The Calypso Will Sail Again. Last April, we
reported
that Jacques Cousteau’s famous research vessel
was about to be scrapped due to unresolved squabbles
between his family and a French boatyard, where the
old boat was languishing. But the Calypso is getting
a second chance. The Cousteau Society says that this
spring, the “Calypso will be able to leave the . . . shipyard.
Restored, she will sail again as an ambassador for
the seas and oceans as Captain Cousteau wished.”
Leonardo DiCaprio’s Scary Dive. In an interview
with Rolling Stone, Leonardo DiCaprio says he owes
his life to fellow actor Edward Norton. The two were
diving in the Galapagos while filming a documentary
about climate change when DiCaprio noticed his
tank was out of air. Norton was a great dive buddy
-- he stayed close by, rushed over to offer his octopus,
and the two made a controlled ascent. Good thing
DiCaprio made it -- he recently gave more money to
environmental causes, with the biggest chunk ($6 million)
going to the ocean-focused nonprofit Oceana and
to Skytruth for Global Fishing Watch, a platform that
uses satellite data to monitor fishing activities. (If you
believe his story, another in the long list of celebrity
near-death diving stories, please honk your horn --
your dive horn, that is.)
Tag Turtles and Sharks at Cocos Island. Turtle
Island Restoration Network (TIRN) does an honorable
job in saving sea turtles worldwide, but it needs
the help of you, my fellow diver, both financially and
physically, to do so. They’re offering three splendid
dive trips to Cocos Island to tag and track sea turtles
and sharks to protect their migration routes -- April
22 to May 6 and August 19-31 aboard the Sea Hunter,
and November 29 to December 9 aboard the Argo.
Rates start at $6,132 and include meals, nitrox fills, marine park fee
and transfers from hotel to the dock -- it’s
largely tax-deductible because it helps finance the research
expedition. And there’s more! TIRN is raffling off one spot
on its Argo trip -- tickets are $100 each. For information, go
to http://seaturtles.org/events
Will Paul Allen’s Billions Fix This Cayman Reef? If
you’re the co-founder of Microsoft and owner of the Seattle
Seahawks and Portland Trail Blazers, of course you own
a big yacht. But Paul Allen’s 303-foot Tatoosh has been
charged with destroying a large swath of protected coral
reef in Grand Cayman. The Cayman News Service reports
the Tatoosh was anchored near the Doc Poulson wreck and
The Knife dive site in the West Bay on January 14 when its
anchor chain destroyed 14,000 square feet of the coral reef,
80 percent of it. Allen’s company defended itself by stating,
“The local port authority had directed the Tatoosh to anchor
in a designated area, and the crew moved the vessel on its
own accord as soon as it learned from local divers there
might be a problem.” Allen, probably distracted because
his Seahawks failed to make the Super Bowl, could incur a
hefty fine if he’s found responsible, but the Cayman government
seems to shrug its shoulders at the giant cruise ships
and billionaire mega-yacht owners who have dismantled the
beautiful reefs with errant chains. By the way, “Tatoosh” is
derived from a native American word meaning “nourishing
beast.” Allen got it half right.
Good News for Many Mantas. WildAid, the late Peter
Benchley’s favorite conservation organization, says the
Peruvian government has approved strong regulations
to protect the giant Pacific manta ray. According to the
Manta Trust, Peru has the largest population of Pacific
mantas. It now joins dozens of other countries with manta
protection laws, including neighboring Ecuador, which
is crucial since the animals migrate to the Galapagos.
However, Shawn Heinrichs of WildAid warns, “Manta
rays are targeted across the world for their meat, skin, and
gills. This has driven many regional populations to the
brink in the last decade.”