Hahahaahaaa... No way. This is from another diver on another thread?
No. Not yet, anyway.
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Hahahaahaaa... No way. This is from another diver on another thread?
"There is no nobility in leaving artifacts on the bottom of the sea, for she is brutally efficient at erasing history forever. The wreck diver is the deads only hope of being remembered."
BTW - interesting quote. Who's is it?
Obviously not the SECOND guy to dive on a wreck and find the helm, telegraph, bell, etc all missing. Probably not the family of the dead, I would imagine. Other mariners or servicemen who survived the sinking? Not likely. Ooh...fellow countrymen of those who perished! Nah, that's not it either.
:shocked2:
:
You don't usually know about current or vis until you actually hit the water.
Besides you stated that wreck trained divers should always carry wreck reels on every wreck dive otherwise they're unprepared.
Which is why I always carry 1 on every wreck dive. And if its a deep 1 I typically carry 3 (sidewinder,safety & jump) plus a spool.
But like I said I'm not wreck trained so maybe I just don't know what I'm doing.
Maybe I'm just over prepared. But it makes me happy.
If I'm in the tropics with 3 ft of vis I picked the wrong vacation spot. But I would still have at least my safety reel. Need something to send up a bag.
...You may or may not agree.
I took a trip to Florida last month. Well it was a trip to Florida but then we did a cruise to Coz and Caymans.
I brought my wreck reel with me too, but I didn't dive with it. I carry a finger reel and an smb and lift bag on every dive though.
I know what you mean about being overprepared and being happy. I'm the same way but sometimes you can just have too much stuff. I mean...where does it end?
Don't assume too much...I've got my share of china and brass in my collection. Here in NJ if they weren't on my mantle they'd be on someone else's. Or they'd be "erased forever" as you say, knowing that the wreck will deteriorate further and further.
I'm sort of torn, I guess.
Would those things be better off in a museum, if one would have them? Possibly. No...probably.
On the other hand, if you ever have the chance to dive someplace like Truk lagoon or Bikini...and see what's there. See ALL of what's there. Where it fell 70 years ago. Swim through a 30' wide torpedo hole into the lower engine room of a wreck at 165' and see a lightbulb in a lamp...with the filament still intact. See the porcelain dials on the list-meter on the Rio de Janeiro point hard to port...at an improbably 90deg angle. See the wrenches hanging neatly in their rack in the machine shop of a wreck that is missing the entire 1/3 of the ship. And then imagine it was all gone, on a thousand mantles and curio cabinets in NJ and SC and Cleveland and London and Tokyo and Sydney etc, etc, etc. After doing those dives, its tough to imagine depriving the next guy of having the same experience.