Another Place to Recycle Dive Gear. After writing
about where to take old equipment when you're
done with it, Undercurrent readers are popping up with
more places to sell stuff to. The latest is from David
Steinberg, who recommends Discount Divers Supply in
Seattle. Box up your equipment and ship it to the shop,
which will give an estimate once the package arrives,
and can offer cash or credit. They're looking for quite
an assortment of stuff, including non-working rebreathers
and antique dive gear ( www.discountdivers.com )
Witch-Burning Alive and Well in PNG. Papua
New Guinea is safe enough -- if you're headed straight
to your dive resort. In her review of Walindi Plantation
last October, our reporter described the arrest of 29 cannibal
cult members in the Western Highlands for eating
raw human brains. That regi on is in the news again
after a mob stripped, tortured and bound a woman
accused of witchcraft, then doused her with gasoline
and burned her alive on a pile of tires in front of hundreds
of people last month. Kepari Leniata, 20, was
accused of sorcery by relatives of a six-year-old boy
who had recently died; the connection between the two
is unclear. The country's big newspapers printed grisly
photos of the burning on their front pages. Police were
outnumbered by the mob and couldn't save Leniata.
The United Nations said the killing "adds to the growing
pattern of vigilante attacks and killings of persons
accused of sorcery" in PNG.
Does Wine Age Better Underwater? Mira Winery
of Saint Helena, CA, is testing that theory by submerging
four cases of 2009 Cabernet Sauvignon in
Charleston Harbor to see how the ocean affects the
aging of the wine. Some European wineries have
produced underwater-aged wine, but it's still a novel
idea in the U.S. Winemakers have long known that
wine recovered from sunken ships has a unique taste, and the ocean is thought to play a role, but Michael Kaiser,
director of communications for the National Association of
American Wineries, suggested that wine recovered from
ships may simply taste better because the wine is really old.
Once Mira's wine is pulled from the ocean in late May, it
will be chemically compared to wine aged in a cellar, then
tasted and compared by wine experts.
First It Was Lionfish . . . Now it's giant goldfish that
are the latest threat to marine life. Biologists with the
University of Nevada at Reno are finding a growing
number of them in Lake Tahoe, probably due to people
dumping their aquariums into the lake. Some of the goldfish
have grown to 18 inches, and they pose a threat to
the lake's ecology because they eat a lot, creating competition
for native trout, and excrete "lots of nutrients" that
stimulate algae growth. There have been no prior studies
on goldish, so researchers are catching the giant fish and
bringing them back to the lab for research.
Join the Search for Treasure. In 1985, Mel Fisher found
the Spanish galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha, which sank in
1622, 35 miles southwest of Key West and 55 feet deep,
and he uncovered an estimated $500 million of treasure.
But there's still more to discover, and the late Fisher's family
is offering divers the opportunity to help professional
salvage experts during week-long dive trips between June
and August. You'll be searching for the ship's sterncastle,
as well as the gold and silver bars and coins listed on the
Atocha's manifest that are still missing. Anyone who discovers
something precious will be awarded previously conserved
Atocha pieces of equal value, up to $2,500. The trip
cost, including lodging, is $2,500, and trips are limited to six
divers ( www.melfisher.com ).
Good Job, Indonesia. Last month, government officials
announced the opening of a new shark and manta
ray sanctuary in Raja Ampat, the first of its kind in the
Coral Triangle, which will measure 18,000 square miles.
The government also issued guidelines to abolish the
fining and fishing of sharks in the area.