Back To The Mother Boat, Aussie
Style: Aboard the Nimrod Explorer, subscriber
Leanne Wells visited the Coral Sea
and Raines Island when turtles were laying
eggs and endless sharks were waiting.
"Retrieval was odd. The dinghy circled
the diver to deliver a tow rope, and then
pulled the diver holding on to the rope
and wearing all gear, back to the liveaboard.
It worked, but I felt like chum on
the end of a troll-line with all the sharks
in the water! Did not like it at all, and
always tried to monitor current so that I
could get back to the live-aboard."
Screwed on Too Tight: Here's a good
tip from Kris Manion in Denver. "When
my expensive UK 100 Cannon light vacuumed
shut, my dive shop technician took
and put it in the freezer for two days,
then when the air shrank they could get
it open with no damage!"
Key West Dive Boat Captain Dies: Ralph Chiaro was driving Subtropic Dive
Center's 42-foot Island Diver back from the reef on July 29 when he leaned into
the hatch for some engine maintenance
near Garrison Bight. His hair became
entangled in the engine's machinery,
pulled him in, and he died instantly.
Chiaro, started as a divemaster at
Subtropic seven years ago. Divers remember
him by his daily announcement "The
eagle has landed", as he docked at the
end of the day.
Sea Bands: We've reported evidence
that says they don't prevent seasickness,
but reader Mike Boom says "the
ReliefBand truly works for my wife and
for other puking folks that we slap it
on." The UC Berkeley Wellness Letter says research on nausea and vomiting centers
around a single acupuncture point, P6,
on the inside of the forearm just above
the wrist. Many studies show benefits of
acupressure on location P6 as well." So,
says Mike, maybe there's something to be
said for wrist bands after all, beyond the
placebo effect. (www.reliefband.com).