Rescue This Diver

Reference is made to Bakawali’s Post

Bakawali called me up earlier this evening from Redang. She’s done one fun dive. She hasn’t gotten to watch the PADI Rescue Diver video yet but should be doing so tonight. Tomorrow she’ll know the tragedy of wanting to become a PADI Rescue Diver.

Anyway, good luck with the course. I can see the Paradox of Dr Perv: she saves divers but amputates limbs.

Hahaha! 😀

An Anniversary of Sorts

Cikgu Lily Abdullah underwater somewhere

I was reminded by Cikgu Lily (above) that a few days ago she turned one-year old as a scuba diver. That also means it has been a year since I met and knew her at Seahorse Dive Center.

I remember the time I was there, that was the best viz I’ve ever seen in Perhentian and my best dive ever at the Sugar Wreck. It was like diving into air.

Lily made it as an Advanced Open Water diver early this month. She now has 30 dives under her belt.

Congratulations Cikgu Lily, happy anniversary as a diver, and happy-our-anniversary. Hahaha!

Me at Sugar Wreck on the day of the best viz
Me at the hull of the Sugar Wreck between 22nd-24 August 2006

The Long Journey – Part 4

Here are some pics taken by Bakawali of the recent trip to Perhentian.

Celebrating Merdeka at the Sugar Wreck
Raising the flag at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Standing to attention
Standing to attention during flag raising ceremony at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Meow at Sugar Wreck
Meow at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Crab at the Sugar wreck
A fellow Cancerian at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Bamboo Shark at Sugar Wreck
Bamboo Shark at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Safety stop at Sugar Wreck
Safety stop at the Sugar Wreck – pic by Bakawali

Aidi underwater at Batu Layar
“Boatman” at Batu Layar – pic by Bakawali

On the way back with Kurt and Trisha
Homebound with Kurt and Trisha – pic by Bakawali

The Long Journey – Part 3

More topside pics of the trip:

Logbook time
It’s Logbook time

Aidi, Lou and I
Boatman, Lou (Instructor), and I

Dinner time
Dinner time at Kuala Terengganu

Starters
Starters

Trisha and her extra pedas Kuey Teow Goreng
Trisha having her extra pedas Kuey Teow Goreng

What I had
I had Fried Kuey Teow, 2 soft boiled eggs, one hot tea, and one lime juice (that caused me to make several toilet stops until now)

Trisha's helping
Trisha’s dinner share

Kurt's dinner share
Kurt’s dinner share

Lynn's dinner share
Bakawali’s dinner share (plus the ashtray)

Toilet break
First toilet break: PETRONAS Kijal Resort

Cornetto time
It’s CORNETTO time!

More topside pics can be found by clicking HERE

Missing Diver

Search And Rescue

A 55-year old diver has gone missing near Pulau Payar since 9th August 2007. A Search and Rescue operation involving local agencies and aircraft from the Royal Malaysian Air Force and coordinated by the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency is now taking place.

Both sea and weather has been quite bad for the area all the way up to Phuket.

For those going to Phuket in two weeks time, please be advised that weather conditions there are as follows:

20-27 August: mainly thunderstorms. Temperatures max at 32 Celcius and min at 23 Celcius. Southwesterly winds between 20 to 35 km/h and waves of about 2 meters. Thai Meteorological Department has issued the following statement:

Rather strong southwest monsoon prevails over the Andaman Sea and the upper Gulf. All ships should proceed with caution.

And as the 25th August will be 3 days before Full Moon, please be advised that currents will be gradually growing stronger between 25th August, peaking on the 26th until 29th when it would be the strongest, and will begin to grow weaker from 30th to the 31st August.

I shall be able to give full tide tables on the 24th August for the period between 25th August through 31st August.

Goodbye MDC

MDC Logo

Finally, after 2 years and 1 month and almost 6,000 postings later, I have quit the Malaysia Diving Community forum.

Why?

I don’t really know. It’s probably a combination of so many things actually. I joined MDC when it was still hosted by conforums in May of 2005, then rejoined in July 2005 when it moved to the current host. It is a good forum and I met lots of friends in there, some whom I have not met until today but remain close in the forum.

September 2005 was the first time I wanted to quit initially but was asked not to by several friends. I think I was made a moderator. Still, mid-last year, I felt tired,and again wanted to quit, but was asked not to by a friend. So I posted less.

I think I tried over and over again to get divers to think about how they conduct their dives. As I have met instructors who did not have a clue of what they were talking about in terms of the fundamentals of diving. So I began to wonder what my diving brethrens are geting themselves into. So MDC became a platform for me to voice out my opinions on diving. Initially, I was frowned upon because I had no authority to speak about diving. I was just an Advanced Open Water diver. Then I went on a streak of self-improvement: began with taking up EFR, then Rescue Diver. Then I furthered my knowledge by doing specialties like Deep Diving, Wreck Diving, Enriched Air Nitrox, Underwater Photographer and Underwater Videographer. I made it as a Master Scuba Diver on Christmas Day of 2005, just 9 months after my open water course.

Still, I was craving for more knowledge on diving, I took up Advanced Nitrox and earned my Divemaster rating, yet I still craved for more, always pushing myself to the limits, also in order to be able to understand the physics of diving so I could share with fellow divers. June last year was when I finally took a step into the dark side: going tech. Then I was able to advice fellow divers better as I had a better understanding and a new perspective of diving.

Anyway, personal problems and health problems have the better of me. And it is time for me to take a sabbatical as advised by fellow Admins and Mods on MDC. Then I thought, even as a normal member I would be posting a lot, so it’s best to leave. As it has been my wish to do so since 2005. I so miss the members, and someone, who is also in that forum. Although I get to see her every now and then outside the forum but sometimes seeing her name in there makes me smile.

To all the members of MDC, carry on, dive safely while having fun. Hope to see you guys underwater.

Blue Skies, Good Viz – Part 4

My 200th dive, I was at 29m

There you go. The last picture Deepblu took with his Inon strobes before it finally conked out. I was doing my official 200th PADI logged dives. This was at the Secret Reef, Perhentian, at 29.3 meters deep.

Why do I call it that?

I did several dives between 1982-1983 when I first dived. Then more dives in the military. After 1996 I was diving in PD and Pangkor, before I finally enroled in PADI’s Open Water Diver Course in March 2005.

I made an Advanced Nitrox Diver (licensed to dive using O2 mixes up to 100% O2) in November 2005, made a PADI Master Scuba Diver in December 2005, a PADI Divemaster in March 2006, almost exactly a year to being a licensed diver.

Nowadays I prefer doing deep and wreck dives. That is why if you dive with me, it is almost always that you will find me hugging the sea floor.

Blue Skies, Good Viz – Part 3

Sleepy me on the speedboat

It’s 4.52am on Sunday 15th July 2007 when I commenced writing this dive report. I had just woken up probably because
I am over-exhausted..and saw four SMS from the loved one. Anyway, this is a dive report, so I’ll talk about diving.

It was 4am when we finally departed the PETRONAS station before the Bentong toll house, and the CD player played everything from punk-turned-new romantics of Adam and the Ants to chill-out compilations by DJ Ravin of Buddha Bar.

Somewhere near Chegar Perah I was already struggling to keep myself alert and awake but luckily Deepblu got up in time to keep me company. Otherwise I would have stopped at Merapoh to catch a power nap, that I finally got to do at Gua Musang at 6.30am. The CD player was playing DJ Ravin’s compilation again and again until when I finally got up at 7.58am when I received a good morning wish SMS from my loved one. We finally recommenced the journey 15 minutes later to reach Kuala Besut jetty at 10.30am to get onto the 11 o’clock boat. The swells were high and the speedboat could only move albeit slowly. Spazm had SMSed Deepblu informing that current was strong and viz equally bad. We finally made it to the dive center (DC) at 11.45am, just in time for the 12 o’clock dive at Terumbu Tiga.

DAY ONE – 14th July 2007

TERUMBU TIGA
Max Depth: 20.5m
Dive Time: 52 minutes
Viz: 5m at best initially, 15m towards the end of the dive
Surface Temperature: 32 Celcius
Bottom Temperature: 27 Celcius

Two dive boats went out. Our boat consist of Lou the instructor with her Arab student, Gee the DM, Deepblu and myself. The other boat was led by another instructor, Varda, with four students of hers. At the dive site, Lou and her student separated from us while Gee, Deepblu and I went on our own excursion in the bad viz. As I was diving without a camera (Deepblu didn’t either as he did not have enough time to set up his camera), I had to do something to keep me from feeling bored. Gee just followed what we did. The stark difference between the surface and bottom temperatures saw Gee shivering in the depths, so I removed and handed her my gloves while I continued doing penetrations at some of the swim-throughs that seemed almost impossible to go through. I moved cautiously although the fearsome resident Titan Triggerfish was nowhere to be seen. I think Deepblu and I were more interested in looking for nudibranches, squat lobsters and impossible swim-throughs more than anything else. The viz improved drastically towards the end of the dive while Deepblu and I commenced our mini-deco stops from 12m. I saw Gee still
folding her arms, shivering, and signaled the Scottish lass to surface and wait for us on the boat.

TUKUN LAUT
Max Depth: 19.3m
Dive Time: 52 minutes
Viz: 15m at best
Surface Temperature: 32 Celcius
Bottom Temperature: 28 Celcius

After a 2-hour surface interval and lunch of rice, fried egg and the Kelantanese budu, Deepblu and I went to Tukun Laut (wrongly called Tokong Laut by outsiders) accompanying Birgit the instructor, and a foreign diver who spoke the Queen’s English with American pronounciations that I found rather odd. Anyway, the boat’s engine developed some trouble while Aidi the Boatman (who comments on my blog as BOATMAN) and I tried to remedy the problem. Anyway, we got to Tukun Laut 40 minutes later amidst huge swells, strong current, surge and crashing waves on the top of Tukun Laut.

Backroll entry and I quickly grabbed hold of the boat and made my way to the buoy line fighting current. I also had to move quickly as the current and crashing waves were threatening to smother the boat. Birgit signaled us for descent, I blew air out of the BCD and dived head first towards the bottom. Fighting strong current, I made it to the bottom first while waiting for the rest. As usual after the first ten minutes at close to 3 ATA, I checked my pressure gauge to make sure my rate of air consumption was within the normal limits. Deepblu and I separated ourselves from Birgit and the other diver. Marine life was in abundance and there was this ball of huge yellow snappers occassionally disorganised as Trevallies moved in to attack stragglers. Several times my mind was elsewhere and Deepblu and I separated. In the end I found him again. Current flow changed towards the end of the dive and I was already feeling the effects of not having enough sleep and fighting current. We commenced our first mini-deco stops at 12m as usual to off-gas.

Back on the surface the boat was missing. Apparently Aidi had moved away from Tukun Laut because the waves and

current were menacing. I steered the boat as he helped Deepblu on board and also keeping an eye out for Birgit and the other diver. Finally, with all divers safely on board, we made our way back to the DC. The engine was still giving problems so Aidi did not make speed. I literally fell asleep and several times almost fell onto the floorboard. The floorboard was very tempting but we had promised Gee and Varda a roti canai tea session, as Gee would be leaving the DC next week to work in the Philippines.

Back at the DC, I was met by Terry, the dive instructor of the ‘B’ Squadron of the police commando unit, the VAT69, whom I used to dive with during joint-exercises back in 1993 in Lumut and Pangkor areas. The VAT69 were there on training.Varda, Gee, Deepblu and I walked to the stall at Teluk Kiker (again wrongly refered to as Keke Bay) and the VAT69 camp was located next to the stall. I did not recognise any of them initially until, when on the way back to the DC, I was greeted by Sgt John, Inspector Ben (the unit’s dive officer) and two other veterans whose name I cannot recall. They still call me ‘Tuan’ (Sir) as they did 14 years ago and invited me to join them for the next training session to be held at Perhentian in August. Inspector Ben and Terry then had a talk with me about the equipment they currently use, evaluating, and future requirements.

After a sunset walk, followed by shower, dinner, enjoying the night breeze and a phone call to that someone who was

about to sleep, I finally fell asleep before midnight.

DAY TWO – 15th July 2007

Woke up to an SMS at 8.33am. I only got to sleep again at around 6am before that. Washed up and brushed the teeth,

prepped the equipment ready for the next dive. Had some minutes to spare so rushed a nasi lemak breakfast.

SECRET REEF
Max Depth: 29.3m
Dive Time: 35 minutes
Viz: 15m at best, 5m below thermocline at 24m
Surface Temperature: 30 Celcius
Bottom Temperature: 27 Celcius

On the boat were Birgit with two divers, Varda with one, Deepblu and myself; while Lou and two other divers headed out to Batu Nisan on the other boat. I briefed Deepblu on the dive plan and the planned stops, which I also informed Varda. Added one more weight to the tank strap for trimming. Birgit’s group went down first while the rest of us waited for Deepblu. Once he was in, Varda gave the okay to descent sign. I blew all air out of the wing, flipped fins up and swam down to 30m, overtaking Birgit’s group in the process who were doing free descent.

Deepblu arrived and quickly took a photo of me with my slate that says 200 depicting my official 200th PADI logged dives. After that Deepblu went to take photos of lionfishes. I looked at him and wondered if his strobe battery had died on him since he did not recharge the battery on the previous night. After 10 minutes, I checked my gauge to recalculate my “air time remaining” against my dive plan, and my dive computer.

At 15 minutes I signaled to Deepblu that we had 3 minutes left before we had to make it back to the ascent line. We circumnavigated a boulder and I was then smack bang in a bait ball with snappers and jacks darting in and out to feed. It was a very frustrating scene as I did not have my camera on me. It’s time I get a new housing or a proper video camera with HID video lights. But that will have to wait until after I get my toy.

On the 18th minute we ascended to 24m for our first deep stop for 3 minutes, and one minute every three meters thereon, with longer stops at both 6m and 3m to off-gas even further. The Nitrogen Tissue Loading Bar Graph on my PDC went down two notches at the end of the stops as it took me another 3 minutes to get to the surface from the last stop. Both Deepblu and I felt fresher than the usual recreational dives had we stopped only at 5m for 3 minutes. As usual back on the boat Varda, Aidi, Deepblu and I exchanged friendly banters to kill time. Picked up Lou and the two divers at Batu Nisan.

We later learnt what had happen to Deepblu’s new Inon strobe – it got flooded big time.

SUGAR WRECK
Max Depth: 19.3m
Dive Time: 46 minutes
Viz: 15m
Surface Temperature: 32 Celcius
Bottom Temperature: 29 Celcius

Last dive for the trip. On the boat were Lou and two fun divers (one German and one Portuguese), Deepblu and I. Lou told us to descend first. I informed Lou that Deepblu will be doing dive-site mapping for his DMT assigment, while I will dive alone. However, I told her if she needed assistance to just holler me.

We got to Sugar Wreck and Lo! and behold. Viz was excellent as we could see the wreck almost to the bottom. Deepblu and I wasted no time in descending upon the wreck. At the top most part of the wreck (its portside), I stood there, arms folded, and cursing to myself for not having my camera with me. Schools of Jacks, Yellowtail Barracuda,

Batfishes, Snappers were playing around me. Deepblu did not have his camera with him too. Deepblu then commenced his exercise while I swam to the edge of the wreck (keel side) before free-descending to 18m. The viz right at the bottom wasn’t as good as above 15m. But I could see the surface clearly. I finally bumped into Deepblu again towards the end of the dive as we commenced our multiple stops to off-gas. At 6m, Lou passed me one of her charges for me to ring to the surface.

All in all it was a good short trip. On the way back we stopped twice; once to refuel at Kuala Krai and porridge in Gua Musang. And the trip back was accompanied by songs by DJ Ravin, SMS and calls to someone, and Deepblu’s attempt in being a record holder as evident in the picture below.

Izwar and bigger size

Blue Skies, Good Viz – Part 2

Ah…I coined the term “Blue Skies, Good Viz” because I was telling someone about the e-mails I received before jumping off KL Tower back in 1999. In one e-mail, a BASE jumper signed it of with the usual skydiver jargon BSBD, which stands for BLUE SKIES, BLACK DEATH.

Anyway, Boatman SMS me the latest report before he left for D’ Lagoon:

“Mendung sket tapi cerah…vis Tukun Laut pukul 9pg td, 15 to 20 mtr..”

Yeah. But I’m not too happy with the latest satellite photo:

Latest topology satellite picture by MTSAT

Blue Skies, Good Viz

Blue skies at Perhentian

At 1412 today I received an SMS report from my boatman. It reads: “Cuaco beres lor ni..vis pun ok. Pukul 3 ni, kawe nok turun Tanjung Basi.”

Hit the road Jack.

Time to be one with the sea.