Feb 28/2004
First of all thank you Kev for the hand in slipping out of my harness. I hate it when that happens. We did two dives off Loggerhead Charters. Jim and John are great guys I find them very helpful when I have students. I have been on that boat so many times I can recite Jim's briefing almost word for word. The water temp was in the low to mid seventies. Current was moving pretty good out of the south. Vis was about 25-30 feet. Not great for Boynton but not to bad. First dive, we did the Capt Tony. I remember when this ship was sunk. It is great to see the new life that comes and goes on her. The 14 divers all found something to look at. The Jew Fish/Goliath Grouper where there as were the normal school of Baracuda. This is one of the few times I have not seen a shark on this wreck. The water at the surface was good, barely 1-2 ft seas. We did the customary 1 hr surface time and then off to a reef for a little drift diving. As I and a friend of mine named Pat were diving with dubbles we decided to just sit on the bench and stay kitted up during this time. The second dive had a good start but the current had picked up and the group was pulled off the reef after a short viewing. Being pulled to the outside now we found that we were getting into deeper than we wanted water. We started to ascend and just enjoyed the playfulness of the group of divers. We took a few minutes longer for a safety stop and then as required the group members surfaced in their teams. When the last few divers surfaced myself included we quikly noticed the change in weather patterns and the increased wave height. Our 1-2's were now 4-5's and climbing. We opted not to do a night dive. But as usual we had good dives while in Boynton. I also had the oprotunity to meet Simbrooke and his GF for the first time. Ya meet the nicest people in this sport.
First of all thank you Kev for the hand in slipping out of my harness. I hate it when that happens. We did two dives off Loggerhead Charters. Jim and John are great guys I find them very helpful when I have students. I have been on that boat so many times I can recite Jim's briefing almost word for word. The water temp was in the low to mid seventies. Current was moving pretty good out of the south. Vis was about 25-30 feet. Not great for Boynton but not to bad. First dive, we did the Capt Tony. I remember when this ship was sunk. It is great to see the new life that comes and goes on her. The 14 divers all found something to look at. The Jew Fish/Goliath Grouper where there as were the normal school of Baracuda. This is one of the few times I have not seen a shark on this wreck. The water at the surface was good, barely 1-2 ft seas. We did the customary 1 hr surface time and then off to a reef for a little drift diving. As I and a friend of mine named Pat were diving with dubbles we decided to just sit on the bench and stay kitted up during this time. The second dive had a good start but the current had picked up and the group was pulled off the reef after a short viewing. Being pulled to the outside now we found that we were getting into deeper than we wanted water. We started to ascend and just enjoyed the playfulness of the group of divers. We took a few minutes longer for a safety stop and then as required the group members surfaced in their teams. When the last few divers surfaced myself included we quikly noticed the change in weather patterns and the increased wave height. Our 1-2's were now 4-5's and climbing. We opted not to do a night dive. But as usual we had good dives while in Boynton. I also had the oprotunity to meet Simbrooke and his GF for the first time. Ya meet the nicest people in this sport.