A Fishy Regulator. While it's too late to include
this in our book There's a Cockroach in My Regulator, we
had to share this bizarre story from subscriber Lada
Simlek (Croton on Hudson, NY). "I did a night dive
in Long Island Sound with a buddy, and we surfaced
in a school of thousands of small fish. They were
densely packed, perhaps an inch apart, and attracted
to our lights. They were hitting us so much it felt
like someone throwing gravel at us. Weeks later, my
buddy went diving, and the air tasted and smelled
bad. One of the fish had swam inside his regulator
and died there. The regulator had to be boiled to get
the smell out. So it ain't just cockroaches."
Diving Medicine for Scuba Divers, 4th Edition. Renowed dive medical expert Carl Edmonds, whoco-
authored this book, tells us it has been recently
updated and is now available online for free at
www.divingmedicine.info . You can download the entire book or each of the 43 chapters separately.
"Because we do not apply copyright restrictions, dive
instructors and clubs are encouraged to supply copies to
their clients and members," Edmonds says.
Sending Tanks by Mail? Make sure all the air is
out of it before you wrap it up, unlike some idiot who
apparently shipped a full tank and caused havoc in
Kirkland, WA for a day last month. Post office workers
called the fire and police departments last month
to report a suspicious package that was hissing and
releasing gas. The post office and a nearby apartment
complex were evacuated, and all roads leading to the
area were closed. "We're going to treat this as the worst
case scenario," said fire department battalion chief Mike
Haschak told the Kirkland Reporter. The Haz Mat team
called in to investigate the package ultimately discovered
it to be "hissing scuba equipment," which was also
confirmed by the package's sender when he was contacted.
No word on whether he got a rebuke or a bill for
the neighborhood shutdown.