Wednesday, February 18, 2009

In a Sepian Mood

Even in moderate visibility, and outside the range of your strobe, you can still get some impressive photos. On this day the vis was just 40 feet, which is quite disappointing for Cayman
Brac, but the model was in a great position to provide a dramatic pose and when coverted to a monchrome sepia in photoshop the photo turned out to have it's own special charm and mood. Who needs all that color anyway?

Captain Joyce the Turtle Dancer (see story below)


Captain Joyce from Narcosis Scuba, Tarpon Springs, FL.
See Story Below:

Turtle Dancer


Every now and then you come across a diver who has something special. In Tom Wolf’s novel, when he was talking about the best pilots, he called it ‘The Right Stuff.’ In diving there’s no phrase to describe the person who is as home in the water more than they are on land. I’ve used the term Transphibian – a fish trapped in a human body – as a joke, but whatever you call them, when you are in the water with one of these exceptional divers you know it in a moment.

It shows in their kick - effortless but powerful, in their buoyancy control – trimmed like a fighter plane, and in their attitude – which exudes comfort and the joy of being immersed in the liquid universe. I’ve authored courses to help divers get to this level, but for some it comes naturally and late last year, on Cayman Brac, I had the good fortune to share a few dives with one of these naturals, Captain Joyce French, a PADI Master Scuba Diver Trainer from the Narcosis Scuba Center in Tarpon Springs, Florida.
As an experienced dive instructor with five underwater rescues to my credit, I try to be very cognizant of the people that around me when I am underwater as you never know when someone who might be inexperienced or exhibiting a momentary lapse of judgment may turn your day into a roiling tempest. It’s not often that you find yourself swimming with someone who puts you immediately at ease and it’s hard to explain just what energy they put out that makes me feel that way, but kick, control and attitude are all part of it.

Still, there’s more, and rather than listening to an aging mossback wreck diver try to explain some esoteric feel that he gets when he’s in the water with an exceptional diver, you instead listen to the turtles.

That’s right, listen to the turtles.

I’ve seen it many times now. When a turtle swims through a group of divers, often they take a few moments to commune with them. But the turtles don’t pick just any diver. In my experience they always seem to take notice of the most comfortable diver in the group and swim side by side for a while, as if to acknowledge and accept them. Usually that is the most experienced diver, but every now and then you come across a relative newbie who simply belongs down there. They use very little air (mostly due to perfect trim and extreme comfort) and always come up glowing like a starlet in musical from the 1940’s.
So when I was in Cayman Brac, visiting the incredibly beautiful reefs right off the shore of the Brac Reef Resort in October of 2008, I wasn’t surprised to see a wonderful adolescent turtle moving through our formation of divers and turn to swim next me for while. I mean, I expect this. After all, I developed a PADI Distinctive Specialty called Mind, Body and Spirit Scuba more than ten years ago and teach people how to meditate underwater. I actually had deluded myself into thinking I had this little fellow hypnotized and posing for my camera when he suddenly stopped dead in the water and turned his head towards Joyce and bolted over to her, picking her out of a crowd of about eight divers.

The diver? Captain Joyce Hannaseck, owner of Narcosis Scuba in Tarpon Springs, Florida. Joyce is a multispecialty dive instructor with an overwhelming joy of life and an innate ability underwater. Joyce drives a 35’ Sportcraft and is an excellent teacher at all levels, specializing in children and teenagers.

Something about her caught his fancy as he first swam side by side with her, then did a couple of spins around her body. Personally, I think he would have given her a turtley kiss if she wasn’t wearing a mask and a regulator, but I can’t be sure. And though I was a little miffed that my turtle buddy dumped me for a hot blonde, I really can’t blame him. She is a force to be reckoned with both on the land and in the sea.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Mongo and lunch



Hand feeding bass in a Pennsylvania quarry is a lot of fun. Even if the owner of Dutch Springs will scream at you like the Seinfeld Soup Nazi that "it's a lake not a quarry", and even if the water is so cold your testicles may never descend again. (Sorry, girls.) and even if there really isn't all that much to see there that you haven't seen a dozen times before, you can still scare up some fishy fun in the shallows. Here's how you do it:

1. find a cray fish.

2. wave to a bass

3. hold the crayfish very bravely

4. don't let go. the bass will be happy to remove the crayfish from between our fingers with a (moderately) gentle tug.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Simple, inexpensive underwater photography

Stunning shots are possible, even with inexpensive photo gear. Consider this flourescent coral shot with a 5 megapixel point-and-shoot camera and cheap INON strobe. In order to get best results, set your camera to manual, meter for midwater, and then set your strobe to fire at full. Adjust the strobe, if the first shot is too hot (you lose detail from overlighting the coral). Once you have the strobe setting worked out, take a few shots, firing for effect.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Soon come Bonaire

Well, I'm counting the hours until my next trip to Bonaire. Early March is a great time to be in the Islands, what with snow and freezing rain predicted in Philly and a general, miserable lack of sunlight. Hey, but things could be worse. Consider my editor from th PADI Undersea Journal. She just moved back home to Nova Scotia after spending years, maybe ten (?) in sunny southern Florida. Talk about a freeze-out.


Anyway, I can't wait to try out my new Fantasea strobe and strobe arms on my old and decrepit Olympus 5060 camera and housing. What a difference side and back lighting can make to an underwater image. I'm looking forward to posting the results. This shot is from the dock areas at Buddy Dive in Bonaire from a couple of years back. There's always a school of snappers there waiting to give you a photo subject.