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Blog

February 6, 2025 by Carl Strange

Underway, the South Pacific Bekons and a Dream of a Lifetime begins (#4)

29 May 2002 – Underway to the Marquesas 02 22S / 092 37 W  

A large swell started curving into the anchorage off the tiny town of Puerto Villamil, Galapagos. The small anchorage was fairly crowded inside the broken rim of a small volcano top. The fringing volcanic rock broke the swell when exposed, but at high tide the waves came right over the rocks and we rolled worse than at sea. Of course, high tide came in the middle of the night and we slept fitfully, spread eagle and hanging onto our pillows to keep from rolling out of bed. We tolerated these conditions and await the weekly supply ship to bring fresh vegetables. Thankfully, the ship arrived on schedule, and Monday was spent shopping and storing. Noon Tuesday, we escaped the anchorage for the relatively calm of the open ocean.
 
Clearing an island with the surrounding reefs and rocks, keeps all of us on deck. The helm area is cluttered with a chart, dividers, triangles and a hand bearing compass. We carefully plot our course and shoot bearings on obvious landmarks. GPS is accurate to a handful of meters these days but the charts haven’t all been corrected yet – especially the old, out-of-date charts most cruisers carry. It does little good to know exactly where you are if the island is a mile from where it’s charted. The winds were light and the sea calm so we had great conditions for spotting sea life around the Galapagos. Over a period of a couple of hours we saw numerous turtles, a couple of sharks including a small hammerhead. Near the current line we spied the usual collection of plastic bottles, sticks and a large black plastic tarp. We noticed a few more tarps as we motored and worried about wrapping one around the prop. As we neared a group of three, one raised a wing revealing a white underbody. Just as we realized these were huge Manta Rays the wing slapped on the water splashing the boat and us. It was wonderful watching the rays swim as we passed.
 
It’s now Wednesday morning. S/V Enchante’ is moving along nicely in perfect sailing conditions – a cool breeze of 12-15 knots, clear skies, broad reaching in a long gentle swell with a knot of a favorable current, making 7 – 7.5 knots over the ground. Our favorite lure is trolling behind us but no fish yet. Thank goodness since the ice box and freezer are full of prepared meals for the first few days.
 
We meet twice daily on a SSB radio net with boats in the area. Several of them departed days ahead of us, one on the same day and more to follow. The spread of boats will share weather information, lie about the fish they’ve caught and offer help should someone have a problem. It’s also nice to know others are sitting in their cockpits at 4 AM going through the same struggle to stay awake.
 
Our sleep periods will soon adjust to the two hour watch schedules and even I will fall asleep as soon as my head hits the pillow. The daily routine continues and Rebecca still has school five days a week. This is a long, 20-25 day voyage that we’ve dreamed about for years. Making this trip is a dream come true!

29 May 2002 – Underway to the Marquesas 02 22S / 092 37 W

A large swell started curving into the anchorage off the tiny town of Puerto Villamil, Galapagos. The small anchorage, inside the broken rim of a small volcano top, was fairly crowded. The fringing volcanic rock broke the swell when exposed, but at high tide the waves came right over the rocks and we rolled worse than at sea. Of course, high tide came in the middle of the night and we slept fitfully, spread eagle and hanging onto our pillows to keep from rolling out of bed. We tolerated these conditions, waiting for the weekly supply ship to bring fresh vegetables. Thankfully, the ship arrived on schedule, and Monday was spent shopping and storing. Noon Tuesday we escaped the anchorage for the relatively calm of the open ocean.
 
Clearing an island with the surrounding reefs and rocks, keeps all of us on deck. The helm area is cluttered with a chart, dividers, triangles and a hand bearing compass. We carefully plot our course and shoot bearings on obvious landmarks. GPS is accurate to a handful of meters these days but the charts haven’t all been corrected yet – especially the old, out-of-date charts most cruisers carry. It does little good to know exactly where you are if the island is a mile from where it’s charted. The winds were light and the sea calm so we had great conditions for spotting sea life around the Galapagos. Over a period of a couple of hours we saw numerous turtles, a couple of sharks including a small hammerhead. Near the current line we spied the usual collection of plastic bottles, sticks and a large black plastic tarp. We noticed a few more tarps as we motored and worried about wrapping one around the prop. As we neared a group of three, one raised a wing revealing a white underbody. Just as we realized these were huge Manta Rays the wing slapped on the water splashing the boat and us. It was wonderful watching the rays swim as we passed.
 
It’s now Wednesday morning. S/V Enchante’ is moving along nicely in perfect sailing conditions – a cool breeze of 12-15 knots, clear skies, broad reaching in a long gentle swell with a knot of a favorable current, making 7 – 7.5 knots over the ground. Our favorite lure is trolling behind us, but no fish yet. Thank goodness, since the ice box and freezer are full of prepared meals for the first few days.
 
We meet twice daily on a SSB radio net with boats in the area. Several of them departed days ahead of us, one on the same day and more to follow. The spread of boats will share weather information, lie about the fish they’ve caught, and offer help should someone have a problem. It’s also nice to know others are sitting in their cockpits at 4 AM, going through the same struggle to stay awake.
 
Our sleep periods will soon adjust to the two-hour watch schedules, and even I will fall asleep when my head hits the pillow. The daily routine continues, and Rebecca still has school five days a week. This is a long, 20-25 day voyage we’ve dreamed about for years. Making this trip is a dream come true!

31 May 2002

[In a conversation with Carl about his current sail, he had some words of advice for some mutual friends planning on joining the cruising life in the next year as well as for Ann and me] You could fly to the Society Islands (think Bora Bora) and charter a boat for a week or so. It would give you a taste of the South Pacific and motivate you not to fool around too long in the US, Bahamas, or Caribbean. I know this sounds odd coming from us [remember Carl spent 3 years in the Bonaire and Venezuela region of the Caribbean], but remember we were headed for the Canal when we first learned about Rebecca almost six years ago. Thank goodness we’re finally here!
 
Sailing conditions couldn’t be better – broad reaching with 12-15 knots and a gentle swell. We’re hundreds of miles from any significant land mass, and the winds have settled into a consistent pattern undisturbed by thermals, mountains, etc.
 
Three days out and on schedule for a 20-day passage – 25 is more likely when it’s all over with.
 
 

Filed Under: Pacific, Sailing, Uncategorized Tagged With: French Polynesia, Marquesas, pacific, Sailing, Strange Chronicles, The Strange Chronicles

February 4, 2025 by Eric Keibler

I Think My Drysuit is Leaking

Draining the Water From Her Suit in Antarctica (Photo courtesy of Marc Nahmias)

So you think you are having a difficult day? Jesse Cancelmo was recently in photographing and diving in Antarctica and he relayed a story to us…

“One of the divers in our zodiac failed to snug up her drysuit zipper completely and after going in and establishing her buoyancy also confirmed a leak. But instead of aborting the dive, she joined her buddy for a 30 minute tour in 29 degree Fahrenheit water.

Upon surfacing, she had a water level in her suit up to her waist. The trooper she was, she simply asked for help draining her suit. After draining her suit I looked at her face and it was a combination of crimson red and blotches of black & blue. She was also shivering and looked terrible. The zodiac driver wanted to take us on a tour before going back to the boat and I was really concerned for her and suggested we go back right away. She spoke up and said, “no, I’m fine.” as she shivered like crazy. When I pointed out her shivering and face-coloring, others who had been to Antarctica before said, “Don’t worry, if she doesn’t shiver is when there’s a problem.”

So we toured for another 15 mins and then went back to the boat. This was the first dive in the morning. I figured for sure after this experience she would never show up for the afternoon dive but I was wrong. She was able to get another drysuit and a complete dry set of undergarments and she made the afternoon dive. I’ll say again, she was a real trooper!

Dive Mom and Madison can both attest that the water is cold in Antarctica and the goal is to manage the water and keep as much of it outside of your suit. But this experience demonstrates that the proper undergarments can help you manage the cold, even if you have a leak. It also demonstrates that you can withstand the cold for a period of time. In this case thirty minutes underwater and fifteen minutes on a surface boat tour. You just have to keep thinking positively!”

The other thing you can learn is that it is important to check all of your seals and the zipper before entering the water. In the case of a tizip plastic zipper, they are different from metal-neoprene zippers also used in drysuits. In zipping a metal-neoprene zipper you pull the slide all of the way to the stop at the end of the zipper. This is the fully closed position. In contrast, the TiZip plastic zippers pull all the way to the stop and then onto the solid piece at the end where it is in its fully closed position. What happens many times is that your buddy is familiar with one type of zipper and not with the one you have and he/she believe it is closed but in reality, it needs to be pulled just a bit more.

A buddy check is important but equally important is helping one another become familiar with the equipment so that the check is more complete. This will help you have a safer and more enjoyable dive.

Filed Under: Antarctic, Equipment Tagged With: Antarctica, dry suit, drysuit

January 31, 2025 by Eric Keibler

Photo Hint – Keep Alert, Position Yourself for the Best Shot

By Tobias Friedrich

Being alert and focused underwater not only adds safety and wellbeing to your dive, but also gives you the best results with your underwater camera. When you can see an animal or a school of fish early or in the distance, you can position yourself as best as possible to get a better shot of the subject.

Equipment: SportDiver housing with iPhone 12 Pro Max using 0.5x iPhone Lens

If you’d like a copy of the above underwater image, please email: lindsay@pioneer-research.com

SportDiver Underwater Smartphone Housing

The SportDiver underwater housing works with iPhone® 7 through the latest 13 Pro Max and most Android phones.

Check if a phone fits and is compatible here. The SportDiver includes a color correcting red filter that brings back lost underwater colors. The best way to get breathtaking images and brilliant video underwater with your phone is with Sea Dragon Photo/Video Lights or the complete SportDiver Pro 2500 smartphone housing & photo-video light set.

Sea Dragon 3000SF Pro Dual Beam

SL679

Try the NEW SL554 Micro 3.0 Pro Dual Beam Set! The compact Sea Dragon 3000SF Pro Dual Beam Photo-Video light has a large COB LED, delivering 3000 lumens in an even 120° wide beam. The light offers an impressive 90 CRI (color rendering index) with a proprietary COB LED array that replicates natural sunlight (A CRI of 100 would be just like natural sunlight). With a simple one-button push, the underwater photographer can switch from the wide 120° beam to a narrow 1500 lumen 15° spot beam. For imaging, the spot beam offers many creative opportunities such as to create a narrowly focused snoot or stage spotlight effect.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Sea Dragon, SeaLife Cameras, underwater photography

January 24, 2025 by Eric Keibler

Photo Hint – Composition for Oceanic Mantas

By Tobias Friedrich

Capturing Oceanic Mantas with a camera is something really special. Sometimes the Mantas swim in a very nice formation together, and you’ll want to be ready and press the shutter at the right moment, especially when the formation is separated and the rays are not overlapping each other.

Equipment: SeaLife SportDiver Housing with iPhone 12 Pro Max using 0.5x iPhone Lens

If you’d like a copy of the above underwater image, please email: lindsay@pioneer-research.com

SportDiver Underwater Smartphone Housing

SL400-U  Available now!

The SportDiver underwater housing works with iPhone® 7 through the latest 13 Pro Max and most Android phones. Check if a phone fits and is compatible here. The SportDiver includes a color correcting red filter that brings back lost underwater colors. The best way to get breathtaking images and brilliant video underwater with your phone is with the Sea Dragon 3000F or the complete SportDiver Pro 2500 smartphone housing & photo-video light set.

Sea Dragon 3000SF Pro Dual Beam

SL679 Available Now! The compact Sea Dragon 3000SF Pro Dual Beam Photo-Video light has a large COB LED, delivering 3000 lumens in an even 120° wide beam. The light offers an impressive 90 CRI (color rendering index) with a proprietary COB LED array that replicates natural sunlight (A CRI of 100 would be just like natural sunlight). With a simple one-button push, the underwater photographer can switch from the wide 120° beam to a narrow 1500 lumen 15° spot beam. For imaging, the spot beam offers many creative opportunities such as to create a narrowly focused snoot or stage spotlight effect.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Sea Dragon, SeaLife Cameras, underwater photography

January 17, 2025 by Eric Keibler

Photo Hint – Using Lights to Capture the Best Color

By Tobias Friedrich

It’s very important when underwater to compensate for the missing illumination from the sun. Using high-performance underwater lighting like the Sea Dragon lights, the powerful and color-friendly lights will illuminate the missing red and orange colors from the beautiful reefs for your eyes and your camera. The closer you are to the corals, the better the colors will come out.

Equipment: SeaLife Micro 3.0, Sea Dragon 3000F

Settings: Deep Water White Balance

If you’d like a copy of the above underwater image, please email: lindsay@pioneer-research.com

SeaLife Micro 3.0 Pro 3000 Set

SL552 – Available now! Ideal for colorful, sharp stills and videos, the Micro 3.0 Pro 3000 Set includes the Sea Dragon 3000F Photo-Video Light, Micro 3.0 Camera, Flex-Connect Single Tray and Grip for optimal stability and handling. The SeaLife Micro 3.0 camera offers easy set-up with automatic and manual image setting options. The Sea Dragon 3000F Light has a Color Rendering Index of 80, with a 5000k color temperature to simulate natural sunlight. Sea Dragon Photo/Video Lightsreveal beautiful colors in underwater photos and videos.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Sea Dragon, SeaLife Cameras, underwater photography

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