Hello from cold snowy Illinois

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Messages
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Location
Chicago Area
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Hello all,

I just joined the boards yesterday. I've watched "Into the Drink" for the past year and thought I need to go checkout the website they talk about on the show. I really enjoy "Into the Drink" It's fun to see the locations they dive at. I may never get to go there but at least I get to see others enjoying the dive sites.

As the subject states, I'm from a cold weather climate so I don't get to enjoy diving year round unless I either do dry suit diving or travel to a warmer climate than the great lakes. I taken the training for dry suit diving yet or done a lot of lake diving. Since I was a kid I enjoyed snorkeling in the shallow portions of Lake Michigan when on summer vacations and always wanted to dive. Never got the opportunity to take training as a kid so now that I'm "older" :eyebrow: I can enjoy some of the things I always wanted to do as a kid.

I first started my training in 03/2001 when we decided to travel to Aruba for a family vacation. My son and I both took the Open Water class locally. Having my son also taking the class allowed me to have a built in buddy to train and dive with since my wife doesn't swim. (Not sure how I married a non-swimmer but that's another story. LOL) I thought I might as well get the course and pool work out of the way and then do my checkout dives where it was warm. I enjoyed the classes in the pool as well as the book work. But the most fun was diving in Aruba! We ended up doing 6 dives while on Aruba. There was a lot of dive opportunities. The only issue we ran into was the visibility wasn't great due to a storm which had passed through not long before we arrived. Even with the lower vis it was still a lot of fun.

Shortly after returning from Aruba my son and I started our Adv cert. This time we didn't have a vacation to a warm climate planned and since it was now coming up on summer time I figured how cold could the lakes be in Northern IL and southern WI. Well I found out. A 7 mil wet suit in July helps but it still gets cold in Lake Michigan when it's 95 deg out of the water but only about 45 deg in 50 ft of water. The first time you bend you neck to look down at the bottom and that cold water shoots down your back, :shocked2: that will wake you up quickly. :rofl3: There are some great dive opportunities in Lake Michigan and I'm looking forward to doing more dives there but I think I may take the Dry Suit training first and pickup a dry suit just to enjoy the dive more. ;)

In 2008 we did the Epcot Dive Quest at Disney and really loved the dive. Disney does such a wonderful job presenting everything and makes you feel part of the crew. Matter of fact, they tell you when you sign your waver you are an honorary cast member of Disney and are expected to act as any other Disney cast member would. My son and I both did the dive at Epcot. The best part for me was swimming within 3 ft of three sharks. We followed right above them for about 30-45 sec before I started thinking in the back of my head, those sharks may get annoyed with us being so close and they could turn on us before we knew it. I knew that wouldn't be the case since we had talked to the DM at the Living Seas before our dive and was briefed on things but just in case we peeled off and headed to another area of the tank.

We really enjoyed interacting with the guests outside of the tank, both in the restaurant and the viewing areas. The rest of our family was eating in the coral reef while we were diving so we were able to go over by the windows and get pictures from outside of the tank with our family.

IMHO, Dive Quest is a great dive and one I said I would do again if I had the time and opportunity. Well three years later, I now have a friend who was just certified as an Open Water Diver and they are going to Disney with us for an upcoming vacation. I told him about Dive Quest and he jumped at the chance of doing a dive there. He asked if I would like to do it and of course I said I would love to. So now I get to do my second dive at Epcot. This time I'm sure I'll be checking out other things that I missed three years ago. :D

Someday I would like to get to Atlanta and do the dive at their tank but not sure when that will be.


Well so long for now from cold, snowy, & cloudy IL. Thanks for listening. :coffee:

- Jeff -
 
Hi Jeff and welcome to the board. Yeah Lake Michigan does stay on the chilly side even through the summer but it has a lot of really great wrecks. Some of the shallower wrecks at the southern end of the lake near Indiana in the 35 to 40 foot range can be comfortably done in a 7mm. Happy diving.
 
Hi Jeff and welcome to the board. Yeah Lake Michigan does stay on the chilly side even through the summer but it has a lot of really great wrecks. Some of the shallower wrecks at the southern end of the lake near Indiana in the 35 to 40 foot range can be comfortably done in a 7mm. Happy diving.

Hi Beth,

Thanks for the welcome and information re. Indiana wrecks. I'll have to check into some of those. I don't live that far from that area. I spent a number of years working in the Michigan City area and living just south of there in La Porte, IN. but that was before I became a cert diver so I never looked into it.

The dives I did when we got our Adv. Open Water Cert was in the Waukegan area. We dove on a couple of wrecks, one of which was an old paddle wheeler. I'd have to check my log book to find out which wreck it was but it was a fun dive with interesting things to see. We saw our first fresh water sponge just inside the old boiler of the boat.

We purchase a boat a few years ago and I've been thinking it would be fun to do some diving off it. It's not a large one which would handle Lake Michigan on rough days but on nice calm days I've had it out on the big lake.

We took the boat up to a lake cottage a year ago on Pentwater Lake over on the Michigan side. I had found a wreck online which was in about 20-30 ft of water just south of the channel but, since I didn't have GPS system to get the actual log/lat, I never located it. I didn't have my dive gear with me anyway so all I would have been able to do is snorkel over it unless I rented what I needed.

We live fairly close to Lake Geneva and I thought it would be kind of fun to dive there but it can be a pretty cold lake at times. We take our boat to Geneva in the summer and enjoy running around the lake. I may some day do a dive there. There's a dive club in the area here who have cleanup dives and I may join them one of these times. ;)

- Jeff -
 
Jeff--

I also live most of the time just outside of Chicago. I know it's an expensive proposition, but I highly recommend that you get trained in and then pick up a dry suit. It will extend your diving "season" to all year round. I got mine (Bare HD Tech) about a year ago, and never looked back. There are some folks who prefer cold water diving, and some who prefer warm. I love both, and the dry suit gives you that option -- especially in Lake Michigan. Also don't forget Haigh Quarry for practice -- it's a great to both learn and practice skills. I'll be taking an ice diving cert class there in early March with my LDS (DJ's in Lyons). Since it sounds like you're into wreck diving, if you have an iPhone, I recommend an app called Dive Spots -- it will give you all the charted wrecks in the area. Also, just as an fyi, DJ's is doing a trip in September to dive the wrecks off the Morehead, NC coast -- very cool.

Mike
 
Welcome to the board. Hope to see you on a dive boat sometime. Lake Michigan has some great shipwrecks at all levels of diving. You'll certainly need a dry suit to stay warm though.
 
We just returned very early this past Saturday morning from FL where we had booked a behind the sciences tour of the Living Seas @ Epcot for 4:30 PM on Tuesday. I had done this in 2008 and was planning on doing it again this trip. Unfortunately the Dive department at Epcot called and told us our dive was off and they would attempt to reschedule for the following day if all went well and they could correct the issues. :depressed: They wouldn't go into what was the problem other than it was an issue with the tank. Disney refunded our monies and said they would rebook if all was corrected in time for Wednesday. I explained to the Dive tour manager Wednesday was our only fall back as we had to fly out to return back home on Friday, thus not being able to dive on Thursday.

I called back on Wednesday around noon and left a message and never heard back. I stopped at the Living Seas that afternoon and was told the issue wasn't corrected and it was a maintenance issue. They had also closed the manatee exhibit to the public. You could see the manatees were doing well as well as being fed so all was good with them but the cast member wouldn't go into any details as to what the maintenance issue was. :depressed:

We were a bit bummed out but that's the way it goes. I guess there's always our next trip. :crafty:

- Jeff -
 
Jeff--

I also live most of the time just outside of Chicago. I know it's an expensive proposition, but I highly recommend that you get trained in and then pick up a dry suit. It will extend your diving "season" to all year round. I got mine (Bare HD Tech) about a year ago, and never looked back. There are some folks who prefer cold water diving, and some who prefer warm. I love both, and the dry suit gives you that option -- especially in Lake Michigan. Also don't forget Haigh Quarry for practice -- it's a great to both learn and practice skills. I'll be taking an ice diving cert class there in early March with my LDS (DJ's in Lyons). Since it sounds like you're into wreck diving, if you have an iPhone, I recommend an app called Dive Spots -- it will give you all the charted wrecks in the area. Also, just as an fyi, DJ's is doing a trip in September to dive the wrecks off the Morehead, NC coast -- very cool.

Mike

I'm thinking I'll take your advice and get the training as well as the dry suit. I don't mind the colder water because I just love to dive but I do enjoy warm water dives much more. But I figure if I can extend my diving and enjoy more local dives I may just go that way. I have a friend who just started diving the end of last year and he was to have gone diving at Epcot's Living Seas with me this past week but that was canceled due to an issue with maintenance at the Living Seas. When we were talking about diving he said it was the second time he had attempted to dive since becoming open water certified and the dive was canceled. He said he was thinking about getting his advanced open water cert training. I told him it would be a great idea. Now I think I'll also encourage him to do Dry Suit training so we can enjoy the northern fresh water wreck dives around Lake Michigan.

I don't have an iPhone yet but hope to soon now that Verizon is going to carry it. My contact is up so it's perfect timing for me. ;)

Thanks for the advice!

- Jeff -
 

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