. His resentment towards Carey
started when Carey reported him for taking a fellow
diver too deep. A friend of Bird said that when Carey
learned Bird took someone diving deeper than 150 feet,
which he was not supposed to do, “Jason went straight
to the [British Sub Aqua Club] diving officer in charge
and told him. It niggled at Derrick a lot.” So much, in
fact, that he killed 11 more people and injured 10 others
before turning the gun on himself.
Underwater Blackout. If you free dive, we trust
you know the risk of hyperventilating before submerging.
Karl Ng, a neurologist in Sydney, Australia, says
that hyperventilating suppresses your natural reflexes,
and you won’t feel “the severe urge to breathe.” You’ll
lack oxygen but you’ll falsely believe you can stay down
longer, so you black out and drown. Ng told the Sydney
Morning Herald about two medical students who hyperventilated,
then tried to see who could swim the furthest
underwater. “One went just over a pool length and
the other went farther, but both blacked out and had to
be rescued.” A few years ago, an Aussie dive guide on a
day boat drowned after hyperventilating and free diving
between guided dives.
Mantas on the Menu. The falling shark population
is prompting Asian chefs to look for manta rays and
mobula rays to meet the voracious demand for shark fin
soup, reports the London Times. Until recently, they have been
hunted only by subsistence fishermen, who harpoon them.
But in the eastern Indonesian port of Lamakera, catches of
manta have rocketed from a few hundred to about 1,500 a
year. “Mantas and mobulas are being used as shark fin soup
filler,” said Tim Clark, a marine biologist at the University
of Hawaii. The cartilage is being mixed with low-grade
shark fins in cheap versions of the soup. So divers, next time
you’re in Indonesia, raise
a little hell about manta
fishing.
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