oh and we're in Oz, not north america.. and he got the original from a surf shop he worked at in the cook islands.. heh if that helps at all
Your "location" on Scubaboard says "Canada", which is why we assumed you were based in North America.
thanks for the tips guys. we're deffinately not after an oval mask, those things are horrible!
I guess beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Oval Masks were standard wear for a quarter of a century, adorning the faces (and foreheads) of non-fictional (Cousteau) and fictional (Mike Nelson) heroes alike during the era when some of us took up snorkelling and scuba. I have to admit I'm no fan of modern-style masks, those large double panes and protruding noses recall, for me, too much of the image of the head of a fly magnified many times.
I dont know why he's so anti silicone.
I once had to snorkel with a silicone mask and I hated it for many reasons. First, I associate it with people with allergies (I don't have any), because they were the principal users of the few such masks in the 1960s. Second, silicone tends to be more expensive than natural or neoprene rubber. Thirdly, silicone may be more durable than natural rubber, but it is also, from my viewpoint, a dead, sterile, man-made material, while natural rubber is a live material which derives from a green, renewable source (why are we always supporting the petrochemical industry instead?). Fifthly, in my opinion, rubber skirts mould better to the contours of the face and provides a better seal (how many drysuits, even nowadays, have silicone seals?). Sixthly, we live, or should be living, in a world that tolerates and even celebrates difference. Why should we all make the same choice of mask material? Some of us like synthetics, others prefer natural materials in street clothing, so why shouldn't we opt for a variety of divewear materials too?
The one he lost was a pretty basic standard looking mask, i dont even know what brand it was. I imagine it was pretty cheap but he swears by it.
Now we've established that you live in Australia and are looking for a modern-style rubber-skirted mask. The rubber-skirted mask that appears to be easiest to obtain in Oz is the Mirage Rubber Pro Dive Mask:
World of Sport Wholesalers P/L - Online Shopping
but I expect it doesn't fulfil your shape criterion. There are a few rubber-skirted modern-style masks around, e.g. the Beaver Orion:
BEAVER ORION MASK - Only £16.95 - Sunderland Scuba Centre - www.sunderlandscubacentre.com