
I know exactly how you feel. I need to dive…badly!

Your Opinion Does Not Matter

I know exactly how you feel. I need to dive…badly!
I wrote an E-mail to the Editor, The Star newspaper on the matter.
Educate The Fishermen
Dear Editor,
While I applaud the positive step taken by the Tanjung Dawai Fishermen Association to use Information Technology to auction off their catch (‘Fish Now Sold via the Net’ – The Star, Friday, July 7 2006), I am horrified by the picture of the dead juvenile Hammerhead Sharks. It seems that while the fishermen are into Information Technology, they know very little about sharks conservation.
As a scuba diver, I spend hundreds of Ringgits just to be able to see at least one of these magnificent creatures. It breaks my heart to see almost a dozen of them in the clutches of the fish supplier, knowing that hundreds more are caught daily in our waters. This species is considered to be “Near Threatened” by the World Conservation Union (IUCN), a global union of states, governmental agencies, and non-governmental organizations in a partnership that assesses the conservation status of species. As a matter of fact, just over a week ago at the Pasir Penambang market in Kuala Selangor, I saw several juvenile Black-tip Reef Sharks being sold for RM10 per kg, and a Zebra Shark for RM14 per kg. Save for the dive I did in the salt water tank of the Aquaria KLCC, I have never seen a live Zebra Shark swimming before. Most sharks are viviparous and have long gestation period, making their cycle of reproduction slow, and mostly give birth to small litters. Simple mental arithmetic will tell you how soon will the numbers reach negative value.
Sharks are normally taken by longlines, gillnets and as bycatch in driftnet fisheries. The Fisheries Department should educate the fishing community to release the ones landed that are still alive. The relevant authorities and non-governmental organisations, too, should educate the general public on the importance of sharks. Sharks fins are tasteless and is akin to eating one’s fingernails boiled in broth.
I cannot stress more how sharks play a very important role in our marine eco-system; preying on injured and sick animals in order to ensure the fitter ones survive. When fish survive in abundance, we human beings have more to eat.
I’m now doing a research for more materials on sharks conservation for this article I plan for the local dailies, well, at least a daily. Then I remembered something I posted back in December 2005. May I just post it again here?
Do I always ask for your permission? Never! It’s my blog.
A SHARK’S PLEA
From the subclass called Elasmobranchii
Evolved my predecessors, my family and I
In terms of number of years 409 million
I have been here since the Upper Devonian
I have strong teeth, they make big gash
But I have no desire for human flesh
But humans make me into a cause
Thank you to the paranoia caused by ‘Jaws’
They hunt, and fin us, they did not even frown
Then they toss us back to sea alive to drown
To earn millions for them is something of a coup
While it was only our fins that end up in some soup
All their butchering earned them some praise
While we never did anything to the human race
15 human deaths a year is attributed to the snake
0.4 human deaths a year is all we could rake
So please, I beg you, make your kind realise
The decimation of a kind goes not without a price
We both live in the same world, so please make them see
So your children and mine can learn to co-exist and enjoy the sea
Abdul Rahmat Omar a.k.a SeaDemon
8th December 2005


Dang…this weekend it would be 4 weeks without diving. The longest stretch without diving this year.
I feel so inactive, under-utilised, dry….like a menopaused nun.
I really really need to be back underwater again. 😦
Today, it has been exactly 23 days that I have been out of the water.
Finally completed the test today. Lots of calculations. Managed a score of 96%.
I’m getting old.

In the end I’m stuck here. My daughters Fazira and Nisaa cried…and I felt I shouldn’t go diving this weekend. That makes three weeks I’ve lived on this polluted land breathing polluted air.
I guess I’ll have to stay in front of this PC so I won’t be bored to death.

Yeaaaahhh…tonight I’m off to Mersing. Will be in Tioman tomorrow morning on the 0900H boat.

Errrghhh…now they tell me. I still need to sit for my final papers for the Decompression Procedures course, and it’s going to be on Friday.
Well, looks like I’ll have to divert to Tioman then. 🙂
Either way, I still win.
Show me the money, guys! Haha!

I’m off to Perhentian again…tomorrow. Yippee!!
Weather There:
Thursday 29th June through Saturday 1st July – fair all day
Tides:
Thursday 29th June:
Low – 0232H (0.5m); High – 1135H (2.3m)
Friday 30th June:
Low – 0303H (0.6m); High – 1206H (2.2m)
Saturday 1st July:
Low – 0333H (0.7m); High – 1233H (2.1m)
For those going to Tioman this weekend,
Weather in Tioman:
Friday 30th June through Monday 3rd July: fair all day
Tides in Tioman:
Friday 30th June: 0550H (0.6m); 1336H (2.9m); 2002H (1.5m)
Saturday 1st July: 0034H (1.9m); 0634H (0.8m); 1408H (2.8m); 2040H (1.4m)
Sunday 2nd July: 0133H (1.9m); 0719H (1.0m); 1439H (2.6m); 2116H (1.3m)
Monday 3rd July: 0235H (1.9m); 0806H (1.3m); 1509H (2.4m); 2149H (1.2m)
So watch out for currents, those going to Tioman.
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