Hello- Finally!
Hello- Finally!
We were introduced to and encouraged to sign up with the NWDC by John & Valerie after they came to Nootka Sound to check out the scenery. After signing up a couple of weeks ago and checking out the way things seemed to work I figured it was time to sit down and introduce myself to everybody instead of sneaking around in the background;-}
I took my first dive course in Terrace B.C. in 1976-geez that makes me feel kind'a old. Made a couple dives and then like a teenager who is going to change the world, I didn't have the time to do any diving for a couple of years- university and beer seemed to get in the way. After deciding that being a school teacher wasn't for me the Canadian navy appeared to be the way to go and thus my serious entry in the diving world. I spent a few years with the Fleet Diving Unit in Victoria and learned how the working world of diving operated. The daily chores of Navy life started to wear thin so my new bride, Jude, and I decided it was time to hit the road and explore the coast via sail boat. After spending 3-4 years beating around we thought it was time to join the world of responsible adults and moved ashore and got real jobs until what seemed like an eternity later we felt it was time to go back to being irresponsible boat people, so we sold our house, bought another boat and started wandering again, with our 9 year old son. We arrived in Tahsis in 1999 to visit some longtime friends and lo & behold, Nootka Sound got her teeth into us and we haven't gotten around to leaving. This is when I started to 'rec dive' again! It was really amazing the number critters there were to see when you started slowing down to look. That "let's get in, get the job done and get out" mentality slowly started to melt away and now I've even started to log my dives!
While I was working on a couple of the local tugs and studying to become a paramedic, Jude (who keeps me organised and focused) and I decided that Nootka Sound needed another active dive charter operater and thus started our new adventure. The local dive operator, Bart Van Herwaarden & Nootka Sound Charters, helped us get started and we were looking forward to working with him when he suddenly passed away and left us out here on our own. We opened our doors in August of 2005 and the learning curve has been extremely steep but with the help of some 'diving fanatics' that we've met and dove with over the last two years things are starting to fall into the groove:) Our village is pretty small and divers are few and far between so I certified as an instructor and we are now in the process of putting a new batch of enthusiastic divers in the water. I could go on and on about how great the diving is here but John and Valerie have said it much better than I could with the pictures and comments they have posted on Nootka Sound.
Well, enough of me going on and on, so if you ever think you'd like to visit Nootka Sound don't hesitate to give us a call cuz we love to meet new friends!
I took my first dive course in Terrace B.C. in 1976-geez that makes me feel kind'a old. Made a couple dives and then like a teenager who is going to change the world, I didn't have the time to do any diving for a couple of years- university and beer seemed to get in the way. After deciding that being a school teacher wasn't for me the Canadian navy appeared to be the way to go and thus my serious entry in the diving world. I spent a few years with the Fleet Diving Unit in Victoria and learned how the working world of diving operated. The daily chores of Navy life started to wear thin so my new bride, Jude, and I decided it was time to hit the road and explore the coast via sail boat. After spending 3-4 years beating around we thought it was time to join the world of responsible adults and moved ashore and got real jobs until what seemed like an eternity later we felt it was time to go back to being irresponsible boat people, so we sold our house, bought another boat and started wandering again, with our 9 year old son. We arrived in Tahsis in 1999 to visit some longtime friends and lo & behold, Nootka Sound got her teeth into us and we haven't gotten around to leaving. This is when I started to 'rec dive' again! It was really amazing the number critters there were to see when you started slowing down to look. That "let's get in, get the job done and get out" mentality slowly started to melt away and now I've even started to log my dives!
While I was working on a couple of the local tugs and studying to become a paramedic, Jude (who keeps me organised and focused) and I decided that Nootka Sound needed another active dive charter operater and thus started our new adventure. The local dive operator, Bart Van Herwaarden & Nootka Sound Charters, helped us get started and we were looking forward to working with him when he suddenly passed away and left us out here on our own. We opened our doors in August of 2005 and the learning curve has been extremely steep but with the help of some 'diving fanatics' that we've met and dove with over the last two years things are starting to fall into the groove:) Our village is pretty small and divers are few and far between so I certified as an instructor and we are now in the process of putting a new batch of enthusiastic divers in the water. I could go on and on about how great the diving is here but John and Valerie have said it much better than I could with the pictures and comments they have posted on Nootka Sound.
Well, enough of me going on and on, so if you ever think you'd like to visit Nootka Sound don't hesitate to give us a call cuz we love to meet new friends!
- nwscubamom
- I've Got Gills
- Posts: 2315
- Joined: Tue Mar 14, 2006 11:13 am
Hi Scott and welcome!
I have fond memories of Tahsis and Nootka sound - 620 dives ago, I did dives #20 - #25 there at Otter Point, Mozino Point and the Gardens. I was a brand new diver and that was my very first dive trip! We dove with Bart - and we're so sorry to hear of his passing. :(
I was very excited to hear you guys are going to carry on the business there! We are making plans to come pay you a visit in spring of 2008
Nootka Sound was actually the place where I got started on all of my Fish ID stuff - look where that got me! I took photos with my new underwater camera on that trip, and when I got back, attempted with the help of my instructor, to figure out what I had just seen. Lion Nudibranchs, Cloud Sponge, Strawberry Anemone, Chimney Sponge, Bat Stars, oodles of Rockfish, etc. Wow, amazing color and life!
To this day, the photos I took of the Cloud Sponge back in March of 2000 are the ones I use in the REEF invertebrate ID curriculum!
- Janna
I have fond memories of Tahsis and Nootka sound - 620 dives ago, I did dives #20 - #25 there at Otter Point, Mozino Point and the Gardens. I was a brand new diver and that was my very first dive trip! We dove with Bart - and we're so sorry to hear of his passing. :(
I was very excited to hear you guys are going to carry on the business there! We are making plans to come pay you a visit in spring of 2008
Nootka Sound was actually the place where I got started on all of my Fish ID stuff - look where that got me! I took photos with my new underwater camera on that trip, and when I got back, attempted with the help of my instructor, to figure out what I had just seen. Lion Nudibranchs, Cloud Sponge, Strawberry Anemone, Chimney Sponge, Bat Stars, oodles of Rockfish, etc. Wow, amazing color and life!
To this day, the photos I took of the Cloud Sponge back in March of 2000 are the ones I use in the REEF invertebrate ID curriculum!
- Janna
Janna Nichols
My underwater photo galleries
REEF Citizen Science Program Manager
Seen any cool critters lately?
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My underwater photo galleries
REEF Citizen Science Program Manager
Seen any cool critters lately?
><((((°>
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- Joshua Smith
- I've Got Gills
- Posts: 10250
- Joined: Mon Apr 03, 2006 9:32 pm
Hi, Scott! Welcome to the NWDC!
So, you let John dive off your boat? John RAWLINGS? Wow. I'm impressed- you're a braver man than I am! I gave him a ride in my van once, and, well, let's just say that my insurance provider refused to honor my claim, had to pay the guy at the scrap yard to crush it for me..... no way I'd let him near my boat, if I had one!
Just kidding, obviously! I was lucky enough to see quite a few of the pictures John took up there, and they really blew my mind- it looks amazing, both above and below the water- I hope I can come up there next year!
So, you let John dive off your boat? John RAWLINGS? Wow. I'm impressed- you're a braver man than I am! I gave him a ride in my van once, and, well, let's just say that my insurance provider refused to honor my claim, had to pay the guy at the scrap yard to crush it for me..... no way I'd let him near my boat, if I had one!
Just kidding, obviously! I was lucky enough to see quite a few of the pictures John took up there, and they really blew my mind- it looks amazing, both above and below the water- I hope I can come up there next year!
Maritime Documentation Society
"To venture into the terrible loneliness, one must have something greater than greed. Love. One needs love for life, for intrigue, for mystery."
"To venture into the terrible loneliness, one must have something greater than greed. Love. One needs love for life, for intrigue, for mystery."
- John Rawlings
- I've Got Gills
- Posts: 5781
- Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 8:00 am
The NERVE of her.....leaving our cold, delightful PNW waters for sunny Florida. Treason....that's what it is....TREASON!
Welcome, Scott!!!! We had SUCH a great time diving and exploring with you up yonder in Nootka Sound. Anyone that hasn't yet seen Valerie's shots from the trip is in for a treat: http://www.nwdiveclub.com/viewtopic.php?t=3065
I hope that many more of our club members will be able to meet and dive with you as well someday.
I thought you told me that you had to flee to Tahsis after an abortive attempt to overthrow the state government of Hawaii by military force! That wasn't you? sorry....my bad....I get my dive operators mixed up.....
- John
Welcome, Scott!!!! We had SUCH a great time diving and exploring with you up yonder in Nootka Sound. Anyone that hasn't yet seen Valerie's shots from the trip is in for a treat: http://www.nwdiveclub.com/viewtopic.php?t=3065
I hope that many more of our club members will be able to meet and dive with you as well someday.
I thought you told me that you had to flee to Tahsis after an abortive attempt to overthrow the state government of Hawaii by military force! That wasn't you? sorry....my bad....I get my dive operators mixed up.....
- John
“Don’t pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he’ll just kill you.”
http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com
http://johnrawlings.smugmug.com/
http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com
http://johnrawlings.smugmug.com/
- John Rawlings
- I've Got Gills
- Posts: 5781
- Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 8:00 am
Ahem.....it was TWO inches!Scott wrote:Poor John Rawlings, sure looks like he gets picked on a lot. But then again he was the the guy who stood on the back deck of the boat and warmed up the whole sound and raised the water level an inch and a half.
I wish that people would get their facts straight! Grumble....grumble....grumble....
- John
“Don’t pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he’ll just kill you.”
http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com
http://johnrawlings.smugmug.com/
http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com
http://johnrawlings.smugmug.com/
Yeah, I'm a huge James Bond fan, and in Sean Connery's Thunderball (1965) they have the famous underwater war scene. (If anyone hasn't seen this movie, WATCH IT! It's incredible!) I was amazed to see not a single BCD, just weight belts and straps to hold the tanks. Those guys are fricking nuts!jackieg wrote:Seth dear...they barely had electricity back then, wrote notes on stone tablets, etc. so no....no BCD. The photo I have of my first class shows the classic tan harness straps holding the tank. No flotation, no pockets, no gadgets...just tank and straps. Simple, eh?
So, how did you control buoyancy at depth? Hold a really deep breath? Pick up a rock?