Revisiting Jarak – Part 3

Me before the morning dive at North Point

It was a good trip…good company, good food, good dives…even by Malacca Strait standards.

Nazir, Ruzman and I got to the jetty at Bagan Pasir just after 8pm, followed by Syed with Anas, and then Peter Seow (a.k.a Sukdev Singh). We departed at 2030hrs on 2nd February and got to Jarak between 0530hrs to 0600hrs on the 3rd February.

First dive was at Moray’s Harem..it was dark down there as there was an overcast in the sky. The resident Batfish was missing, the morays were nowhere to be seen. By the time we surfaced the winds had picked up and the swells were big. Even at the bottom we could feel the surge.

Second dive was at Snapper’s Den. Better viz but due to thermocline, the water temperature dropped from 28 Celcius to 26 Celcius abruptly. There was current and we drifted as we did our safety stop. Same huge swells as the winds changed direction, so the Kaleebso repositioned at Moray’s Harem again, where we did our night dive.

The next morning, the Kaleebso moved to the Pinnacle, bit current proved too strong, so North Point was chosen as the next dive’s site. Again, good viz and lots of Blue Fin Trevallies. I really enjoyed the last two dives there.

We departed Jarak at 041130H Feb 07 and arrived back at Bagan Pasir at 042026H Feb 07.

As usual…dives from the Kaleebso are fun. Anyway, you can see the pics of this trip by clicking HERE.

Revisiting Jarak – Part 2

The Kaleebso at Jarak - November 2005

Three days from now I’ll probably be doing my third or fourth dive already, probably another dive before commencing the night dive. Four days from now hopefully I’ll get to do two more dives. So I’m aiming for 7-8 dives this weekend just to make sure I have lots of photos and video footages so I’d get to make meaningful videos…last which was of the August 2006 trip to Perhentian.

On this trip too shall the full potential of my new Princeton Tec eLED Shockwave dive torch be realised, and for the first time I shall be diving with shears rather than a diving knife. Apart from that, with my PADI decal for my 2007 membership already pasted on my C-card, I shall also have my new self-inking rubber stamp for my charges’ logbook.

I really want to take lots and lots of pictures this time.

Revisiting Jarak

Come Friday, I shall make my way to Bagan Pasir near Tanjung Karang and board the MV Kaleebso for the 10-hour journey to Pulau Jarak…after a 15-month absence. With me in my group will be Nazir Erwan a.k.a Nazir4321 from Kundang in Sungai Buloh (5km from where I used to live) and his friend from Shah Alam. Hopefully Snafu will be able to j0in us on this trip. Since I have an extra SD card, I’m going to do maximum photography and videography.

Anyway, here’s the tides for Jarak for Saturday 3rd Feb 2007 and Sunday 4th Feb 2007:

Saturday 3rd Feb:

0431H (2.0m); 1057H (0.3m); 1653H (2.1m); 2315H (0.5m)

Sunday 4th Feb:

0500H (2.1m); 1125H (0.3m); 1718H (2.1m); 2340H (0.5m)

Weather for Jarak should be:

Weather should be fine through the weekend with rain in one or two places in the North Malacca Strait.

Ahhh….2 more days to go to make that journey…

Getting Wet

Anas forcing his way somewhere

Today is Saturday. Come Sunday I shall wet my gear again at the Shah Alam pool just for fun, and preparing for the Jarak trip next week.

I just can’t wait to get back into the sea again.

PADI Members Forum

PADI Logo

I was running a fever of 39C but I still went to the PADI Members’ Forum for the latest updates. More questions unanswered until they tie-up loose ends.

Anyway, Jim, Katakpink, Mephisto, Putradiver and Commander Saufi were there too. I also learnt that one of my PASKAL buddies, Warrant Officer Sahak, passed away at the beginning of the last Haj season after he was involved in a motorcycle accident after seeing his mother-in-law off.

Another one bites the dust…

Love Plus One

Where to dive?

What’s with the title? It’s actually the name of a song from 1982 by Haircut 100 called Love Plus One (what else could it be?). There’s a part, a bridge if you like, in the song that goes like this:

Where does it go from here?
Is it down to the lake I fear?

I was singing that part to myself when wondering where to go diving.

Yes, it’s mid-January and the question that I am getting frequently is: “When is your next dive trip? Where will you be going?”

The short answer would be: Port Dickson.

Other than that would be Pulau Payar…or an LOB trip to Pulau Jarak. Another interesting place would be Roach Reef as there’s a special package offered for 4D/3N – 3 boat dives a day, unlimited shore dives, food and accommodation included. And it’s cheap.

Come March I’ll have to go back to Pulau Bidong, after that maybe an LOB trip to..wherever because the whole vessel has been chartered by a friend.

Maybe I’ll do just that. Organise an LOB trip every month and get people to pay cheap.

So where will you be diving next? And when?

2 Days and 28 Dives Later

Me and Brigette at the underwater set

For two days I was part of the safety diver team, the underwater grip team, counsellor to a talent, for a commercial shoot for a Lebanese company. I was in-charge of the safety of namely the Malaysian talent, Brigette. There were two other talents, Francine from Brazil, and the main talent from Russia whose name I did not get.

On the first day we did rehearsals, mainly for the respective safety divers and their charge to have somekind of understanding on hand signals and safety. I did 8 dives on the first day that lasted from 10am through 9.30pm. We also assembled the scaffoldings underwater and moved them to the correct positions.

On the second day, we did more rehearsals while waiting for the shooting of the spa scene at another location to complete before the director could attend to our location. The day started at 8am. We only began shooting at nightfall to get the correct ambience. We wrapped up at 4.30am the next day, and I logged 20 dives (with lots of bounces). And remember, 20 dives means all dives were of 21 minutes or more, not including the bounces where I spent less than 5 minutes on the surface while assisting the talent I was in-charge of with safety.

It was a good experience, albeit a very tiring one. We divers finished up 3 bottles of 100% oxygen to minimise inner-ear decompression sickness or any other decompression sickness that may affect us due to the nature of the dives.

Many people forget that every dive, even those in pools, is a decompression dive.

You can view more pics by clicking here.

After 47 Days

Malaysian Underwater Divers in PD- pic by Nazir4321

47 days…47 long days that caused me to fall ill off and on…and I was craving to dive.

In the end, I managed to do a dive, albeit a short one, in Port Dickson, with 17 other hardcore divers. Viz was terrible, the sea was very rough, but that did not deter us from diving. Two days before the dive I was coming down with sore throat again, plus cold. I downed lots of Vitamin C, Cod Liver Oil, gargled Bactidol, took Clarinase, hoping that I’d be fit for the dive.

Well, I did the dive. Now I’m a happy man again…even with the fact that the doctor’s put me on antibiotics, cough mixture, and antihistamines again.

Birgit the Heroine

Kimi sent a YM message to me just now asking about Birgit, the German instructor from Seahorse Dive Center on Perhentian Besar.

Birgit’s been on Perhentian Besar for the past 8 years. A few months ago her calf was bitten by some animal and she now has to go across to the Kuala Besut’s government clinic for dressing. I asked him why, and he gave me a link (that can be used for 7 days from the date of this posting). This is probably news on Birgit:

Sabtu, 23 Disember 2006

Penyelamat 11 nyawa

Oleh Ahmad Shahrul Nizam Muhammad dan Mohamad Ishak

KUALA BESUT: Seorang wanita warga asing yang tinggal di Pulau Perhentian, di sini, sejak lebih lapan tahun lalu menjadi wira apabila menggunakan kepakarannya sebagai perenang dan penyelam untuk menyelamatkan 11 penumpang bot nelayan yang sedang terkapai-kapai selepas bot dinaiki mereka karam dipukul ombak besar petang semalam.

Dalam kejadian kira-kira jam 2.30 petang itu, wanita warga Eropah berusia lingkungan 50-an yang masih belum diketahui identitinya itu dikatakan menjadi `master-mind’ apabila menyelamatkan sebahagian besar penumpang terbabit yang berusia lingkungan tiga hingga 50 tahun.

Sebelum kejadian, semua penumpang terbabit termasuk wanita berkenaan yang dikatakan bertugas sebagai jurulatih skuba berpengalaman di Pulau Perhentian dikatakan dalam perjalanan keluar dari jeti Kuala Besut, di sini, untuk pulang ke pulau berkenaan apabila enjin bot yang mereka naiki rosak selepas berada kira-kira satu kilometer dari jeti.

Keadaan itu menyebabkan bot berkenaan hanyut sebelum dipukul ombak besar lalu tenggelam dan semua penumpang terkapai-kapai di lautan berombak.

Difahamkan, melihat keadaan itu, wanita berkenaan yang dikatakan sudah sebati dengan penduduk Pulau Perhentian bertindak nekad dengan berenang di laut berombak dan mencapai beberapa pelampung serta papan bagi membolehkan semua mangsa berpaut untuk mengelak mereka lemas sebelum diselamatkan.

Seorang mangsa, Che Hussin Che Mat ,43, berkata tidak berapa lama selepas keluar dari jeti, dia melihat ombak setinggi lima meter menuju ke arah bot dinaiki mereka.

Menurutnya, bot yang mereka naiki terus tidak berfungsi selepas tiga kali dipukul ombak menyebabkan enjin dimasuki air sebelum bot berkenaan terbalik.

“Bot itu terbalik begitu pantas sebelum tenggelam menyebabkan saya sekeluarga bersama tujuh lagi penumpang terapung kira-kira sejam di permukaan air yang berombak.

“Saya menjerit mendapatkan isteri, Kamilah Deraman, 44, serta dua anak, Noratira, 4, dan Norhafiza, 3,” katanya ketika ditemui di Hospital Besut, semalam.

Che Hussin berkata, dalam keadaan panik itu, dia sempat mencapai tong plastik untuk dijadikan pelampung sambil menyelamatkan anaknya Norhafiza yang tenggelam timbul dipukul ombak besar.

“Pada masa sama, Isteri saya berpaut pada kayu sempat memaut seorang lagi anak, Noratira, walaupun banyak terminum air laut,” katanya.

Che Hussin berkata, dia sekeluarga baru pulang dari Langkawi selepas menghabiskan cuti persekolahan anaknya.

“Saya bersyukur semua selamat walaupun banyak barangan berharga seperti kain dan pinggan mangkuk yang dibeli di Langkawi tenggelam,” katanya.

Sementara itu, Penolong Ketua Unit Jertih, Jabatan Pertahanan Awam (JPA3), Wan Bukhari Wan Mus, berkata semua penumpang berjaya diselamatkan penduduk di perkampungan nelayan Kuala Besut.

Menurutnya, penduduk yang menaiki bot bergegas ke tempat kejadian sebelum menyelamatkan mangsa termasuk kanak-kanak berusia tiga dan empat tahun.

“Semua mereka dipercayai tidak memakai jaket keselamatan dan terselamat selepas berpaut pada pelampung dan kayu yang diperoleh penumpang warga asing yang juga orang pulau itu,” katanya.

This definitely sounds like Birgit caught in a storm on her way back from the government clinic at Kuala Besut.