Aggressor Damaged: The Palau
Aggressor canceled at least two months
of trips in June after a freighter was
blown into it during high wind (no
one was hurt). Scores of divers had to
rush frantically, with the aid of
Aggressor staff, to find substitute destinations
in Palau and throughout the
Pacific, which led to many problems
in switching flights (and expectations).
The Aggressor is expected to be operating
again by mid-September.
Open Water. I saw an early preview
of this film, opening August 6,
and it's a winner. While accurately
portraying day boat diving, it builds
enormous tension as the two lead
characters drift aimlessly after their
boat heads home without them. The
constant threat of sharks is understated
-- no heavy handed music -- and
unexploited, as the couple struggles
through an emotional roller coaster
while their chances for rescue dim.
Based on the true story of an
American couple left behind in
Australian waters, Open Water builds to
a powerful and believable conclusion.
Divers could pick a few nits, but why?
Just roll back and drift with this powerful
and believable story. Then, rush
to your dive store and buy yourself a
safety sausage.
Jellyfish for Lunch? The depletion
of the seas has become so severe
that Daniel Pauly of the University of
British Columbia says that jellyfish are
being targeted for food. In the wake
of the disastrous crash of the North
Atlantic's cod stocks, the Newfoundland
government is encouraging fishermen
to go after jellyfish, Pauly said. Recently
he was served jellyfish in Thailand --
"kind of crispy, a noodle-like thing."
Fish that were once subpar have
become dinner mainstays. Fish from
New Zealand known as slimeheads
were rechristened orange roughy in
the 1980s -- and promptly overfished.
Patagonian toothfish became Chilean
sea bass and demand drove a thriving
poaching business. Unless you're looking
forward to a jellyfish sandwich, eat
only sustainably caught seafood. For
more information, go to:
www.thefishlist.org/FishList.pdf or
www.audubon.org/campaign/lo/seafood/seafood_wallet.pdf.
People Eat Puffer Fish: Even in
Florida they do; however, in the past 30
months at least 28 people have gotten
sick eating the southern puffer harvested
from the Indian River Lagoon. The
type of poison here, saxitoxin, is new to
the lagoon's puffers. Japanese prize
puffer sashimi -- fugu -- though
some diners die even after well-trained
chefs trim the poisonous tissue.