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      <title>Mark&apos;s Dive Log</title>
      <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/</link>
      <description>This is my diving web log.</description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2009</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2009 08:27:34 -0500</lastBuildDate>
      <generator>http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/</generator>
      <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs> 

            <item>
         <title>For Deeper Service, Just Add Helium</title>
         <description>This time a year ago I was busy chewing through the PADI Tec Deep Diver course work and thinking about how much information we were expected to know.  We learned fun acronyms like &quot;Being Wary Reduces All Failures&quot;, &quot;a Good Diver&apos;s Main Objective Is To Live&quot;, and NOTOX.  We learned how to plan gas consumption for divers with different breathing rates and tank sizes.  We learned how to calculate decompression stops using gasses with different oxygen content.   Most importantly, we learned how dangerous tech diving can be and how to minimize the risks, i.e. how to be safe.

One thing I quickly realized was that regardless of how much more depth or bottom time we would get by learning how to do decompression diving, my primary reason for getting into tech diving was still not being met.  I got into tech diving to be able to dive wrecks in the Great Lakes.

The Great Lakes have some of the most well preserved shipwrecks in the world.  The combination of fresh water, depth, and temperature allow wooden shipwrecks to remain intact long after they would have deteriorated or been destroyed in other environments.  While studying for the class, I quickly realized that the 165&apos; mark that the DSAT Tec Deep certification trains you for was insufficient to reach some of the best wrecks including the Daniel J. Morrell (a 587&apos; freighter that sank in two halves five miles apart, the bow at 213&apos; and the stern at 225&apos;) and the Roy A. Jodrey (a bulk freighter similar to the more famous Edmund Fitzgerald that sank a year later).

So that meant that I was destined to do the second half of the DSAT curriculum:  Tec Trimix.  The DSAT Trimix course teaches you how to plan and execute dives to 240&apos; and beyond using gas blends of Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Helium.

If you&apos;re like me, the first time you heard of diving with helium, you thought someone was pulling your leg.  As it turns out, helium has been in use in diving since the 1960s.  Initially helium was used to replace the nitrogen in air (a mixture known as heliox) to eliminate nitrogen narcosis.  Unfortunately, that introduced a new problem: HPNS (High Pressure Nervous Syndrome) when diving at depths around 400 feet.  To counteract this, divers began to add nitrogen back into the mix to act as a mild depressant.  Thus trimix was born.

So, the use of helium as a dive gas has been around for a while, and it allows you to dive deeper than an oxygen equivalent nitrox (nitrogen and oxygen) blend, but it comes at a price.  Actually, it comes with several prices, including the cost.  More important than that is the extra decompression time.  Then the cost of a drysuit inflation system since you can&apos;t use trimix in your drysuit (helium doesn&apos;t provide enough thermal protection).  Oh yeah, your deco stops have to be even more precise than with nitrox tech diving.  And did I mention the cost of the gas?  Oh, and sometimes you may be diving with a mix that doesn&apos;t have enough oxygen to support life at the surface.  And you may be diving with three, four, or more decompression/stage/travel bottles.  Using the wrong one at the wrong time could result in death.  Not to mention just lugging all of that bulk through the water.

So why do it?

To get to the bottom.  Honestly, the risks are manageable (even if they aren&apos;t eliminated) and replacing some of the nitrogen with helium makes you safer at depth because you aren&apos;t as narced as you would be with nitrox or air.  And diving with hypoxic mixes (gas blends with less than 21% oxygen) reduces your oxygen exposure for even more safety.  So you trade one set of risks for another.  But you&apos;ll get to dive places that most people can&apos;t even dream about.

As for the inherent relative risk of diving to 245 feet versus 165 feet?  Does it really matter?  You can&apos;t go straight to the surface from either depth, so screwed is screwed.  If you have an emergency that you can&apos;t handle the result will be the same whether you are 245 feet or &quot;only&quot; 165.

And to think that 130 feet used to be scary.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/04/for_deeper_service_just_add_he_1.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/04/for_deeper_service_just_add_he_1.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Training</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Trimix</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2009 08:27:34 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Cavern Diving</title>
         <description>One type of technical diving is cave diving.  The thought of cave diving has never really appealed to me.  I got into technical diving to dive wrecks.  Yes, I know wrecks are more dangerous than caves, but psychologically being in a hole in the ground several hundred or thousand feet from the entrance just didn&apos;t sit right in my brain.

Then I took the Cavern Diver Specialty course.  Cavern diving is similar to cave diving, but you need to be within sight of the opening and within 200 feet of the surface.  Even with that restriction, you can experience quite a lot.  You can do cavern dives with basic recreational gear, but I did the course in my tec rig, more for the practice diving in the tec rig than any other reason.

So I made the long drive to Florida just after Christmas to join Steve and Kelly Oborn on their annual winter dive trip to Florida.  There were several classes going on during the week including some Open Water certifications and an Advanced Open Water class.  The Cavern class consisted of me, Dave Brown (who got his OW certification the same weekend as my wife), Joe Tumeo from the shop, and Ed and Darcy Smith who got their OW certifications on this trip last year.  Having five people was a little awkward, but it gave us the opportunity to practice working in teams of more than two.

We started the dive week at Devil&apos;s Den near Williston, Florida.  The first dive was mainly an acclimation dive for most of the divers (although it was a training dive for the Open Water students).  I dove in my rec gear the first day because doubles would have been way to bulky for the entrance to the sinkhole.  During subsequent dives we practiced running lines and then following them out with our eyes closed.  It was a relatively easy day.  The real work started on day two.

The second day of the trip was spent at Blue Grotto, also near Williston.  Blue Grotto is more of a cavern dive.  We did more line drills including following the line out with mask off and eyes closed.  This was probably the most disconcerting dive experience I&apos;ve ever had, although I never felt uncomfortable.  I knew I wasn&apos;t in any real danger, since in a worst case scenario I could just open my eyes and swim out and up, so I there was no anxiety, but I felt like I had somehow managed to get turned around or that I was sliding backwards down the line.  In the end I made it out of the cavern area with no problems.  It was a very good training exercise.

Our third and final day of cavern training was done at Ginnie Springs near High Springs, Florida.  The first dive was to a cavern called The Ballroom.  The entrance lies in about 10 - 15 feet of water.  You pass through the upper chamber and a narrow opening down to The Ballroom.  We practiced running a line from the entrance down to the back of the cavern even though there is a huge line permanently run there already.

Sitting (floating) in the Ballroom was incredible.  Facing the back of the chamber our flashlights lit up some of the most beautiful structures I&apos;ve ever seen while diving.  It was incredible.  Facing the front of the chamber you can look all the way up to the surface of the spring and the light filtering in reminded me of my first dive experience in the kelp forests off of Catalina Island in California.

When we came up from the first dive I turned to Doc and said &quot;I&apos;m hooked&quot;.  The rest of the dives in Devil&apos;s Eye, Devil&apos;s Ear, and Little Devil only served to set the hook.

So now I&apos;m going to start looking into getting full cave certified.  I want to get some more tec experience first, but cave diving, once on my &quot;never in my life&quot; list is now on my short list.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/01/cavern_diving.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/01/cavern_diving.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 16:26:06 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Coming Up For Air</title>
         <description>I haven&apos;t written anything in a long time (over a year), so this is just a summary of the intervening time.

2008 was a busy and exciting dive year.  At the time of my last entry I had just picked up my Master Scuba Diver certification.  Since then I&apos;ve earned several new specialties and certifications.

2008 started off with a trip to Bonaire in January.  The whole family went with others from the shop for a week of diving.  Michael, being 7, spent the mornings in Sea Camp while Tracie and I did the morning boat dives.  We also did several of the afternoon, evening, and night dives.  The last day of the trip was spent driving around the island on ATVs and dune buggies.  I used the trip as an opportunity to pick up the PADI Boat Diver and Peak Performance Buoyancy specialties.

A month later a group of us went up to Twin Quarries near Columbus, Ohio for the PADI Ice Diver Specialty.  I bought dry gloves for the experience as well as an argon bottle for my dry suit.  I never did get the gloves working correctly and wasn&apos;t able to get my argon tank filled before the trip.  I don&apos;t think it would have made it that much warmer anyway.

Also in March I started working towards Divemaster.  Let&apos;s just say that this was a lot more work than I expected.  It was a very good course and I learned a lot.  I think it was the most fun dive course I&apos;ve taken.

May marked the beginning of the dive season.  I met up with Mike Gifford to do some acclimation dives in our doubles.  I also started working on my Divemaster open water dives (assisting instructors with dive classes).

June was the big month.  Mike Gifford and I headed to Florida with Steve and Kelly Oborn and Mike Havlin for our DSAT Tec Deep Diver certification.  This was a seriously intense week.  I can&apos;t think of anything I&apos;ve ever done that was this intense.  Even bootcamp was easier than this.  After two days I was asking myself what I was doing there.  But by Thursday I was starting to feel pretty comfortable and by Friday Mike and I both felt confident planning and leading the last dive.  Our instructors apparently felt pretty comfortable with our abilities too because they didn&apos;t change anything in the dive plan.  Once we completed the last dive, there was a conflicting feeling of relief that we were done and wanting to do yet another dive.  It was a most excellent course.

July gave Mike and I an opportunity to try out our brand new Tec certification diving the USS Oriskany.  We flew to Gulf Shores, Alabama to meet up with Steve and Kelly (and a few others from the shop).  We made two dives on the Oriskany, although we aborted the second dive after we got blown off the descent line.  We both want to make that trip again.

August was a family vacation to Hawaii.  Tracie and I did a boat dive off of Honolulu and I dove off of Kona on the Big Island.  The Kona dive was spectacular.  I had planned on diving the Molokini crater, but the arrangements were more complicated than I wanted to deal with (renting a car from the cruise ship before 9:00am wasn&apos;t possible).  So I&apos;ll put it on my list for next time.

In September I finished my Divemaster open water assistance dives by assisting with a Deep Diver Specialty class and doing a quarry tour with some divers who hadn&apos;t been in the water since their certification class the year before.  It was a nice dive and they all seemed to have fun, so I guess I did OK.

October and November I was busy working on refinishing my basement, so no diving.  In December, however, I went with Steve and Kelly Oborn on their annual winter Florida trip.  They were certifying several Open Water and Advanced Open Water divers as well as doing a Cavern Specialty course (more about that in a later post).  The trip ended on New Year&apos;s Eve swimming with manatees in the morning and a drift dive in the Rainbow River in the afternoon.  Steve had me teach tank matching to the Cavern class and Kelly had me play Divemaster for her on several training dives.  She also asked me and Joe Tumeo to lead the drift dive.  All in all a fun trip with several opportunities for teaching/assisting.  I also used the trip to do my mapping project for the Divemaster course, so I&apos;m finally finished with that.

So that was 2008 in a nutshell.  I&apos;m looking forward to 2009.  My goals are much simpler:  Wreck Diver Specialty and DSAT Tec Trimix Diver.  Steve asked me to help out with his next TecRec course as well.  I&apos;m really looking forward to that.  Assuming the shop accepts my Divemaster application, I&apos;ll be doing some Divemaster work as well.  Since my goal is to move on to Instructor in the next couple of years, I want to make the most of this to learn as much as I can before starting the IDC (Instructor Development Course).

Dive safe and don&apos;t hold your breath!</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/01/coming_up_for_air.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2009/01/coming_up_for_air.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Blowing Bubbles</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 15:23:22 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Jack Of All Trades, Master Of None</title>
         <description>Most scuba certification agencies have a Master Scuba Diver certification.  For most, the requirements are 50 logged dives and some number of specialties.  Most require either Advanced Open Water or Rescue Diver certification.  NAUI doesn&apos;t require any specialties, but requires eight training dives as part of the course.  For most others, there is no course, it&apos;s simply an application after you have reached all the prerequisites.

So some would say that the NAUI Master Scuba Diver is better trained than the others since it&apos;s actually a training course.  However, it only requires Advanced Open Water and no specialties.  PADI Master Scuba Diver isn&apos;t a course, just an application, but you need to be a Rescue Diver and have five specialties.

So I suppose it&apos;s a wash.  If you are a NAUI Master or a PADI Master, or an SSI Master, it&apos;s all about the same.

Regardless of what it is, I don&apos;t feel like a particularly experienced diver; in fact, I feel like a student.  Sure, I have a lot more knowledge and skill than the average Open Water student, but I still feel like a student.  I suppose if you put it in the context of school, Open Water is your Freshman year, Advanced Open Water is your Sophomore year, Rescue Diver is your Junior year, and Master is your Senior year.  I think that about fits.

From here on out, it&apos;s graduate level courses.  Divemaster is like becoming a college T.A.  From there, Assistant Instructor, Open Water Instructor, Master Scuba Diver Instructor, etc are all various levels of graduate school/professorship.  Sure you can learn with straight dive experience, but teaching can give you a whole new perspective on a subject.

I had never intended to become a scuba instructor.  Not even Divemaster appealed to me six months ago.  A lot has changed since then.  A couple of months ago I said that I could see myself ending up as an instructor.  Now it&apos;s starting to become a goal.  Unless the Divemaster course changes my mind.

So now I&apos;m a Master Scuba Diver, but I don&apos;t feel like a master.  More like a master in training.  Maybe all the tech stuff I&apos;ve been doing lately has shown me a little bit of how much I don&apos;t know yet.  Maybe the stupid mistakes I made last weekend humbled me.  Regardless of why, I think accepting that there&apos;s a lot I don&apos;t know will help me in my training over the next year...</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/jack_of_all_trades_master_of_n.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/jack_of_all_trades_master_of_n.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Training</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 15 Nov 2007 16:36:16 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>More Double Trouble</title>
         <description>When I started my dry suit class, everyone told me that learning to dive in a dry suit was like starting all over again, and they were right.  So when I was told learning to dive in doubles is like starting all over again, I took it to heart.

The first thing about the technical rig (other than the weight of the doubles) is the change in philosophy.  For one, in recreational diving, you keep your octo available for your buddy in an out of air emergency.  You would only use it for yourself if your primary regulator failed.  In technical diving, your two regulators are equal and you donate your primary to your buddy and take your back-up for yourself.  This makes a lot of sense because in an emergency you want to make sure your buddy is getting a good, working air source.  If you are breathing off of a deco bottle, handing your buddy the regulator in your mouth is your only option, so it&apos;s a good habit to get into.  I guess the thought is that by the time you get to technical diving you are competent enough to deal with not having a regulator in your mouth for extended periods, so making sure your buddy has a good air source is more important.

Another difference is that technical divers focus on streamlining their rig.  Recreational divers nearly always have things hanging down from them while they&apos;re swimming.  Even if your octo and console are clipped off properly, the hoses tend to be long and looping, so they dangle.  I used to always carry my dive tables on a ring with my dive slate.  The whole bunch was clipped to a D-ring on my BCD, but when I was swimming, they hang.  Recreational divers frequently snag their hoses on stuff.  In tech diving, you focus on removing as many snag hazards as possible.

So before getting in the water, we check to make sure everything is routed correctly.  Hoses are routed so they don&apos;t hang loose, everything that is loose is clipped to a D-ring to minimize danglies.  Because you donate your primary regulator (the one on the seven foot hose) in an out of air emergency, you need to make sure it&apos;s not trapped by any other hoses or equipment.  Double check your LP inflator hoses to your wings and dry suit.  Make sure your regulators are functioning correctly.  Once in the water, you check all of this again and follow it up with a bubble check of your buddy.  A bubble check is basically just checking for bubbles coming out of your buddy&apos;s manifold or regulator connections.  It&apos;s all about safety.  Every critical piece of equipment is backed up.  The primary and backup are double or triple checked.

So this is what I&apos;m thinking about as we prepare for our first dive.

After checking and double checking everything, putting some air in my wing, and rubbing some defog on my mask, I was ready to get into the water for the first time.  I followed Mike, one of the instructors, down the stairs into the water.  With the crowd at the stairs, I made my first mistake:  I decided to float out and put my fins on once I got away from the stairs.  Well, it turns out I didn&apos;t have enough air in my wings and without my fins on (and no mask and no regulator in my mouth) keeping afloat while I found the inflator was a struggle.  Fortunately it was a minor issue.  A bigger problem was that trying to put on my fins while floating was a lot harder than in recreational gear.  I was like a turtle on its back floating with legs out of the water.  Live and learn, I guess.

Once we were all in the water and everything checked, we dropped down to the 70&apos; platform for some buoyancy drills.  First was the pin fivot.  This is supposed to be the same as what you did in your open water training:  get neutrally buoyant and then pivot on your fin tips as you inhale and exhale.  Unfortunately, with the light fins I had on and the heavy rig on my back, I couldn&apos;t keep my fins on the platform, so it was more of an elevator than a pivot.  Additionally, one strap was looser than the other, so the rig wasn&apos;t centered on my back.  That made me want to roll over to my right.  So my pin fivot wasn&apos;t very good.  Next I had to get neutrally buoyant a couple of feet above the platform and float there.  Finally, we headed off for the other side of the quarry.  It was a nice long 55 minute dive that gave me plenty of time to get used to the new rig.  The dive ended back at the original dock with several decompression stops (even though we were well within no-deco limits).

Our second dive of the day was a bit simpler.  The plan was to dive to bottom of the quarry (120 feet), go to a submerged trailer, and then follow the north wall until someone reached their turn pressure.  Well, we never found the trailer, but the north wall is impossible to miss, so we swam out and back along the wall, followed again by practice decompression stops.  By this time I&apos;m starting to feel pretty comfortable in the tech rig and operating the dry suit is starting to become second nature.  All seems to be going well.

We woke up the next day to rain.  The forecast called for rain all day.  Now rain isn&apos;t a big deal when it&apos;s warm.  But in northern Ohio in November, rain makes a cold day miserable.  We decided that we would do our two dives back to back with a short surface interval.

The plan for the first dive was to demonstrate an S-drill.  An S-drill is basically practicing emergency procedures.  This one was to practice an out of air emergency.  First Doc would demonstrate with Mike, then he would work with me.  So we descended to the 70&apos; platform and I dumped enough air from my wing to kneel solidly on the platform to watch Doc and Mike go through the drill.  When they were done, Doc turned to me, signaled &quot;OK&quot;, which I returned, and then gave the out of air signal.

As I said, in technical diving you donate our primary regulator on the seven foot hose and then put your backup in your mouth.  To do this, you duck your head while pulling the regulator out with your right hand to unwrap it from your neck.  This is why it needs to be free from the rest of your equipment.  In this case, somehow my backup hose was covering my long hose.  I had failed to fully check it at the surface.  The result was that after donating my long hose, I couldn&apos;t get my backup fully in my mouth.  I only had the left side of the mouthpiece in my mouth and running out of breath I had to inhale, which resulted in a lung full of quarry water.  

Now, most scuba divers have inhaled small amounts of water at some point.  It&apos;s not an uncommon thing, and even underwater, not a big deal as long as you have a functioning regulator in your mouth.  But when you don&apos;t have a functioning regulator in your mouth, and you know it, and you&apos;re sitting at 70 feet below the surface, I don&apos;t imagine too many people who wouldn&apos;t have at least a moment&apos;s pause.  Panic would not be an unusual reaction.  Having just inhaled a nice mouthful of water and still not having my regulator completely in my mouth, and knowing that I&apos;m at 70&apos; feet, I had my first moment of real panic underwater.

What went though mind was something like:  &quot;Oh crap!  Regulator&apos;s not in my mouth!  I&apos;m sucking water!  Where&apos;s the regulator!  I gotta get to the surface!  NOW!&quot;  That took approximately a tenth of a second to flash through my brain.  The next half of a second was:  &quot;I&apos;m at 70&apos;, I&apos;ll never make the surface.  My regulator is in my mouth, just not fully.  Just relax, I can straighten this out out.  The long hose must be wrapped around the short hose pulling it away from me.  Pull the long hose away from Doc!  No, don&apos;t do that, just try harder to get the back up completely in my mouth.  Purge!&quot;  My hand was still on the regulator, so hitting the purge button happened pretty quick.  That allowed me to get more air in my mouth along with more water, but now that I was expecting water I was able to keep from inhaling it.  Still, I hadn&apos;t been able to cough yet because I didn&apos;t have the regulator in my mouth and I was afraid that if I coughed, I would  involuntarily inhale while coughing which would make matters worse.

By this point Doc was well aware of my situation and he was returning my long hose to me.  In fact, he told me later, he was getting ready to shove it in my mouth.  I saw him offer a regulator to me (I didn&apos;t know it was my long hose, I just saw a regulator), but I didn&apos;t want to take the regulator that I had out of mouth, so I put up my hand to signal &quot;wait&quot;.  Since he was handing back my long hose, the stress on the short hose was gone and I was able to get the backup fully into my mouth and hit the purge button.  I forgot to plug the mouthpiece with my tongue, so I ended up with more water in my mouth, but I managed not to inhale it and then I managed to get a full breath for the first time since taking my primary regulator out of my mouth.  I think this was my third breath on the backup, so only a few seconds had passed.

Now I had myself under control, but I knew I didn&apos;t look like it, so I kept my hand up to let Doc know I was handling it.  I wasn&apos;t OK yet, so I didn&apos;t want to signal &quot;OK&quot;, but I needed to communicate something, so &quot;wait&quot; was the only thing that came out.  He saw that I was responsive and coherent, so he let me handle, but he continued to hold my primary in front of my face in case I needed it.

After a coughing fit and a few seconds of breathing water free air I gave Doc the OK sign and switched to my primary regulator.  Then Doc untangled my hoses for me, took my primary and wrapped it around my neck and everything was back to normal.  The whole event, from the time Doc gave the out of air signal until I had all of my equipment back in place and I was breathing normally was probably only a minute, but it felt like a lot longer.  I had two simultaneous thoughts:  &quot;I want to get out of the water&quot; and &quot;I hope Doc doesn&apos;t end the dive&quot;.

Fortunately, Doc is experienced enough to know &quot;when to hold &apos;em and when to fold &apos;em&quot; and with all the excitement over, he signaled &quot;8-0&quot; and &quot;level off&quot; indicating that 80 feet was our hard deck (maximum depth) for this dive, as we had discussed on the surface.  I signaled OK and we swam off the platform.  We immediately started descending and when we reached 80 feet, I stopped descending, but Doc and Mike kept going.  I wasn&apos;t sure if he had changed his mind or if he was testing me to see if I would follow him below the hard deck.  Doc looked up at me and I gave the &quot;level off&quot; signal, but he kept going down.  I ended up descending a few feet below 80, but then Doc started swimming along the wall to the shallow side of the quarry per the dive plan, so I followed, keeping my depth about 80&apos;.  At the end of the dive, when we talked about it, Doc said he was testing me, but he was looking for me to come down and stop him.  Next time, I&apos;ll know.

The rest of the dive was rather uneventful.  We swam up to the shallow end past a submerged school bus and helicopter and through the cabin of a submerged plane.  Then we practiced decompression stops and surfaced on the opposite side of the quarry from where we started.  The first thing I did was cough out more quarry water.  Then we debriefed, discussing the various events in the dive.

For the next dive, the goal was retrace our steps (or rather kicks) back to the deep dock, but with the short surface interval, we set our hard deck to 50&apos; for the way back.  Additionally, Doc wanted me to lead the dive.  This was the first time I had lead a training dive, which was kind of neat.

Once we were ready to go, I signaled &quot;descend&quot; and we all slipped below the surface and began our swim back to the deep end of the pool.  Part of the purpose of me leading was so Doc could see whether or not I could get us back.  Fortunately, from our position, the route back was pretty simple.  We were about twenty feet from the tail of the plane.  The route back was to swim to the front of the plane, which gets you to the helicopter.  There&apos;s a rope off the front of the plane that takes you past the helicopter to the school bus.  Once you reach the bus, you are only fifteen to twenty feet from the deep side wall.  Then you just follow the wall all the way back to the deep platform.

The trip back was pretty uneventful.  Once we hit the deep wall, I kept my depth between 46 and 49 feet the whole way.  When we got back to the deep platform (or at least above it, I signaled &quot;up&quot; and led us through the deco stops.  I forgot to look at the time, so I was just guessing on the stop durations, so I need to work on that, but I went through the motions.  It was, for me, the best dive of the weekend.  It was also the shortest at 23 minutes.

After we surfaced, Doc and Mike critiqued the dive.  They complemented me on keeping to the plan and checking back frequently, but they said I was kicking too fast.  So I need to slow down.

All in all, it was a good weekend in spite of the weather and the small problem I had on the third dive.  I&apos;m starting to feel very comfortable in the dry suit and by the end of the weekend, I was getting very comfortable with the tech rig.  The big things I learned this weekend were:

1.  Always do a long hose check on the surface to make sure your long hose isn&apos;t trapped.

2.  I still need to get some better fins for tech diving.

3.  I need a lower volume mask for tech diving.

4.  This was the first time I had used a wrist mount computer and now I don&apos;t ever want to use a console computer again.

Unfortunately, this was probably my last dive of the year, so it will be a while before I can put these lessons to use, but hopefully I&apos;ll have the right fins and a new computer by then.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/more_double_trouble.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/more_double_trouble.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Training</category>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2007 20:39:25 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Double, Double, Toil, and Trouble</title>
         <description>I supposed the first skill a technical diver has to learn is how to dive in doubles.  I get that opportunity this weekend.  So, even though I had a brief taste of some technical dive training when we did the dry suit and deep diver specialties courses, this will be my first real technical dive training.

The dry suit class was basically just a recreational class except we were taught to use our suits tech style instead of rec style.  That means we used both the dry suit and the BCD for buoyancy control instead of just the dry suit like you normally would in a pure recreational course.  For the deep diver course, we practiced gas switching using a stage bottle hung at 20 feet (in standard recreational deep training the hanging bottle is just a bailout bottle in case you run out of air during your &quot;safety stop&quot;).  We also did one dive using the tech diver rule of thirds to signal the end of our dive and then the final dive was done using run times and staged decompression stops (even though we were well within the no-deco limits).  So these weren&apos;t really anything special:  any recreational diver can do that.

This weekend, however, I&apos;ll be learning how to use a technical diving rig.  This is a big departure from the standard recreational diving gear.  In addition to having two tanks, the whole rig is different from the standard rec set up.

The first task is learning how to set up the gear, which we did this week.  This started with connecting the two LP95 tanks together with an isolation manifold and tank bands.  The tank bands are just metal bands that hold the tanks together and onto the rest of the rig.  The tank valves and isolation manifold allow you to connect two regulators (one to each tank) and access the gas in both tanks from either regulator.  Normally both regulators are drawing from both tanks.  In the event of a regulator failure, you can turn off the valve to that regulator, but you are still getting air from both tanks using the remaining regulator.  If, for some reason, you need to turn off the air from one of the tanks, you can close the isolation valve.  Then each tank/regulator acts independently.  I don&apos;t know know what situation that would be useful for, but I&apos;m sure I&apos;ll learn that soon enough.

The next thing we did was set up the regulators.  We used two Aeris AT400 Pro regs with DIN connections.  The manifold is a Thermo 300 Bar DIN.  You use DIN in tech diving because it&apos;s less likely to leak, especially if the connection gets knocked into something.  Both regulators are high quality primary regulators.  You don&apos;t use a standard octo in technical diving because the environment you are diving in requires that your backup be just as reliable as your primary.  However, the second stage we designated as primary gets a seven foot hose instead of the standard hose.  This regulator is connected to the right post and the hose routed down between you and your wing, then up across your chest and around your neck, left to right, and then into your mouth.  The other regulator is mounted on the left post with the second stage hose going to the right and over your right shoulder.  The second stage is attached to a regulator necklace.  This holds your backup right below your chin, so in an out of gas emergency, you can hand off your long hose to your buddy and quickly pick up your backup.  Both regulators get break-away clips.  Basically this is just a gate clip attached to the hose using an o-ring and zip tie.  If you have the regulator clipped off on a D-ring and you need it in an emergency, you can easily pull it off breaking the o-ring instead of fumbling with the clip.

Next we set up the harness on the backplate.  The backplate is just a metal plate with holes and slots designed for routing nylon webbing to create the harness.  We started with seven feet of two inch webbing which we routed through the various slots.  In the process of doing this we added two D-rings to each shoulder strap and one to each waist strap.  We added a metal belt buckle to connect the two waist straps and a plastic weight belt on the right side waist strap to hold the flashlight cannister (that I don&apos;t have yet).  We finished it off by creating a crotch strap with a D-ring in the front and back, so you end up with four D-rings on your chest (two about shoulder level and two about three or four inches lower) and four on your waist (front, back, and each side).

Then we put it all together to see how it fit.  Lay down the tanks with the tank band bolts pointing up.  Put the wing on next with the bolts going through the appropriate grommets in the wing.  Then put the backplate on the bolts and secure each bolt with a washer and wingnut.  Next connect the regulators to the tank valves (long hose on right post and short hose on the left post).  The LP hoses for the wing inflator and the dry suit inflator are connected to different regulators so you don&apos;t have all of your buoyancy on one regulator (redundancy).  In our case, we are putting the wing inflator hose on the left post and the dry suit inflator hose on the right post.  Additionally, the left post gets the SPG (with breakaway clip).

One other note.  We removed all the hose boots.  The reason for this is so we can see all the connections to look for cracks and leaks.

Comparing this set up to my recreational rig, it&apos;s simultaneously simpler and more complex.  More complex because you have two tanks with an isolation manifold that you need to learn how to use.  Simpler because there is not much to it.  There is no integrated weight system, no fancy BCD inflation system, no adjustable tank strap that you have to set at the correct height every time you mount a tank.  The tech rig is designed to be simple, redundant, and streamlined.  Looking at a properly equipped technical diver, you will see that he&apos;s much more streamlined, in spite of the double tanks, larger wings, and other gear, than the average recreational diver.  Recreational divers aren&apos;t general taught about streamlining, so they tend to jump in the water with all kinds of things hanging off off them.  I know because I was one of them.

So the first think I learned from technical diving, streamlining my rig, will be an immediate benefit to my recreational diving.

This weekend we&apos;ll be headed for Gilboa Quarry for my first dive in doubles.  This could be called my second dive weekend in the transition to tech course, since we started working on thinking like a tech diver during our dry suit and deep diver certification dives last month.  In spite of the cold, it should be a good time.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/double_double_toil_and_trouble.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/double_double_toil_and_trouble.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Training</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2007 16:38:10 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Any Dive Begins With The First Kick</title>
         <description><![CDATA[As I mentioned earlier, I've been looking into technical dive training.  After a lot of research, questioning a lot of people, and doubling my logged dive count I have enrolled in a Transition to Tech course that was designed by <a href="http://www.docsdivingllc.com/">C. Stephen "Doc" Oborn</a> to develop the diving skills of those interested in tech diving prior to starting the DSAT TecRec course.  The idea is that if he can start training you to dive like a technical diver before you actually start the technical dive training, then the tech training will be that much easier.  So instead of waiting until you have the 100 dives to start thinking and diving like a technical diver, you start before you've developed too many bad habits and then reinforce the tech thinking while getting the 100 dives.

Not only does this provide transition path from recreational style to technical style diving, it also makes it easier because you are learning some of the tech stuff earlier and reinforcing it with practice rather than practicing the recreational way for a while and then trying to switch mindsets.  The course could be called "Advanced Deep Diver".  It sits between the "Deep Diver" specialty and the "DSAT Tec Diver Level One" (previously called "Apprentice Tec Diver").  It's not a DSAT course because it stays within the recreational limits of no-decompression diving to 130 feet and air or Nitrox up to 40%.

Doc's transition course focuses on deep diving (between 70 and 130 feet) on air and Nitrox.  You do these dives in a dry suit, so you get more dry suit practice as well.  If you don't have the EAN, Deep, or Dry Suit certifications, Doc will integrate those courses into your training.  In my case that meant we started the transition training with the dry suit and deep classes.  Doc's background is in education and he seems to tailor his training to the students he's working with rather than trying to fit the students into a preset curriculum.  In this way, his style reminds me more of flight training than traditional scuba training.  Maybe it's a coincidence that he used to be Flight Instructor and an FAA Designated Pilot Examiner.

TDI was the certification agency that was recommended to me for tech training, but overall, the majority of technical divers seem to recommend finding a good instructor and to not worry about the agency since, in the end, they all teach the same stuff.  The biggest difference between TDI and PADI/DSAT seems to be that TDI breaks up the training into a lot more courses.  PADI basically has two courses, Tec Deep Diver and Tec Trimix Diver.  (There's also the Tec Diver Level One which is really part of the Tec Deep Diver course and the Tec Gas Blender).  TDI breaks this into "Intro to Tech Diving" (a brand new course similar to Doc's Transition to Tech course), "Nitrox Diver" (equivalent to PADI's recreational EAN course), "Advanced Nitrox" (covered in DSAT's "Tec Deep Diver"), "Decompression Procedures" (covered in "Tec Deep Diver"), "Extended Range" (covered in "Tec Deep Diver"), "Trimix Diver" (covered in "Tec Trimix Diver"), and  "Advanced Trimix Diver" (covered in "Tec Trimix Diver").  TDI also has several overhead environment training courses that DSAT doesn't have, but I'll cross that bridge when I get there.

In any case, my next class will be spent putting together my tech rig, followed by a training dive to start practicing with doubles.  That should be even more disconcerting than my first dry suit dive.  Especially since I don't have that much experience in a dry suit yet.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/any_dive_begins_with_the_first.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/11/any_dive_begins_with_the_first.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 01 Nov 2007 10:11:55 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Run Dry, Run Deep</title>
         <description><![CDATA[This was an intense weekend of diving:  nine dives in two days...

The purpose of the weekend was to the certification dives for the dry suit and deep specialties.  We did the dry suit dives first to make the deep dives easier.  Being that it was the last certification weekend for the shop, there were a lot of different classes going on.  There were five or six Open Water students, six or so Advanced Open Water students, three or four Rescue Diver students, and then us.  There were four of us doing the dry suit specialty and three of the four, plus one other, doing the deep specialty.

Unfortnately, I ordered a dry suit a couple of weeks ago, but it wasn't in yet, so I was using a rental.  Fortunately it was a trilaminate with latex seals and separate boots just like the one I ordered, so the practice will directly translate to mine.  I'm getting a Bare and the rental was a DUI, but they aren't that different.  One thing I noticed was that the exhaust valve leaked when I didn't have enough air in the suit, and the wrist seals leaked a little bit.  Hopefully mine will be a little better.

Doc (our instructor) was teaching us and the Rescue students.  He started with our dry suit dives which allowed us to do some more practice dives while he worked with his Rescue class.  The first dive was just a skills dive.  We practiced buoyancy using both the dry suit and the BCD and recover from a runaway ascent.  The runaway ascent drill was fun:  the instructor put us on our heads, filled up our dry suits with air and let us go.  We had to turn ourselves right side up and dump the air from the suit to arrest the ascent.  If you get yourself right side up quick enough, it's pretty easy, but if you don't, I would expect that it's a little more difficult.  The second dive was just a tour of the quarry, or at least one corner of it.  It was my first trip to Gilboa in four years, so it was a little more interesting than Blue Springs where I've done most of my diving this year.

After our two dives, we went to help the rescue class.  For one dive I played the lost diver.  For another, I was the diver who lost my buddy.  I played it up pretty big:  signs of panic, not inflating my BCD when I got to the surface, throwing off my mask and regulator, wildly looking for my "lost" buddy.  It was fun.  Not as fun was when they found me in the previous dive.  The rescue students managed to dunk my head under water multiple times while simulating rescue breathing and removing my equipment.  I suppose it's payback since I'm sure I did the same to the "victims" when I did the rescue class last month.

We took a lunch break and then headed to the deep side of the quarry for the first of our deep dives.  I decided that this would be a good opportunity to do my first Nitrox dive.  The plan was to go to the deep platform at 70 feet and do some skills.  Instead of the usual timed puzzle drills, Doc had us record our depth and tank pressure on our slates every five minutes in preparing for the transition to tech course that some of us are going to get into.

This was my first trip to the deep end of the Gilboa quarry.  The visibility on that side of the quarry is a lot better than the rest of the quarry.  The wall on the deep side goes straight from the surface to the bottom at 120 feet.  We descended next to one of the descent line to the platform and I was immediately amazed by the view.  I had never been deep in a quarry before where you could see more than 20 feet.  The whole thing was very eerie.  It hardly seemed real.  I took my camera with me for the trip, but I didn't take it on that dive because I figured we would be working.  As it turns out, the first deep dive was the only one that I would have had time to take pictures, so I'll have to catch the view on a different trip.

The surface temperature wasn't too bad, maybe 68 degrees, but by the time we got to 70 feet, it was a little chilly.  Even in a dry suit, it was cool.  The second thermocline was very definite and you felt it immediately.  This being my first day in a dry suit (other than the pool session we had earlier in the month) didn't help matters.  It took me until our third deep dive before I realized that the majority of my suit squeeze was being caused because I wasn't closing my exhaust valve until I got to the bottom.  So, as I was descending, I would add air to my dry suit and it would just start bubbling out.  I didn't realize this immediately since the exhaust valve is pretty slow, so I just assumed that as I was descending I needed to add more air because of pressure.  Oops.

We got to the platform and Doc did a quick check of everyone just to make sure there were no problems.  The <em>plan</em> was to sit on the 70 foot platform for a few minutes and then swim along the wall at 70 feet, but Doc changed his mind after he checked with everyone.  He decided we were all too calm, I guess, so he started off, with the group in trail, and descended to the top of the trailer sitting at bottom next to the wall.  The top of the trailer is at 110 feet or so.  Now the water was <em>really</em> cold.

We didn't stick around too long.  Since we had all been diving all day, we all had pretty good nitrogen levels, even with using EAN-32 for this dive.  And even though we were well within the no-deco limits, a "safety stop" was not just a good idea, it was virtually mandatory.  Still, it was an easy dive and probably the most interesting dive I've had in a quarry.

That night the Advanced Open Water class was doing a night dive, so we tagged along.  There were a bunch of divers, so we split up into three groups.  The group I went with planned to make it a deep dive too.  We went to the tubes at 65 feet or so.  It was a nice long dive and we covered most of the shallow end of the quarry.  Before the dive, I was talking with Tom, one of the divemasters, and he mentioned that I should try turning out my light and swim along by the light of the other 20 divers.  So after we started up from the deepest part of the dive, I fell to the back of the pack and turned out my light.  I should have been paying attention because there were divers everywhere.  I didn't know which group was mine, at first.  I got situated and settled in.  It really was pretty cool, but you have to be careful.  There's a lot of stuff to bang your head on.  I was close enough to the group that their flashlights allowed me to see the obstacles.  Actually, without my light on, I could see <em>more</em>, although nothing as clearly as with my own light.  It was an interesting experience.

The next day was all about deep diving.  Our first two dives were to the bottom at 120 feet.  Again, Doc had us record our depth and tank pressure every five minutes.  For, the second dive of the day, we were to go to the bottom, and then swim on a 270 degree bearing until we reached a limit, either a third of our gas or our no-deco time.  This, again, was an excercise to move toward tech training.

In traditional recreational diving, you would plan your dive to stay within your no-deco limits and end the dive when you reach that limit (or when you are down to 500 PSI).  In technical diving, or more correctly any dive where you can't ascend directly to the surface due to an overhead environment or a decompression obligation, you do things a little differently.  One difference is that you look at the dive in halves and you gas in thirds.  You use no more than one third of your gas for the first half of the dive, one third for the second half, and are left with one third to share with your dive buddy should he have a problem.  The first half of your dive is your descent and trip away from the descent point.  When you reach your turn point (either by location, gas limit, or time limit) you turn back to your exit point.  The trip back is the second half of the dive.  Presumably you will use another third of your gas in the second half.  In a worst case scenario, your dive buddy has an OOA situation at the turn point, so you have your last third of gas to donate to your buddy.

So for our second dive of the day, we focused on the rule of thirds.  My buddy was Bob, one of the shop divemasters.  He was working on his deep certification too, but he is more experienced than I am and has a little bit better air consumption rate than I do.  We were both diving with LP95s, so I reached the turn limit first.  It was at a checkpoint as well, so we recorded our depth and pressures, then signaled "up".  In this scenario, "up" didn't mean "ascend", but rather turn back, simulating an overhead environment.  By the time we reached our ascent point, I was within one minute of the NDL, so it worked out perfect.

For our "safety stops" on the deep dives we practiced breathing from a stage bottle hung at 15 feet.  Our "safety stops" were "simulating" a 5 minute, 15 foot decompression stop.  (That's recreational phraseology.  Technically a "safety stop" is a decompression stop.  Most certification agencies use the term "safety stop" because recreational divers aren't supposed to be doing decompression diving.  Even though a three minute "safety stop" at 15 feet is a decompression stop, they just don't call it that.  Since these dives were for a recreational deep dive specialty, I'll call them "safety stops".)  Basically, these dives were the first dives in the transition to tech course, so we did everything from a technical diving view while staying within the recreational limits.

The last dive of the day was to practice following a decompression runtime schedule.  We started at the 70 foot platform for five minutes.  Then we ascended to 40 feet at a slow 15 ft/min rate (noting the 55 foot mark at one minute into the ascent).  We then stayed at 40 feet for four minutes.  We had additional four minute stops at 30 feet and 20 feet and a five minute stop at 15 feet.  We did these stops without an ascent line to practice midwater buoyancy.  I did OK until the 15 foot stop.  At one point I floated up a little too far and I couldn't dump my dry suit fast enough, so I ended up at 6 feet before I got control, but other than that, it wasn't too bad.  I stayed within +5/-3 feet of the assigned depth.  Given that I'm still new at the dry suit and I can't control the buoyancy as naturally as I can with just my BCD.

Throughout the weekend Doc would randomly signal "out of air" to someone to see how fast they got their backup regulator to him.  I was the last one, so by the time he got to me, I was ready for it.  He got me on the last dive at the 15 foot stop.  I had just finished my gas switch demonstration and was watching Bob do his demo when Doc came up from behind me and signaled "out of air".  Without looking, I was able to pull my octo from its clip and get it to him in less than two seconds from his signal.  A lot better than in the pool when he gave me the out of air signal and I was trying to figure what he was asking me to demonstrate:  "Does he want me to demonstrate an out of air situation?  Does that signal have some special meaning for the dry suit?"  After he pulled his regulator out of his mouth and gave the signal again, I figured out what he was doing, but I was still confused:  "why would we be practicing that?"  It turns out that Doc likes you to practice out of air drills frequently.  Which make sense.  Without air, your options are pretty limited.  If you have air, you can work out most other problems.  So you need to be prepared to donate air to your buddy at the drop of a hat without even thinking about it.  I wonder what would happen if I turned the tables on him and signaled to him that I was out of air?  Would he be as quick to donate?  (-:

All in all this was a great weekend.  I learned a lot and feel relatively comfortable in the dry suit.  The short intro to technical diving was interesting.  I'm looking forward to starting the transition course.  I enjoyed diving with Doc.  He's easy to get along with, but he's right on top of you if you screw up.  I think he's going to be a good instructor.

Oh, and I'm never going to dive in a full wet suit again.  If it's too cold for a shorty, I'm diving dry.  Actually, I won't get that luxury.  I'm going to start the Divemaster course next February and you can't teach Open Water students in a dry suit.  Well, you could, but it's better if you are using the same equipment as your students.  So I guess I can't throw away my wet suit just yet.

I told someone a couple of weeks ago that I have more fun at each certification dive weekend than I did the weekend before, and this weekend was no exception.  My only disappointment is that this may be the last dive of the year.  Maybe when my dry suit comes in, I'll see if I can get out one more time...]]></description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/run_dry_run_deep_1.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/run_dry_run_deep_1.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Deep diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Dry suit</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Training</category>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 15 Oct 2007 16:24:03 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Scubie Doo Where Are You?</title>
         <description>It&apos;s hard to believe that the weather is still this warm in October, but I&apos;m not complaining.  In fact, I&apos;m quite happy that it was so warm this weekend.

This weekend we did the certification dives for the PADI Search and Recovery specialty.  As I told the instructor, with each class I take, I&apos;m having more fun than the class before.  This one was a smallish class of five.  The course is basically learning techniques for finding objects lost underwater and bringing them to the surface.

The interesting thing for me was that everyone in the class other than me is on the underwater search and recovery team for the county.  Of course the techniques they use are completely different, especially since most of their &quot;dives&quot; are in water less than 20 feet deep.  For the deeper ones, they use cool toys like side scan sonar to narrow down the search area to, oh, about 10 square feet.  They&apos;re all police officers with various departments in the county, so they recover things like stolen cars and murder weapons.  A lot more meaningful than a lost fin or mask that the PADI Search and Recovery is geared towards.  And certainly more interesting than the bottles of sand we used for our training dives.

The weekend started off with a descent to a training platform to be tested on tying knots.  Specifically the bowline, sheetbend, and two half-hitches.  I had spent about 45 minutes before the dive practicing the knots, so I didn&apos;t have any trouble (just don&apos;t ask me to tie them today!).  Then we broke into teams and practiced the circular search and U-pattern search.  Since there were five people, I was team number three with one of the members of the first team to return from each skill test.  So I ended up diving with several different people throughout the weekend.  For the U-pattern we had a larger object that we used a lift bag to raise.  Unfortunately, the object wasn&apos;t big enough for the bag we used, so the dump valve didn&apos;t work right, but it was just practice anyway.

The second dive of the day was the semi-circular search pattern.  We had a lot of trouble on this one.  We never found our bottle.  It turned out that it had rolled under some tall grass that was growing around a dentist chair.  Even the instructor had trouble finding it and he&apos;s the one who put it there, so I don&apos;t feel too bad about missing it.

The last dive of the day was the jack stay pattern.  For this you position a rope across the search area at one end.  The two divers swim along the rope, one on each side until they reach the other side.  Then they move the rope toward the unsearched area, and do it again.  Eventually you cover the entire area.  For this search there was only one object that each team had to find (instead of one object for each team).  No one found it.  We were all two for four, with each team missing an object from one of the previous searches.  Maybe we would have better luck tomorrow.

Sunday started off with an expanding square search pattern and a snorkeler led search.  By this point we had searched for the little bottles filled with sand three different times.  I think we were all sick of them.  At least with the snorkeler led search was to a larger object that we used the lift bag to raise.  This time the object was big enough that we got to actually use the bag properly.

Our final task for the day was to find an object the instructor had planted the day before in a large area of the quarry.  We performed the interview questions to locate the general location of the object (a flat plastic weight about 12&quot; x 24&quot; with about 20 pounds of scuba weights attached with a weight belt.  Since the plate is black and the weights are grey, it should blend in quite nicely with the quarry rocks.

We decided that since it was such a large area that maybe a snorkeler led search would work.  Except no one wanted to be the snorkeler.  We came up with the idea to do the snorkeler led search with the &quot;snorkeler&quot; swimming under water and being one of the searchers.  This proved to be a huge mess.  On the second pass we got off in the wrong direction and ended up where we started from.  One of the guys was low on air, so we went to the surface to regroup.

After a tank change, we split into two teams to do U-pattern searches from opposite sides of the search area working towards each other.  My team was three people and I played navigator while the other two swam on either side of me.  We had just started our third leg when we found it shoved down between some rocks.  We tied it on to the lift bag and took it to the surface to end the dive.  Our instructor, who had been monitoring on the surface, came down when we stopped to make sure we had found it (since he had forgotten exactly where he had put it) and then went to gather the other team.

Afterwards we sat and joked about our mistakes and how clumsy the guy with the plastic bottles full of sand was.  My wife and her cousin had come up to dive on Saturday and had found the bottle that none of us could find, so our instructor gave us a hard time about how two newbie divers found it just swimming along and we couldn&apos;t (he and I actually recovered later that day on a for-fun dive).  Some of the other guys are going to be doing the deep and dry suit specialties with me next weekend, so we planned out the food for that trip.  Basically, this was probably the most fun I&apos;ve had on any dive weekend this year.  If the trend continues, next week will be a blast.

So that&apos;s three specialties.  Two more and 15 more logged dives and I can go for Master Scuba Diver.  I&apos;ll get the two specialties and half of the dives next weekend.  So I need to find a couple more Saturdays to get the rest before it gets too cold.

</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/scubie_doo_where_are_you.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/scubie_doo_where_are_you.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 08 Oct 2007 12:24:59 -0500</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>How Dry  I Am</title>
         <description>Last night I had my dry suit class and pool session.  The class stuff is all pretty straight forward, but I&apos;ve been told by many people that your first time in a dry suit is like starting all over.  I always figured that as an exaggeration.  Was I wrong.

The class was an interesting start.  There are four of us taking the class.  One guy has to work, so he&apos;s going to take the classroom/pool session next week.  Another guy works third shift and had a late night call that kept way past his normal shift end time, so he couldn&apos;t make it.  The other guy just never showed up.  There were three instructors and me.  No pressure there.  Fortunately, the class material is pretty simple and I was well prepared.

After class we headed to the pool.  Before last night, I had only been in dry suit once and that was last week to find one that fit for the class.  Last night was my first time in the water in the suit.  I had read the material, watched the DVD, talked with several dry suit divers, and read a lot of information on the Internet, so I felt that I was as prepared as I could be.  And I suppose I was, but that doesn&apos;t really help you when you get wet - or hopefully don&apos;t get wet - for the first time.

So the first thing we have to do is get into the thing.  The suit I used was a front entry suit, meaning it has a zipper in the front going from the left shoulder to the right hip.  It&apos;s easy to get your feet and one arm in.  The second arm isn&apos;t too bad, but then you have to squeeze your head through an opening that has to seal water out around your neck.  It&apos;s a tight fit anyway, but to make things more interesting, you don&apos;t have a lot of slack to play with because your arms are already in the arms of the suit.

Anyway, we now have the suit on and zipped up.  The next step is to get the excess air (or at least as much as you can) out of the suit.  You do that by pulling open the neck seal and squatting down.  Then you release the neck seal and stand up.  Up until now, the dry suit has been relatively comfortable.  Now the dry suit is squeezing up against your body.  If you are claustrophobic, this might not be for you.  But it&apos;s not over yet.

Now we get into the water.  Since this is a pool and the first time in a dry suit, we left the gear on the side of the pool and just got in.  Someone told me that just jumping in with a dry suit on can be pain full as the suit suddenly starts squeezing you in, well, let&apos;s just say sensitive areas.  So I climbed in using the pool ladder.  Now I&apos;m feeling some suit squeeze.  And I&apos;m standing in three feet of water.  I&apos;m not looking forward to what this is going to feel like at 100 feet.

It&apos;s time to put our scuba gear on and start playing with the suit.  We start off in the shallow end and swim to the deep end along the bottom of the pool.  I&apos;m immediately feeling out of control.  I can&apos;t keep my feet down without considerable effort, kicking is almost impossible, and buoyancy control is something that I think I heard about once, but not something I can be accused of having.

I haven&apos;t decided yet whether or not the problem I was having with my fins was from my feet flopping around in the suit or the fins flopping around on the suit.  Probably the former.  I&apos;ve decided that when I get my own suit, I&apos;m going to get a better fit in the foot.  The flopping caused my feet to cramp up, which is not comfortable in the best of circumstances.

The related problem was all the air in the suit kept going to my feet.  Even when I went from standing to horizontal, the air quickly migrated from my back to my feet.  Trying to get my feet down so I could kick was impossible.  I was able to do a cave diving (bent knee) kick, but the basic flutter kick wasn&apos;t happening.  Picking a dry suit with soft booties and a separate boot seems to be the answer to both of my problems.  I could use ankle weights to solve the kicking problem, but it seems highly inefficient.  Kind of like driving with your parking brake on.

The final problem, buoyancy control, was the only one I really made any progress on.  After we went through the drills, which included standing me on my head and inflating the dry suit to practice rolling right side up and dumping the air before you get to the surface, I got a chance to just swim around trying to get my buoyancy and trim under control.  I almost managed to get my buoyancy to an acceptable level, but my trim isn&apos;t even close yet.  I&apos;m all over the place.  So I need to work on that.

Doc, my instructor, caught me off guard with and OOA signal.  I was confused because I was trying to figure out whether or not this was some kind of dry suit specific signal.  He gave it to me again, so I handed him my octo and he later scolded me for being so slow about it.  That&apos;s what you call a learning opportunity.

In the end Doc said that he felt my acclimation was good for a first time.  I sure don&apos;t, but he&apos;s the instructor.  Of course, he probably says that to all but the really bad students.

A couple of final notes:  in the humid pool room at the YMCA, wearing the dry suit was like wearing your own little personal oven.  It was OK once I was in the water, but out of the water was brutal.  I&apos;m dreading what it would be like on a hot summer day prepping for a nice long deep dive to 35 degree water.

Second, the neoprene neck seal didn&apos;t seem to fit me too well.  I was pretty wet when I got out.  Craig, the shop manager, had a similar experience with the same kind of suit a few weeks ago.  I&apos;m going to go with latex seals on mine.  When I got out of the suit I was soaked.  Some of it was sweat, but I&apos;m betting that most of it was pool water.

With the classroom and pool session behind me, I get to try it for real in a couple of weeks when we do the training dives.  We&apos;ll be combining the dives with the Deep Diver specialty dives.  Regardless of how bad I am in the dry suit, I&apos;ll be glad to have it on for the deep dives in the quarry.  Brrrr...</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/how_dry_i_am.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/10/how_dry_i_am.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2007 12:26:46 -0500</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Newbie Scubie</title>
         <description>Tracie and Christina did their Open Water certification dives this weekend.  Jeff, their instructor, did a great job with them, especially Tracie.  Having a fear of water, especially water that you can&apos;t see in very well, makes it tough to scuba dive.  Well, I&apos;m proud of her.  She made it through the whole weekend with only marginally more trouble than a water lover.

I only dove with them on their last dive.  I hung out with other groups for the other dives.  Since I&apos;m thinking about doing the Divemaster course next year, I figured it would be a good opportunity to watch what instructors and divemasters.  I even managed to be useful on one dive.  They had an odd number of students so they needed an extra for the navigation dive.

On the last dive I dove with Tracie and Christina and took a bunch of pictures of them so they can look back and remember the occasion.  When it was all over, Christina and I went down for her first non-training dive.  Tracie was too tired, so she waited on surface.  I took her on a short tour of the quarry.  We started out with partial tanks, so we didn&apos;t get a full dive, only about 25 minutes, but it was enough.  We were both pretty beat from a weekend full of diving.  We just went until we reached 500 PSI, then surfaced and swam back.

I wish Tracie had gone too, but I&apos;ll see if I can get them to  come out on my Search and Recovery dive weekend so she can get some non-training dives in before the end of the season.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/newbie_scubie.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/newbie_scubie.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Dive Buddies</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 23 Sep 2007 20:14:18 -0500</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>To The Rescue</title>
         <description>I finished my PADI Rescue Diver training this weekend.  It&apos;s been a long time since I&apos;ve done a weekend quarry trip.  It was a lot of fun, but I was pretty much exhausted by the time I got home.

I&apos;ve heard others who have gone through Rescue Diver training say that it&apos;s the most fun of any of the classes they had taken.  I would have to disagree with that.  I&apos;ve also heard people say it was the hardest.  I suppose if you do OW, AOW, and Rescue, but nothing else, it may be the hardest.  I think AOW was harder for me, but then again, I hadn&apos;t been diving in 10 years when I took it, so that might have something to do with it.  Rescue was definitely the most physically demanding.  Towing a diver to shore while giving rescue breaths and removing the diver&apos;s equipment will wear you out.  I didn&apos;t really notice how tired I was until I was done, but then it hit hard.

We had a pool session before the quarry weekend to learn all of the new skills and review the self-rescue skills.  Apparently this is a relatively new thing.  I think it&apos;s a great way to do it.  Our instructor said that it cuts out about two hours from each day.  My viewpoint is that it&apos;s a better method for learning since you aren&apos;t trying to cram everything into a two day weekend.

I took the test today, expecting to pass, but not with a great score.  The problem was that I had bought the book two or three years ago with the intention of doing the class then, but I never managed to find the time.  They changed the book last year, so there were some new things and subtle differences between what I was studying and what the current course teaches.  I didn&apos;t realize this until I got to the quarry on Saturday.  Regardless, I decided to take the test today so that maybe those differences would stick out in my mind more.  I went through the questions twice and counted six that I was unsure of the answer.  In the end, I only missed two (both from the new/changed material), so I was pleasantly surprised.

So I got my temporary &quot;card&quot; and it&apos;s on to the next thing.  My dive shop is starting a Divemaster course in January, so I guess I&apos;ll look into that.  I don&apos;t have the 60 logged dives yet, but I&apos;ll have them before the course is over.  I&apos;m shooting for 40 logged dives by the end of the year.  Since I&apos;m going to do the drysuit course in a few weeks, I might be able to dive into November, so getting up to 40 shouldn&apos;t be a problem.  Maybe I should look into the PADI Ice Diver specialty...</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/to_the_rescue.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/to_the_rescue.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 17 Sep 2007 19:35:36 -0500</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Bubbles In The Night</title>
         <description>While at the quarry this weekend for my Rescue Diver certification, we did the PADI Night Diver certification dives.

We started out with a descent to one of the training platforms at 20&apos;.  From there, each buddy team used a compass to navigate to one of the other training platforms.  Once we were all at the second platform we swam around for a while, swam through some tubes and along the quarry wall.  The visibility was pretty bad, even with all of those lights.

After a short surface interval we went to the bottom and turned off our lights for a few minutes.  I suppose some people might have trouble with that, which is why they do it, but I found it fairly relaxing.  I just lay down on the bottom and waited.  After a full day of Rescue training, and a dive just for fun late in the afternoon, just doing nothing was nice.

Finally the lights came back on and we swam around some more looking for fish.

Probably the easiest course I&apos;ve done so far.  Next on the list, Search and Recovery.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/bubbles_in_the_night.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/09/bubbles_in_the_night.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Training</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 16 Sep 2007 20:59:42 -0500</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Technical Diving</title>
         <description>I&apos;ve started to look into technical diving.  I have a lot more training to do before I can start thinking about it seriously, but I&apos;ve been thinking about it nonetheless.

I&apos;m looking into what I need to do to prep myself for technical diving training.  I&apos;ve already picked up a Nitrox certification, which most seem to consider to be the starting point.  I&apos;m also working on the Rescue Diver certification, mainly because it&apos;s a prerequisite for Master and Divemaster.

The other specialties I&apos;m going to try to pick up in the next year that I think would benefit me in my goal are Deep Diver, Multilevel Diver, Dry Suit Diver, Night Diver, and Wreck Diver.  My reasoning:

Deep Diver:  Seems kind of obvious, since technical diving generally involves going deeper, or longer, or both.  So this one is on the short list.

Multilevel Diver:  I&apos;m presuming that this will be more than just learning how to operate the PADI Wheel.  It would seem that it would be about learning more about diving physiology which would add to the base knowledge needed for technical diving.

Dry Suit Diver:  Technical diving generally involves exposure to colder water or longer exposure times.  Using a dry suit is fairly standard.

Night Diver:  Since one part technical diving is diving in limited visibility environments (caves, wreck penetration, or just plain really deep water), the skills learned in the night diving course would seem to be useful.

Wreck Diver:  The main reason I&apos;m interested in technical diving is for exploring wrecks.  Wreck Diver is a prerequisite to the technical wreck diver certification offered by some certification agencies.  Even it it wasn&apos;t, I want to do wreck diving, so this one is on the short list (i.e. next year).

I have several other specialties on my short list, like Underwater Photographer and Search and Recovery, but these are just &apos;cause I want to do them.

There are a lot of diving activities that fall into the technical diving scope from cave diving to underwater filmography.  Most uninformed people think of &quot;technical diving&quot; as the &quot;lunatic fringe&quot; of diving.  While I agree that the lunatic fringe are part of the technical diving community, most technical divers are completely uninterested in cheating death.  They are quite interested in staying alive.  I fall in that category.  I&apos;m not interested in pushing the limits of known diving.  I want to live in the parameters determined by others.

Interestingly, many of the activities I participate in are things that the uninformed consider risky or dangerous:  flying, scuba diving, motorcycle riding, hunting, etc.  I do enjoy activities that are more dangerous than watching TV or playing shuffle board, but they are hardly life threatening activities.  It&apos;s about risk management:  you learn what the risks are and learn how to mitigate them.

From a diving perspective, especially technical diving, that means learning everything you can about the hows and the whys so you can develop safe dive plans and handle any emergencies that come up maximizing your chance of survival.  If you understand the things that can go wrong and make contingency plans for those problems, the risk of death or serious injury becomes almost negligible.

Obviously you can&apos;t completely eliminate the risk, but then again, you could slip in the bathroom, hitting your head on the sink, and bleed to death before someone finds you unconscious on the floor.  Do you have a contingency plan for that?  Don&apos;t take a shower without a buddy!  Some risks are so small as to be not worth worrying about.  With proper planning and risk management, so called &quot;dangerous pastimes&quot; are like that.  Most people get hurt (or killed) in these activities are the victims of poor planning or risk management.

So to those who look at technical diving as some kind of crazy stunt like base jumping off a downtown building, just remember that you don&apos;t take a potty buddy with you to the bathroom, so you must be just as crazy as me.</description>
         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/08/technical_diving.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/08/technical_diving.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Technical Diving</category>
        
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Technical diving</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 26 Aug 2007 21:40:18 -0500</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Future Diver</title>
         <description><![CDATA[I think Michael's ready for snorkeling in Hawaii next year.  He can't wait until he's old enough to get certified for scuba.

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         <link>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/08/future_diver.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.markdame.com/divelog/2007/08/future_diver.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Blowing Bubbles</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 13 Aug 2007 09:44:35 -0500</pubDate>
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