In last month's issue, we asked what crazy
things you've seen while diving. A few came back
to us with stories of things they saw underwater
that left them thinking, "WTF?"
"Green Torpedoes Coming at Us"
Many tales show how it's marine life that surprises
in the most unexpected ways. Marc Lippman
(Miami, FL) tells us how an octopus in Belize called
his bluff. "My older daughter is my 'spotter,' and
suddenly she went into point mode. We swam
over to see what she was looking at. It was an octopus
down in the antlers of a staghorn coral.
"I took out my dive knife and, holding it by the
blade, I offered the handle to the octopus, hoping
it would put a tentacle on it and then, with a finger
on its tentacle, I could coax it out. The octopus did
grab the knife handle, but I couldn't hold onto the
blade, so now we had an armed octopus holding
us at bay. Eventually the creature made its escape
with my knife, which it later dropped."
The bioluminescence of plankton at night
streaming off the bodies of sea lions or dolphins in
motion can make them look like alien spacecraft
underwater. It's a common sight in the Galapagos
Islands, but Clayton Fuller (Coronado, CA) wasn't
prepared. He describes the hair-raising scene of
"green torpedoes coming at us" and the boat as
they made their way between Wolf and Darwin
Islands. The pod of dolphins veered right and kept
on going.
Mike Panek (Boca Raton, FL) sent us a photograph
of a yellowtail swimming about normally but greatly disfigured by a massive hook caught
in its mouth. Panek called it "the fish who cheated
death." Maybe it was able to feed efficiently. We're
thinking it suffered a deferred demise, unless
someone else sends in a new photo of it.
Sharks Don't Want Saving, Only Spearguns
It's annoying to see a diver interfering with
the animals, particularly when that person thinks
he or she is saving the day. While diving in Saba,
Fredda Lerner (Annandale, VA) and her husband
watched as some reef sharks became interested in
a little coral head, and one eased itself into it while
attempting to seize its catch.
"To our amazement, another diver decided to
swim over to the coral and drag the shark out by
its caudal fin. Luckily, the shark was so freaked
out, it swam quickly away. Our instructor could
not believe it. What the heck was she thinking?
After the dive, we asked her what she thought she
was doing. She said she was afraid the shark was
drowning, so she was saving its life by pulling it
out of the coral. Hello, really?"
Many divers like to get up close with sharks but
as shark wrangler Stuart Cove likes to remind us,
they are predatory animals with lots of sharp teeth,
so they need to be treated with respect. But it's
easy to feel some smug satisfaction when sharks
make annoying divers learn that respect through
some mild fear tactics (with no bites involved).
Edward Noga (Akron, OH) tell how he and a
friend were diving on a tugboat wreck off Hatteras,
North Carolina, when they were confronted by another diver racing up from depth, eyes wide
with fear.
"He had been spearfishing, and the sharks had
gone after his bagged fish. The genius had attached
the bag to his weight belt and couldn't get it off,
but that was not dissuading the sharks. I cut it off
and let the sharks take it, but going for a Darwin
Award, the guy decided to try to recover the bag
and tease the sharks. Back on the boat, the imbecile
said he tried to poke the sharks away with his speargun,
but one shark grabbed it from him and took
off. Someone went and found it for him later."
The Red Sea Wins for Crazy Tales
People, of course, can offer even greater surprises
in the water due to their wide range of behaviors.
Somehow, a lot of their tales happened while diving
in the Red Sea. Khaled Kenawy (Sharm el Sheikh,
Egypt) made a video of an underwater fistfight between an Egyptian dive guide and the visiting
British diver he found pillaging an artifact from the
19th-century wreck, SS Carnatic. While attempting
to persuade the diver to put the object back where
he'd found it, the dive guide had his regulator
ripped from his mouth. That act earned the perpetrator
a fine, some time in an Egyptian cell, and
the suggestion that he not return to Egypt. And of
course, the video went viral on social media.
Returning to her liveaboard, MV Rearis, Farzi
Mireskandari (London, UK) was doing a safety
stop near the stern with her buddy and looking up
through the clear water to keep an eye on where
they were in relation to the boat. They could clearly
see the two stainless steel stern ladders leading up
to the swim platform, glinting in the sunlight. But
without warning, another object broke through the
surface: the white backside of the boat's skipper,
an Austrian named Tony, followed by a man-sized
turd Tony had released into the water. "Not many people get to see such a sight from below, whether
diving or not," Mireskandari wrote. Let's hope not.
Equally startling but less amusing, Undercurrent senior editor John Bantin once saw a fully
equipped diver in tow with his girlfriend, who was
wearing only a bikini but no dive gear, and breathing
off his octopus rig at 100 feet deep near the
wreck of the SS Thistlegorm. They both made it back
to the surface, but what a foolhardy move.
Less chilling to Bantin was the sight of a large
group of male divers conducting some sort of celebratory
dive in the nude. The disastrous effect of
cold water was equally apparent among the assembled
company.
"A gratifying observation," says Bantin.
Lost and Found: Top Dawg and Dildos
It's amazing what you can find by accident
underwater. Luke Inman (La Paz, Baja California)
was with a group of rebreather divers at El Bajo in
the Sea of Cortez when they stumbled across a new
Top Dawg video camera housing. After a dive and
drift lasting more than two hours, they surfaced a
long way from where they started, but decided to go back to see if there was any other boat over the
site looking for that camera gear.
When they got back, they indeed found a boat
carrying a dejected diver who had given up hope.
When Inman's group asked if he had lost anything,
the diver said it was no point in them looking
because he and his friends had been searching
for hours.
Inman asked if it was a Top Dawg housing
with a Sony camcorder inside. The diver remained
exasperated, saying he told them it was lost and
there was no way they could find it, despite their
rebreathers. It had fallen off the deck when his boat
had arrived at the site.
"Did it have Radio Shack batteries in it?" Inman
asked, at which point the camcorder's owner finally
got a clue, realized the rebreather had his Top
Dawg, and finally cheered up.
A less happy ending: During an underwater
clean-up in Lake Erie, Georgann Wachter (Avon
Lake, OH) came across a discarded sex toy. When
Wachter surfaced, there was no person waiting to
see if someone had rescued it.
-- Ben Davison