EDGE and HOG BCD Recall: Edge Dive Gear
received an Edge Freedom Buoyancy Compensator
with a complaint of a broken spring in the over
pressurization valve. Upon inspection, it was clear
that the springs in the OPV exhibit an unacceptable
amount of corrosion. In cooperation with
the US Consumer Product Safety Commission on
October 20, Edge Gear issued a voluntary recall
of the Edge Freedom BCDs, Some Edge Stealth
2 BCDs (units with red weight release handles
for weight pockets are NOT involved), Hog 32lb
Single Tank wings identified as “Made in China”
and all Edge 32, 38 and 58lb wings. For more
information, please contact EDGE at (404)579-
7631 or email recall@edge-gear.com
Pirate’s Point: Perhaps my favorite Caribbean
dive retreat, the Little Cayman institution turns 25
next year. The owner, 78-year-old Gladys Howard,
is unstoppable. While she has had two knee
replacements and an artificial joint in one of her
fingers, she made 23 dives this summer around
Komodo and took the two-hour dragon walk on
Rinca Island.
Where do Barracuda Go? Carleton University
student Amanda O’Toole recently completed
her masters in biology studying barracuda in the
Bahamas, which are the subject of little research.
Some barracudas carry ciguatera toxin, which
can poison humans, but unlike people think, fish
in one area do no necessarily carry more toxin
than fish in other areas, because the barracuda
loves to travel. Some stayed in one spot, but others
moved as far as 100 kilometers away, and back.
In her studies near Eleuthera, she found that the
fish disappear for months in the summer, presumably
leaving the continental shelf for the deeper
regions, most likely to spawn.
Pressure to Stop Bahamas Shark Feeding: In
early October, Jane Engle, a local resident, was
attacked by a lemon shark while surfing in the
Abacos Islands in the Bahamas. It took more than
75 stitches to repair the bite marks in her calf.
This was just two weeks after the remains of a man
who disappeared after a boat trip with three others
off Jaws Beach were found in the stomach of a
12-foot tiger shark. Some people think the attacks
are related to scuba operators feeding sharks.
William Engle, the surfer’s husband, told the
Nassau Tribune, “there has never, in recent memory,
been any shark attack here . . . Personally, I
would discourage any shark diving adventures in
the Abacos or the Bahamas, where they literally
feed sharks to bring them in . . . I don’t think
that’s a good thing for the Bahamas because these
sharks can interact with other humans someplace
else and expect to see food.”
Undercurrent Publishing Schedule: Historically,
the Nov/Dec issue has been the Chapbook, but
since we have stopped printing Undercurrent, the
2011 Chapbook will be available on line December
1. You’ll be able to download it and even print out
specific sections. And we hope to make it available
on Kindle. We have added this bonus November
issue. Of course I would have loved to continue
printing the Chapbook, but the rise of the web,
the decline of print media, and the continuing
decrease in divers means we’ve had to become
electronic to survive. I can’t thank you enough for
your continuing support
— Ben Davison