Patti Meg Diver and I have just returned from Santo
Domingo, Republica
Did I say the sponges were rather large?
The reef right in front of the
The view from the resort.
There are several dive sites visible from the dive
center and one could easily swim either to them or back from them after the
dive. However with 3 dive boats and 3
RIB’s, there was never a need to swim at all, if you couldn’t find the up line
to the boat, just come to the surface and flag down the RIB for a ride back to
shore or to the dive boat. The Galleon
Hunter is the largest boat at PCDC, at 38 feet long, it is a great dive boat
with a wide beam providing plenty of deck space, seating and a nifty system for
securing tanks or rebreathers. The Wreck
Raider is the next size down boat, able to handle about 10 divers with
ease. We passed another dive operations
dive boat on the way to a distant dive site and they were in an open panga,
under the blazing sun, it didn’t look like fun to me as I sat back sipping a
coke under the amble protection of the hard top on Galleon Hunter. As I get older, I really enjoy the touches of
comfort.
John Mattera --Uwe Rath
PCDC is owned by John Mattera and run efficiently by
Uwe Rath. John is a long time NE wreck
diver and knows what he wants of a well run dive center. Uwe makes it happen. They employ a group of locals, pay them well
and treat them well. I must say I have
never seen a more enthusiastic crew, from the maids and cleaning help, to the
bartender, the boat captains and the guys who help you in and out of your gear,
everyone had a contagious smile and a helping hand. I am not usually someone who allows anyone to
touch my rebreather, preferring to take it in and out of the boat, do my
rinsing and moving of my gear, but after the first day, when I saw the care these
guys take with everyone else’s gear, I gave in and let them do what they do so
well. They never move gear without first
making sure there are no dangling canister lights, or handsets, they treat your
stuff better than you do. Most of the
crew only speak their own dialect of Spanish, but the supervisors, like
Francisco, speak really good English, so you have no trouble getting your point
across, whether you are ordering up gas for tomorrows dive, or need your rig
put on the boat. The meals were created
by Tommy, who spoke little English, but made up for it by cooking in at least 3
languages; the multi-cultural meals were appreciated by all.
It’s the can-do attitude of the crew that
make it happen at Pirates Cove
PCDC is a new operation and what better way to promote
your new dive center than plan an event like Rebreather Week, invite some of
the industry’s top people, take them diving, set no limits and turn ‘em all
loose to see what happens. Every evening
after dinner, a RB industry professional would do a short seminar on their
specialty. Kim Smith talked about the
Jetsam KISS units, Tom Mckenna told us how Extendaire canisters were made and
some about the balance of Micropore’s CO2 absorbent products, Mike Fowler
showed us how the Vision Electronics package in the Evolution rebreathers
worked, I provided a presentation about ISC, the makers of the Megalodon
rebreather, and its past, present and future, Jill Heinerth enchanted us with a
stunning look at cave diving, the Wakulla 2 project, the making of “The Cave”
and her take on rebreather safety, John Chatterton and Richie Kohler, The
History Channel’s Deep Sea Detectives and subjects of the book Shadow Divers
entertained us with their diving exploits and finally, Jeff Bozanic showed us
his history of searching for the elusive Remedia in caves all over the world.
The pool and bar/restaurant, along side the
partially completed dive center building, which when done will have 12 rooms
and a spa.
Jill Heinerth
with Bill Adams and Curt Bowen approaching.
Multiple rebreathers were available to demo in the
pool and I even tried out an Evolution.
There were a couple classes going on during the week and Bill Oestreich
certified a couple new Meg divers while we were there, also Carrie Kohler was working
on her CCR Trimix course with Mike Fowler as the instructor. There was a drawing and lots of cool stuff
was given away, including T shirts, hats, copies of Shadow Divers, DVD’s, lift
bags and more.
Bill Oestreich
rinsing his gear.
Did I mention cave diving? The
Patti
Meg Diver, now Patti Doubles Diver
One of the dry domes of the
cave.
While at this event, I reacquainted myself with a
couple old friends and made a couple new ones.
On one day Uwe told us about a spot near the SDQ airport, that a large
blip was noted on the sonar system aboard the Galleon Hunter, it was reported
to be an uplift from the bottom of at least 60 feet and the bottom was near
300, a possible ship wreck! Curt Bowen,
myself, Paul Blanchette, and Richie Kohler planned a deep dive to investigate
the possible discovery. We brought along
a few more divers who were going to dive another wreck that was close to the
“blip”. We spent a bit of time trying to
find the blip on sonar but were unsuccessful and Curt decided to bag the dive,
not wanting to waste a 300 foot dive on a possible nothing. Well the other 3 of us were not going to come
all the way out here and not dive, so we geared up and took the plunge, as
close to the guesstimated spot as possible.
We fell through 240 feet of water and the visibility opened up to at
least 200 feet and we saw this very large, egg shaped rock standing straight up
out of the slope of the wall that defines the shallow water from the deep. Laughter was the point of the dive as we
descended upon what we now call “Ship Rock”; I pantomimed planting a flag on
the top of it and declared my claim. We
swam around it near its base of 360FSW and worked our way back to the shallows
up a huge sand funnel and over two distinct coral ridges that ran parallel
between the wall and shore. The coral
and sea life were magnificent and it looked like no other diver had ever been
to this spot before. We completed our
deco with a run time of 167 minutes total and climbed back on the Galleon
Hunter satisfied with our exploration and wanting to do it again. And do it again we did… Richie told his partner John Chatterton about
the dive and they decided to do another dive, this time to a planned depth of
400fsw and film the dive for the extreme segment of their new DVD dive magazine
“Dive Portal”. Paul and I were invited
along as safety divers, with the promise we would try to stay out of the camera
shots. Evan, their cameraman, was to
come along and document the dive.
Significant preparations were made for this dive,
everyone spent considerable time setting up their CCR’s, Bailout Stages, and
other equipment to make as certain as possible, the dive would go off as
planned. Richie, John and Evan, all
dived 10/90 heliox and Paul and I dived on trimix, 10/60, we all had stages of
bottom mix and spread air cylinders, 50/50 and 100% O2 between the team, so as
to have plenty of bailout gas for anyone who had to come off the loop and go
open circuit. The only problem on the
dive was my cylinder of deep mix began to free flow and I had to turn the valve
off to preserve the contents. I was
already near the deepest point of the dive so it was not a cause to end the
dive, if I needed to, I could have modulated the valve to breathe off the
cylinder. Entering the water, Evan, Paul
and I dropped down first to about 180 and Evan filmed John and Richie dropping
past us into the depths. They held up
then and we went ahead to position ourselves near the rock to film John and
Richie’s descent to and past the rock to 400fsw, then we followed. Spending a few minutes at depth, Paul and I
heard squeaky, helium altered voices discussing the shots and then calling time
to ascend, our first deco stop was at 318 fsw for two minutes and then the long
slow swim back up the reef to the shallows, finding fish and examining the huge
coral that inhabited this reef. Our
total run time was 172 minutes with a max depth of between 396 fsw and 403, not
all computers agreed, and Richie insisted that he accidentally dropped his VR3
the extra 3 feet past the planned depth, he just wanted to beat me, I dropped
mine in 402 feet. : ) Paul and I became fast friends and I was
surprised to find that Richie was such a likable guy, after reading Shadow
Divers, I never thought I would get along with a guy like that seemed to be so
loud. His enthusiasm for the sport of
diving is quite contagious however; we found we have a lot in common,
especially our “Stench” of humor.
Patti, Richie, and John
Part of the Dive Portal DVD magazine was the quest for
caves and an interview with Jill Heinerth.
The segment involved Jill taking Richie cave diving and to film the
segment, much light was needed in the cave.
Mike Fowler and I were pressed into service as swimming light holders
for this segment. Hanging out with an
entertainment crew is actually a lot of hurry up and wait, we spent quite a bit
of time at the dive site waiting for the interview to finish before we could do
what we really wanted to do, which is dive, of course. Personally I don’t care if I’m holding a
light, or wrestling an alligator, as long as I get to be in the water and the
dive seemed over much too quickly, luckily Curt Bowen was on hand and I asked
if he would shoot some pics of me in the cave, so we got another 20 min of
bottom time doing that. Now I'm stoked
even more about my CCR cave course next January in
Well that about wraps up Rebreather Week in DR. I had the time of my life and Patti is
sporting a great tan too, she said it was some of the best diving she has ever
done and is excited about coming back again next year. Pirates Cove is also planning to do a wreck
diving week, as well as a cave diving week, so stay tuned and check out the
website at www.piratescovedivecenter.com.
Ron Micjan
Cinco de mayo, 2006