UNFIT DIVER: Are you among those
who don’t think staying aerobically fit
means much to a diver? Think again.
Researchers have found a positive
correlation between aerobic capacity and
the amount of nitrogen expired. In
testing three subjects, the subject with the
highest aerobic capacity eliminated up to
15 percent more nitrogen than the one
with the lowest capacity. While the data
is insufficient to allow firm conclusions,
it does indeed suggest that the higher
the diver’s level of physical fitness, the
less nitrogen-bubble formation he’ll
have — and the lower his likelihood of
a bends hit will be. (P. Ronning and G.
Bolstad, XXIV Annual Scientific Meeting of the
European Underwater and Baromedical
Society, M. Gennser, ed., Stockholm, Sweden).
I KNOW WHAT YOU DID OVER THE
MILLENNIUM: Fiji divers went through
some changes recently following the
death of Taveuni’s Paramount Chief.
During the mourning period, a tabu was
imposed banning all Somosomo Strait
water activities, including diving and
snorkeling, for 100 nights, however,
meetings between dive operators and
local chiefs resulted in a partial lifting of
the ban allowing dives on the Rainbow
Reef and Rabi Island to resume in time
for holiday travel and millennium
celebrations. Although most Fijian dive
operators obviously breathed a sigh of
relief after the compromise was announced,
apparently not all Fijians shared
their sentiments. Fijian chief Ratu Tevita
Vakalalabure claimed that the decision to
allow the festivities was a mistake and
announced that he would exercise his
chiefly powers to call up sharks and direct
them to attack millennium partiers.
HIGH DOLLAR BEER: In October,
members of a British dive club discovered
seven bottles of Scottish beer in the
106-year-old wreck of the Loch Shiel off
the Wales coast. Jim Phillips and his
fellow divers recovered the brew from
the silt, and, as they brought them to
the surface, the cork in one popped
open. Phillips took a swig.
“It was flat and a bit sour, but the salt
water had not contaminated it. I offered it
around, but no one was interested, so I
finished it off.” The auction value of the
century-old beer turned out to be $1600 a
bottle, making Phillips’ pint about the
most expensive ever tippled.