Why we dive

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Initially, to please my father.
Later, to get all the hippy chicks who loved watermen.
Now, because it's part of my being.

:) M
 
To explore another world. I'm a scientist on the topside, and the curiosity drives me. And it is beautiful.
 
I can't like the original post enough! Can I "like" each of your reasons individually? I share almost every one of them, although you articulated them better than I could have.

I might have one to add, though it could also fall under the "camaraderie" you mention. Diving is something my wife and I do together. We make time to do this together on a regular basis. I have friends who don't seem share any sort of hobby or sport with their wives.
 
To learn, study and document the huge amount of life on this planet that most will never see. I'm fortunate to live near an area that is rich in invertebrate life. We don't usually get the visibility of the offshore islands, but there is so much more to see when we can actually see it. The West Coast of North America from Mexico to Alaska has some of the best diving in the World. The cold water keeps most divers from traveling here but that's alright. More for us.

We have a lot of shipwrecks to explore. The life on some of our local wrecks is what attracts me. If I wanted to see a broken down boat, there are plenty of shipyards and marinas to visit. Some shipwrecks are nothing more than an auto junkyard with water dumped on them. Others are an oasis in a sandy desert. The most fish I've ever seen in California was on the UB88, a WWI German submarine six miles off of San Pedro.

We have reefs that are dominated by sponges of all shapes and colors. Other reefs are nudibranch havens. Still others are barren sand with concrete pilings strewn about that attract large wreckfish.

We have kelp forests that provide habitat for millions of animals. They are enjoyed by curious divers, photographers and hunters alike. There is more to see than I can find in a lifetime, so there is no way I can ever tire of exploring my home waters.

33723806396_1d50fe00d7_b.jpg


33385332644_7108e55197_b.jpg


32532396383_7bda04e0b7_b.jpg


32921452414_1a024da67e_b.jpg


32963824530_80d55bf634_b.jpg


34426842690_417182194b_b.jpg


33218145781_0499167612_b.jpg


33218145831_666dfda605_b.jpg


33589836316_47c12e5f6e_b.jpg


33190728922_5d9a2fa06d_b.jpg


33345967465_a66b0d8728_b.jpg


36862887050_e7c51d3c10_b.jpg


38214853556_1591232e94_b.jpg


46005511054_edac957bb1_b.jpg


32962815800_a22e193b46_b.jpg


33304749716_c9b0a79140_b.jpg


32532235333_e3228a5a5f_b.jpg


33218556621_bdea1a2bc1_b.jpg


34680307641_6841671013_b.jpg


27986841728_e44f2902e6_b.jpg
 
For some reason being underwater makes me feel calmer.
^^^^ This.

Plus, it's kinda weird, but if I'm a mile back in a cave system in Mexico swimming through a labyrinth of stalagmites and stalactites with solid jungle floor overhead I'm the calmest I have ever been.
 
Because it is there
That's pretty much what it comes to for me now. My only reason to dive was to vastly expand my shell collecting hobby. Pretty much accomplished, at least to a point. Then again, most of my diving is here in NS and in the NYC/CT area, so I will not be finding anything there that I don't already have.
Then there was the DM idea--took the course and did that for 4 years.
What's left seems to be reaching 1,000 dives (#800 completed yesterday) before I'm 70 (am 65).
I guess a goal will still be to dive the tropical Pacific and some other far flung places--for the different shells and different diving in general. Donations accepted at this time.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

Back
Top Bottom