Contents of this Issue:
All publicly available
Truk Odyssey, Chuuk, Micronesia
There’s an Easier Way to Dump Air from Your BC
By Land or by Sea: What Makes for the Best Diving?
Cozumel, Raja Ampat, Cuba, Grand Turk . . .
Reader Reports: Easier to Write, and Now with Photos
Got any Tales of Unexpected Dive Travel Bills?
Yes, Sport Divers Get PTSD, Too
Even Royal Family Members Are Dive Fatalities
Snorkeler Gets Swallowed by a Whale
Fly for Free to Your Dive Destination
Dragon Smugglers Forcing a Shutdown of Komodo Island
Your Letters to the Editor
The Real-Time Data Every Dive Computer Should Have
How This Diver’s Coastal Cleanup Plan Has Turned Him into a Hero
Trinidad Diver Survives a 44-Mile Swim
Don’t Ignore that Dive Injury
Flotsam & Jetsam
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When Jonah of the Bible got swallowed by a
whale, it was three days before he was finally spat
out. Luckily, Rainer Schimpf of Port Elizabeth, South
Africa, was released a lot sooner after he found himself
inside the mouth of a whale.
Schimpf, 51, has been organizing trips out to the
famous Sardine Run, 25 miles off Port Elizabeth, for
more than 15 years. Sometimes they can be disappointing,
others they can result in spectacular one-off
experiences to be treasured. Austrian diver Heinz
Toperczer got one of those cherished moments when
he captured video footage of Schimpf being gathered
up in the mouth of a charging Brydes whale while
snorkeling in February.
Schimpf told the Daily Telegraph that there was no
time for fear or any emotion. "I knew instantly what had happened. I knew a whale had come and taken
me, and I instinctively held my breath, assuming it
would dive down again and spit me out somewhere in
the depths of the Indian Ocean."
But then he felt enormous pressure around his
waist, which is when the whale may have realized
its mistake, Schimpf said. "As the whale turned sideways,
he opened his mouth slightly to release me,
and I was washed, together with what felt like tons of
water, out of his mouth, while the whale himself was
swallowing all the fish in his throat."
OK, maybe Schimpf didn't actually get swallowed,
but it certainly was a one-off experience to find himself
inside the whale's mouth even for just 1.8 seconds.
Brydes whales can reach up to 55 feet long and weigh
30 tons, so they certainly have big mouths.