randpchi
Contributor
Thanks for the report, sounds like a great trip. Loved the pics. What kind of exposure protection did you use?
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What about Jaws?
Diving in Great White territory (some at night) with a wet suit giving one that ‘seal look,’ has to raise at least a little concern, though attacks on humans in the region are astoundingly rare considering the vast legions of people engaged in water sports in the region. So I asked our Captain Fritzler how many he’d seen in all his years diving the region.
One. His wife spotted it while he was after lobster, pointed it out, it was quite large and made a couple of passes though it never behaved aggressively, and from his ‘about from where we are to that’ description on the boat, I’m guessing it was maybe a bit over 20 feet from them? They stayed put till it left, then made their way back to the boat.
Bottom Line: they’re out there, but they didn’t bother us.
What Do You Need To Do This?
What level of training, experience and natural aptitude one needs to dive a place is a matter of opinion. I’m no dive professional so take mine with a grain of salt, considering we had good weather and didn’t see the worst they get. If you’re a product of mainstream scuba training (e.g.: learned in a quarry or benign tropical conditions), I suggest:
1.) AOW Level cert. or competency.
2.) Have a good comfort level with viz. down to 30’.
3.) Be able to run at least a crude reciprocal straight line course; you don’t have to be a master navigator, but pack a SMB (in case you get too far away) and have a comfort level with going to the surface to find the boat when lost, grab a compass bearing and head in. Bring a compass you’re comfortable with.
4.) I’m told you can snap kelp if necessary; if you get entangled, don’t just pull trying to rip it. Pack at least one cutting tool – I’ve got a Trilobyte and a rustproof H1 steel Spyderco knife.
5.) Get some cold water experience with full wet (or dry) suit, hood and gloves (deep quarry diving will do) and a steel tank. Try to get at least a very rough estimate of your weight needs.
6.) If you’re gonna solo (I mostly did), considering getting SDI Solo or PADI Self-Reliant trained and equipped. My Spare Air isn’t ‘rule of 3rds’ compliant, but it’s still a backup gas supply in case my main fails at depth.
7.) ‘If it’s not on the boat, it’s not on the boat,’ as a post by RJP taught. A razor, toothpaste, medications, triple antibiotic ointment for scrapes, an extra mask, a backup computer, be prepared.
8.) Lycra socks can prevent painful chafing from frequent diving, and swimmer’s eardrops can save some pain.
Miscellaneous Notes
With my old iPhone 5s in an Otterbox case on AT&T service, I had cell service part of the time around Santa Catalina Island, but not San Clemente, Santa Barbara or Santa Cruz.
On my trip, we spent 2 days diving San Clemente, 1 day at Santa Catalina, 1 day at Santa Barbara and 1 at Santa Cruz. One evening we didn’t do a night dive because we couldn’t secure good anchorage. I dove with the group on the 3 night dives, with a buddy on 2 day dives, solo the other 19 dives.
Day 1 – 5 dives.
Day 2 – 6 dives.
Day 3 – 4 dives.
Day 4 – 6 dives.
Day 5 – 3 dives.
My dive times ran from 31.5 min. to 1:14, mainly clustering around 40+ min., but the need to get back to the boat without great navigation skill limited me. You can dive your tank. My max. depths ran from 40.31’ to 105.78’, and overall depths were moderate. I usually dove over a flat bottom, not a vertical drop-off.
Time course for planning my August 2016 trip:
Sept. 2015.
1.) Noticed trip posted on Truth Aquatic’s calendar. E-mailed to learn more. Trip was ‘in the white,’ but I was told is one of their ‘featured trips,’ which is why it went on-calendar so far in advance. Trip’s run many years & never been cancelled for lack of participation. At least 13 passengers need to guarantee trip. It’s one of the few trips the T.A. founder/owner runs. I was told I’d likely find great conditions from late July to late October, usually warmer water towards Oct., but I wouldn’t be disappointed with summer dive conditions.
2.) Asked about hiring a guide. Was referred to a seasoned guide familiar with the area and able to do guided spear fishing if desired; the service is $240/day & comes with 3 dives/day. Guide service would’ve cost more than the trip; I declined.
Oct. 2015.
1.) Booked my reservation by phone with 50% deposit.
Jan. 2016.
Jan. 6th: 5 people booked so far. Jan. 20th: 7 so far, with a block of 6 expected to confirm by mid. Feb.
I booked airfare.
Aug. 2016.
Trip was in the yellow (guaranteed to go; I don’t recall when that happened), and nearly sold out as of Aug. 9th. Was told bottom temp.s were already in the high 60’s touching low 70’s right now.
Bottom Line
I had a great trip. Be ready before you try California diving, but when you’re ready, go. It’s worth it.