A Solo Dive on Bari Reef
[Click on each image to see an
enlargement.]
With Many thanks to the staff of Bonaire Dive and Adventure, Roger, Mike, Hank, Jorge, E.T., Valeria, Chicha, Marnix, and especially resident biologist and reef-restorer Jerry Ligon
and to Tim Peters, of Fisheye Photo, a brilliant and generous underwater photographer and teacher to whom I owe any photographic success!
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Alone, I exult in slow, methodical, loving preparation. I please myself by remembering the complicated threading pattern of the strap that locks my tank and the smaller, spare “pony bottle” to my BC. I make sure it’s buckled on as tightly as possible. Having a tank get loose and float up behind me is a small problem if I have a companion to see it and reattach it for me. But alone, a loose tank could trigger a cascade of events—loss of buoyancy control, twisted hoses—that I don’t want to consider. I attach the first stage of my regulator to the tank and praise the apparatus that does the simple, essential job of reducing the unmanageable pressure of expanding gas to a level that’s breathable. With a stainless steel clip, I secure the supple hose that carries the air to the second stage of the regulator. This diaphragm enclosed in hard plastic has a mouthpiece shaped to my own teeth. In the water, it’s as comfortable as a pair of well worn hiking boots, as familiar as a pair of glasses. Yet, until its invention, diving as we know it was not possible. Like the wheel, the stirrup, the sail and the compass, it’s a modest device that opened a vast world to human beings. And, like all these inventions, it has a demonic side. It has made the plunder of fish, coral and antiquities much easier. It has brought us with all our conflicting impulses toward stewardship or careless exploitation into a world that was once fairly safe from us. |
More Bonaire Photos
California Collection
Hawaii Collection
