Saturday, 1 October 2011

2 More Turn to the Dark Side

Well done to Craig and Ian who both finished their Mod 1 Inspiration course yesterday. It was a long week with more driving than diving due to the weather! We completed over 7.5 hours of open water diving down to depths of 30m.

Well done guys and see you in 6 months for your Mod 2 course.

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

O'Three Drysuit Ambassador


I have been made an ambassador for O'Three drysuits! I have been wearing their drysuits for the last 12 years starting off with their original Ri2-500 suit in 1998. I have always chosen their suits due to the quality of the product and the customer service both of which are second to none.

Over the years I have always paid for my suits even though I could have received free or discounted products from other manufacturers but when you make your living from teaching diving poor quality products show a lack of professionalism and commitment to you and your chosen career.

I would like to thank Sean and Marcus for choosing me to represent O'Three as I know there would have been strong competition.

Check out their new and improved web site on the link below.

Sunday, 5 June 2011

Weymouth Diving

Just had a cracking weekend of diving on Skin Deeper out of Weymouth. We did an unnamed wreck christened the Conger Wreck. From the surface the water looked very clear but after entering and looking down the shot line it was clear the Plankton bloom was well and truly in. At about 30m the light disappeared and from then on if you wanted to see anything it would be by torch light. Reaching the wreck in 60m the visibility was around 5m. The wreck was a very small steamer and with a 30 minute bottom time we had managed to swim around the wreck 3 times. Not one I will rush back to.

Sunday we dived a wreck called the Snowdrop the bell was found last year by one of the divers on board. She sank in 1883. The visibility was around 8m and there was some ambient light but to see anything you needed a torch. The wreck was a steamer with the smoke stack still on top of the boiler. She is covered in Lobsters and other fish life and makes a cracking dive and is well worth a look if you are looking for a dive in 60m out of Weymouth.

Saturday, 28 May 2011

TDI Combined Advanced Nitrox and Decompression Procedures Course.


I am running a TDI Combined Advanced Nitrox and Decompression Procedures Course at Old Harbour Dive Centre in Weymouth and off their dive boat X-Dream.

The course starts on Monday 4th July and finishes Friday 8th July.

For more info please click on the link below.


Cheers

Kevin

Sunday, 1 May 2011

TDI Combined Advanced Nitrox and Decompression Procedures Course.


I am running a TDI Combined Advanced Nitrox and Decompression Procedures Course in Weymouth from 20th to 24th June. The course will be run from Old Harbour Dive Centre and on the dive boat X Dream.

For more information and prices click on the link below.


For more more info please drop me a line or give me a call.

Cheers

Kevin

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

New Advanced Open Water Divers

Well done to Josh and Greg from O'Three Dry Suits. They completed their PADI AOW course over the weekend. We did to dives at the Cove on Chesil Beach on Saturday then 3 dives off X Dream out of Weymouth on Sunday. We had a good 5-10m visibility on all our dives which was good.

Sunday, 20 March 2011

Red Sea CCR Trimix Training

I have just returned from a very quite Sharm El Sheikh where I was running a Mod 2 Inspiration course. We had a cracking week completing 10 dives on the course 8 of them on Trimix down to depths of 60m.

I had 2 students on the course who had previously done their Mod 1 course with me. We had a good week and the guys learn't a lot. However the highlight of the week was on the last day of diving after the course had finished when we went Scootering at Jackfish Alley in Ras Mohammed where we saw a couple of Black tip Reef Sharks some Turtles and a Dolphin.


Monday, 28 February 2011

S.S. Leopoldville



The 11,500 ton passenger ship Leopoldville was launched in 1927 at the John Cockerill S.A. Shipyard in Hoboken Belgium. Up until the second world war broke out she was used to carry passengers and goods to Congo. When the War broke out she was commissioned as a troop carrying ship, with some modifications and the fitting of necessary armament.

During a 4 year period from May 1940 until December 1944 she covered some 219,949 miles and transported 120,000 American soldiers to aid in the battle for Europe. On the 24th December 1944 at 0900 the Leopoldville left Southampton carrying 2,235 troops of the 66th Infantry division to Cherbourg. As the Leopoldville approached Cherbourg the U-486 laid in wait the U boat was equipped with a snorkel so was able to stay under the water and out of site to all on board. The U boat fired a torpedo and struck the port side of the Leopoldville, the damage caused was enormous.

An SOS was sent out and several ships came to the rescue. HMS Brilliant came along side the Leopoldville to extract the ships passengers and crew however many lives were lost due to the rough conditions causing the jumping men to miss and fall down into the icy water.

Seven Hundred and Sixty Three men died that night. The Supreme commander tried to keep everything quite in order to to keep up moral of the troops. Only in 1996 did the British Admiralty release documents that detailed what exactly happened. Since then a memorial has been erected at Fort Benning in the USA.

The Leopoldville now lies on her side in 60m, 5 miles from Cherbourg. She is still very much in tact and makes a cracking dive

For underwater video footage click on the link bellow.

Friday, 4 February 2011

Trimix Diving in the Channel 6-10th June


I have booked Skin Deeper out of Weymouth to dive some cracking dives in the Channel and off the coast of France. The cost for the boat will be around £4,500 (cost could go up or down due to fuel costs). The trip is open to CCR divers as we need to be self sufficient for gas fills. I am limiting the numbers to 10 divers to give us plenty of room for the extra kit we will need to take for the 5 days.

The Itinerary is

6th June Leopoldville then in to Cherbourg & nbsp;
7th June wreck north of Guernsey ( decide max depth ) then into Guernsey
8th June HMS Limbourne then in to Plomanach
9th June HMS Charybdis then in to Guernsey or Alderney
10th June dive Illinois then home

To book you place email me or give me a call. But as usual you are not on the boat unless you have paid your deposit. Deposit of £200 required.

Cheers

Kevin

Sunday, 30 January 2011

O'Three Goes Nitrox

Well done to 8 of O'Three's staff and friends who completed their TDI Understanding Nitrox course. We spent today learning all the aspects that make a safe Nitrox diver from Oxygen CNS tracking to analysing and marking of your dive cylinder.

Well done guys and see you all soon for longer bottom times!

Cheers

Kevin

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Busy few Days


Hi Guys,

Well the new year finally got going for me as far as diving was concerned on Sunday!

Martin D and Martin P both did their Mod 1 Inspiration courses with me. I must have done a good job as they both came back for more! On Sunday they started their Mod 2 course we covered all the theory aspects of the course and had a discussion on equipment configuration which gave them ideas on how best to set up their rebreathers so to carry all the equipment needed to safely dive to 60m. They now have the next few weeks to fettle with their kit and practice their in water skills before we all fly off to Sharm El Sheikh for some serious diving.

Monday saw me take on a role reversal rather than being the educator I was the student, as I was attending the first day of the Sentinel rebreather user course run by Phil Short at Vobster. We covered assembly and disassembly of the unit preparing the unit for diving and the pre dive checks required for safe rebreather diving. We also touched on the theory of the course which is very similar to the Inspiration. It was an excellent and an informative day. I will no doubt be spending more time with Phil and the Sentinel in the very near future.

Tuesday and again I was learning new tricks this time at Sea & Sea I had a days instruction in the Ocean Reef Full Face Mask (FFM). This was to enable me to go away and teach others that want to learn how to dive using the FFM. We spent several hours in the classroom learning how to set them up and the benefits of the FFM one of which is the ability to communicate with your buddy, students and the surface. We then moved to the pool and put all the theory into practice. Within a few minutes I had the FFM fitted and I was under the water we tried to flood them and all that happens is air is released and this keeps any water out. We did removal and replacement and with a quick press of the purge button the mask was empty of water. Lastly we tried out the underwater comms these didn't work to well due to the confines of the pool and the signals bouncing off the pool walls.

I have now got a couple of days doing paperwork getting all my HSE stuff in order, then on Sunday I am off to O'Three for the day to teach nine of the staff how to safely dive breathing Nitrox.

Cheers

Kevin