Here's a connection I never would have made:
I was re-reading Jacques Cousteau: The Sea King by Brad Matsen and come across this passage on page 24. He is discussing Philippe Tailliez around 1936, the fellow naval officer that introduced Cousteau to diving (bold added by me):
*The Condorcet is the ship he and Cousteau were stationed on
It's hard to imagine how inventive they had to be in those days. I just hope he ground the cutting teeth off before strapping them on! It would be interesting to read about other innovative stories... hint-hint @Sam Miller III


Hey Dano (@MAKO Spearguns), hope you don't mind my snagging the image of your freediving fins. I'll substitute an inferior image if you prefer.
I was re-reading Jacques Cousteau: The Sea King by Brad Matsen and come across this passage on page 24. He is discussing Philippe Tailliez around 1936, the fellow naval officer that introduced Cousteau to diving (bold added by me):
"With instructions from the commander of Condorcet*, a skin-diving enthusiast named Captaine Louis de Corlieu, Tailliez made himself a pair of flippers by sandwiching pieces of metal saw blades between two slabs of rubber and strapping them to his feet with twine. The fins, about a foot long, more than doubled the power of his kicks."
*The Condorcet is the ship he and Cousteau were stationed on
It's hard to imagine how inventive they had to be in those days. I just hope he ground the cutting teeth off before strapping them on! It would be interesting to read about other innovative stories... hint-hint @Sam Miller III





Hey Dano (@MAKO Spearguns), hope you don't mind my snagging the image of your freediving fins. I'll substitute an inferior image if you prefer.

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