It's Wednesday, and I'm still mulling over the fun of Sunday's BareFootBlue charter to Catalina island.
Sweet!!
Let's start with
Lori and
Kyaa: The faces of the flight deck. The dive masters and the providers of air to breath and food to eat.
Lori gave a concise and thorough briefing at Farnsworth, including necessary info for both Farnsworth newbies and old hands:
- Watch depth and gas on these walls.
- Ascend and Descend on the anchor line.
- Use caution at the swimstep.
- Carry a SMB and use it if needed.
Divers using gas other than 21% were spoken with privately so as not to confuse the briefing.
Every dive was drama free. When one dive party got blown off the anchor line on ascent,
Lori was watching the bubbles and informed the captain long before the SMB appeared on the surface. The divers were down current quickly while safely making all their stops. Lori quickly completed roll call (with Eye Contact! I love this woman!). The hook was pulled, and the divers were picked up smoothly from a live boat. AND LORI HAD INCLUDED THIS PROCESS IN THE PRE-DIVE BRIEFING SO EVERY ONE KNEW EXACTLY WHAT TO DO.
"The planners survive", as Mo2vation said. :colgate:
Tanks were filled well throughout the day, and snackage/drinks/food were in the galley all the time. Climbing the ladder after the 2nd dive, the aroma of BBQ chicken was fabulous! Thanks,
Kyaa!!
And... The day had it's unavoidable delays due to conditions. But we enjoyed a full 3rd dive at a spectacular spot with no complaints from anyone. As Tevis promised, with BFB, we are guests and clients, and the sweet fun never stops.
Captains
Kevin,
Ray, and
Kyaa: GREAT DIVE SITE SELECTION AND ANCHORING AND SITE BRIEFINGS.
They picked a beautiful peak at Farnsworth, putting us closer to a shear vertical wall than was the
Pacific Star, who had anchored first.
PacStar had the high spot, but
WE had the cooler, deeper wall, according to my detailed bathymetry map.
On a quickly roughening day, the captains tucked us into Eagle's Nest on the lee side for some great Gorgonia thicket diving and Paper-Nautilus-shell finding.
Then, my favorite dive of the day: The deep reef Northeast of Indian Rock. In the late afternoon light, the water glowed a spooky green in the thick kelp.
Ken navigated us beautifully around all the gorgeous rocky peaks, faces, and crevices. We found half a dozen eel, half a dozen octopuses, dozens of lobbies, and TWO toothsome Swell Sharks, sleeping soundly in a vertical rocky crevice. FABULOUS. Our great day closing out, we hovered silently upwards amidst the kelp, quite unwilling to leave the beauty.
The sky stepped up competitively, with slices of white clouds uplit by the setting sun.
Thank you, Tevis, for bringing us all together for superb diving. I can only echo what Ken so eloquently said. Thanks! Thank you to all the skilled and fun divers who made the surface intervals a joy and the diving drama-free.
Thank you, Ken, for the adventure, The Funny, the skills and focus, for completely being there on every dive, and for seeing the magic. I'm having the time of my life.
~~~~
'Chica