In January 1977, as I was struggling to build up my first dive operation called V. I. Divers Ltd. in St.
Croix, a customer came down and spent a week diving with us. He and his wife had a great time, and as
they were leaving, they gave me a cheesy "newsletter" sort of publication called Undercurrent. I'd never seen
it before but they explained that it was a Consumer Reports for diving which had recently started up, was distinguished
by unbiased reporting on equipment, resorts, dive operations and the like, and was developing
a reputation for objective, reliable articles done by its editors who arrived anonymously and just blended in
with the rest of the diving customers, then wrote about the experience, good and bad.
Of course, I immediately asked if they were part of this Undercurrent thing and if I was about to get
reviewed. They vehemently denied it, saying no one knew who the editors were. They gave it to me so I
could see how my competitors in the Virgin Islands and other areas of the Caribbean were faring in their
reviews -- and to be forewarned that some unidentified reporter could drop in on me sometime. They also
assured me that my company's laid-back attitude about diving freedom, varied sites and great customer
service would probably do well.
Wonderful, I thought. Unbiased objective reporting in the diving industry, in which you couldn't even
get a mention in Skin Diver magazine without an ad contract? It just didn't seem likely. I was already advertising
in Skin Diver and it always seemed to run some sort of little column about V. I. Divers Ltd. in every
issue, along with a big yearly section on the Virgin Islands. They thought we were great, but then again,
they thought everybody was "world class" if you bought an ad. Let your ad contract lapse, and you fell off
the earth into the ocean's deepest depths as far as they were concerned.
So I read through Undercurrent and decided to write the editors immediately to dare them to come down
and evaluate us, but nothing ever happened and I forgot about it. Then eight months later, I got the August
1977 issue and the lead story on the front page was a review of my operation, called "The Burgeoning
Business of Beach Diving," written by a Ben Davison. My first instinct was to check our customer roster to
see when this guy was down with us but, of course, there was no "Ben Davison." We had been clandestinely
infiltrated, just as our guests had predicted. I nervously retired to my office to read what they had to say.
Here are a few gems from that article:
"St. Croix, however, earned our attention because we respond now and then to a well-orchestrated
hustle. In January, a letter arrived from the President of V. I. Divers, Bret Gilliam, saying he would 'like
to host one of your writers to see how we fare in your evaluation. We aren't perfect, but we like to think
we do a pretty good job of taking care of our guests.' Not long after that, the Virgin Islands Tourist Board
wrote 'Y'all come see us some time, hear?' St. Croix has been an obscure speck on tourists maps... only
now is it back... dive trips are offered by a handful of guides in business, more for sun than income, Bret
Gilliam included. But he had his eye to the future and after a guide gig or two, he opened his own business,
expanded and continued to expand.
"Now he has the only full-service dive shop on the island, and owns the Virgin Diver (an 85-foot liveaboard)
that operates one-week charter trips out of British Virgin ports. Along with being an enthusiastic
diver, Gilliam's real skill seems to be tough-minded management. Gilliam will bust his buns to get the tourist
trade, and I don't doubt he'll be successful. He expects an avalanche of visitors from Skin Diver's forthcoming
coverage, and when I was in his shop, boxes of new gear were arriving, and he was continually on
the phone hustling new staff to handle the onrush. That's sound planning, and that's why Gilliam's getting
St. Croix on the diver's map."
Well, I thought, not a bad start. This guy seems to appreciate the effort I'm putting in and thinks I'm
going somewhere. Swell! The article continued: "I selected St. Croix because Gilliam offered a one-week
certification course, which I sought for a newly recruited buddy, but only after we had answered his earlier
invitation, saying that he would learn of our visit when he read about it in Undercurrent. He replied, 'You're
right. Booking as a regular diving customer is really the best way and
most objective way to conduct a review. Good luck with Undercurrent.'
So Bret, we booked as a regular customer. I was the guy you promised to
have a dive for the first day, but didn't..."
Ah shit. I knew we had screwed up because this guy must have
arrived on an afternoon flight and missed our morning boat departures.
We made a practice of doing only one boat trip a day in order to give
folks three dives and lunch in an unhurried setting that let us access the
remote drop-offs and reefs other operators couldn't get to in their little
outboard boats. We ran a 50-foot boat then, huge for that era, and traveled
up to 25 miles to get the best diving. It was an all-day outing, but I
guess we didn't make it clear that you had to be there by 9 a.m. My bad,
and I fiercely scribbled a note to myself to add this information to our
booking brochure.
The reviewer also never realized that we ran the boat trips because he immediately opted for our inexpensive
beach diving tours than ran all day and at night. "St. Croix diving is well suited for the diver who
brings his own tank and buddy, feels confident in new water, and wants to explore the reefs on his own,
because there is more than enough beach diving to keep one occupied for a vacation. Gilliam encourages
people to head off on their own, and will provide a map of beach dives for anyone who has demonstrated
on a guided dive that he can handle himself. For...confident beach divers, St. Croix indeed rates well.
Gilliam has two competent guides... and Bill Walker, a gentle and excellent instructor. For the macro photographer,
Fredericksted Pier will provide critters almost impossible to find elsewhere."
The writer went on to favorably rate our operation
for the most part, and to disparage our competitors,
much to my delight. Along the way, he pointed out
some things we could improve on, and I immediately
implemented the changes -- the very next day. He
also made some notes on hotels and restaurants that
would prove both amusing and the key to his secret
identity 20 years later. "We stayed at the Buccaneer.
Summer rates of $51 a night are awfully high, but it's attractive and relaxing. In town, the Club Comanche
at $24 a night... a good choice. For fine dinner, we loved the Comanche. We didn't enjoy the appetizer of
quail eggs garnished with salmon eggs... but the cat beneath the table did."
In retrospect, the five-star luxury Buccaneer Resort now has rates that start at $410 and go up over $1,100
a night. The Club Comanche (our hotel base for guests that offered harbor view rooms, pool and a big pier
for our dive boats) has only gone up to the $85 - $200 per-night range. What a difference three decades
makes... I eliminated the quail eggs appetizer from the restaurant menu, but our resident cats, who we
adored, stayed on forever.
Overall, that review really put us on the map, and I was astonished when a rave article in the same publication
followed, about how much the writer liked the certification course we provided his girlfriend. He
rated us the best place for training in the Caribbean. Later Undercurrent followed up with reviews of our
liveaboard operation on the Virgin Diver, then one of only two in the Caribbean, along with Paul Humann's Cayman Diver.
Undercurrent was always fair and I appreciated the exposure, as it brought in a lot of sophisticated divers
who read and trusted its reporting. We were frequently reviewed over the next eight years before I
sold the business, and we always got high marks. A mutual trust developed. Although I never knew who
"Ben Davison" was, he communicated with me through assistant editors from time to time, asking for honest
information on diving conditions, expansion of tourism, conservation issues, crime, airline service, etc.
I always gave them the straight truth, even when it meant losing money sometimes, but I knew that if I
fudged on accuracy, I'd lose my credibility overnight.
I think I finalized my commitment to honesty in late 1979, when an editor called in the aftermath of a
hurricane to find out what diving conditions really were locally, as they thought they were getting "hyped"
by other operators and the tourism board. I replied that, although we would recover just fine in about a
month, the rough weather, high winds and silty runoff into the ocean had reduced visibility at the dive sites
to two feet or less, and extended as much as a half mile offshore. I recommended that no one schedule a trip
for at least six weeks to allow things to get back to normal. Yeah, that cost me some revenue but I made it
back 10 times over from customers who came later and said they respected me for telling the truth and putting
customers first.
About that time, my editor contact at Undercurrent asked me to contribute articles, using my own byline,
on subjects like safety, medical emergencies, training, deep diving, narcosis, remote destinations and the
growth of the diving industry. I sold my Virgin Islands interests in 1985 and moved on to bigger things, but I was also contributing more often as a writer to Undercurrent. However, I still had no earthly idea who
the mysterious publisher and senior editor, "Ben Davison," was. I'd inquire every now and then, but was
always politely rebuffed with the explanation that only a handful of staff even knew his real name, and
none had ever met him. So I figured I'd forever remain in the dark. But he paid well enough for my articles,
never failed to embrace controversies, like the initial arguments over diving computers, nitro and technical
diving, and I decided that having an honest forum on these subjects for divers to make an informed choice
was worth not being privy to the Lone Ranger's secret identity.
Then in January 1997, a strange thing happened. I was attending a private cocktail party at the DEMA
conference in Orlando for senior writers who contributed to my magazines, Scuba Times and Deep Tech. I
had to host another private affair later that same night -- I was in the process of taking one of my companies
public for a nearly $46 million sale, and had rented the entire private dining room at Morton's Steakhouse
for a grand celebration. I had 60 major industry players arriving, along with my top staff all showing up,
so I was anxiously sneaking peeks at my watch as time dragged on, worried about being late. Dinner and
the liquor bill at Morton's was going to set me back over $50,000, and I was already getting cellphone calls
about my whereabouts from my executive assistant, Cathryn Castle (now editor of Dive Training magazine
for the last 13 years).
"As I strode down the hall, he
called after me, 'Let's chow down
on some quail eggs sometime!' I
stopped dead in my tracks." |
Finally, I got up, excused myself from the magazine writers' group and left them to be entertained by
my publishing partner, Fred Garth. As I was walking out of the hotel suite, a pleasant-looking, middleaged
guy said it was good to finally meet me and asked if we could grab a quick drink before I left. I didn't
know him and I apologized, saying that I was already late for another event that I was hosting. He shook
my hand and said he understood... maybe some other time. I waved and hurried out the door. As I strode
down the hall, he called after me, "Let's chow down on some quail eggs sometime!"
I stopped dead in my tracks. I've got a near-photographic memory and had never forgotten that tossedoff
critique of my resort restaurant in the original Undercurrent review 20 years before. I turned around and
asked what this stranger meant by that. He simply replied that he thought I had a fondness once for that
esoteric dish.
I looked at him closely and said, "Is that you? Are you really the guy that wrote that?" He grinned and
said, "Nice to meet you. I know you're late but I just wanted to say hi finally after two decades."
I looked at my watch, pulled my cell out and dialed Cathryn, who was supervising the Morton's party to
say I was going to be a little late. Something important had come up and I'd be along later.
I turned back to the stranger and said, "I'm Bret Gilliam. Who are you?"
And the figurative "mask" came off as he introduced himself with his real name. I was actually filled
with emotion to meet the guy who had helped launch my business career through an article in a little newsletter
that had made a decision years ago to be a real journal with ethics and give readers the straight, honest
truth in an industry that avoided honesty like politicians giving campaign speeches.
"Yeah," I replied. "I'd really like to have a drink with you."
We walked back into the suite, sat down away from the others, and I spent an hour catching up with
my newest best friend. I finally made it to dinner 90 minutes late but Cathryn had everything in hand, as I
knew she would.
"Well, do you want to tell me what was so important to make you disappear for a dinner that's costing
you more than some people's houses?" she asked.
"Sorry, I couldn't break away. I bumped into an old friend I didn't know."
In the years since, "Ben Davison" and I have managed to get together just a half dozen times for dinner
in various cities, but it has always been a great occasion with a now dear friend. We talk on the phone a lot.
And I still write for Undercurrent, although I've retired from all other diving industry connections except litigation consulting. Let me only comment that it has been my pleasure and privilege to be included in
Undercurrent's family over the years. In exchange, I've received a certain sense of nostalgia, fond memories,
friendship and benchmarks of the diving industry chronicled in those pages.
"Ben Davison" has done good work for nearly 35 years, the diving industry is a better place and the
readers better informed, due to Undercurrent. He has earned his place in history, even though only a handful
of people actually know his name or would recognize him. That's a rare entity. If there were a proper Hall
of Fame in diving (other than the dubious awards ceremony held by various sycophants devoted to a mutual,
self-aggrandizing exchange of statues, medallions, medals and plaques issued to those who lobby the
loudest), then he would be in it as a member of the first inductees. And I would proudly stand to applaud
him. But I'd never reveal or disclose his true identity. You can "waterboard" me but I ain't giving him up.
Bret Gilliam is a 40-year veteran of the professional diving industry with over 18,000 logged dives. He retired in 2005 as one of
diving's most successful and wealthiest entrepreneurs, and now lives on an island in Maine.