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Houston, TX 77401

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Open Circuit

June 26, 2008 by Eric Keibler

Deep Wreck Trip


Pam Radford & Kelly Plato
Pam Radford & Kelly Plato

We arrived in Key West at about 3:00 in the afternoon and found some of the other divers already loaded and waiting for our arrival.  Of course for Dave Kenny and I it was more than just loading equipment it was making sure the Gas Blending station was loaded and ready.  The final arrangements and filling would have to wait until after dinner at a local restaurant, the anchor.

 

 Captain Frank had intended to have the bank system and blending system completely set-up but the previous day was spent making sure the generator would work, remneung the temporary generator from the roof and replacing with the 54 bottles of gas that we would need for this 5 day trip. 

 


Terry DeWolf & Richie Kohler
Terry DeWolf & Richie Kohler

This left the final assembly to us.   The task was daunting because all of the diver’s bottles were wither full or contained the wrong mix of gas *mostly air and we would need trimix).  So the bottles were drained and the first fills – deco cylinders were started.  While Kenny and Dave filled these bottles, I continued plumbing the deco station, adding the quick disconnect fittings, changing some of the other fittings and getting ready for the next phase.  We were lucky that Capt. Frank had filled the bank with Trimix prior to leaving Houston.  This made this part of the job easier.  Of course Kenny and Dave still had to work

 

 Perhaps the best report of this trip comes from Captain Frank’s trip report:

 This trip ROCKED!!! Mike Barnett, Richie Kohler, the crew at Oceanic Ventures, and 12 loyal customers joined us for the Deep Week wreck trek off of Dry Tortugas and Key West. As with all plans, some things changed from the original, but holy cow, what a great week we had. We boarded as usual after a great meal at the Rusty Anchor, with at least 50 tons of rebreathers, doubles, stage bottles, deco bottles, 24 cylinders of helium, 30 cylinders of oxygen, 10 tubs of sorb, and a partridge in a pear tree. We set out at 9 PM for the wreck of the Rhein.

 

We arrived on-station at the Rhein at 0700 on the 17th. We threw a spot buoy, Mike and Richie swam down the up-line and tied into the wreck, and we were anchored above the wreck by 0800. The divers waited for Mike and Richie to come back up with a conditions report, then splashed onto the Rhein. The Rhein was sunk by Dutch and British warships before the US had entered World War II. A complete description of the sinking is available in Mike Barnett’s book Shipwrecks of the Sunshine State. Richard Mork shot some amazing video of a baitball above the wreck, and Richie returned with a square porthole to start the collecting. Most people did not come prepared to collect (no tools, no plastic bins), so a large pouty face was collectively seen. By the second dive, the crew was starting to get the program figured out regarding fills, etc. After pulling the grapple, we motored off to the Araby Maid.

 

The second day was spent on the Araby Maid. The Araby Maid was sunk in a collision at the turn of the last century, and was a wood over steel sailing ship. The weather was slightly choppy and the Spree was hanging by her stern to the seas making for a uncomfortable ride and a grumpy captain. Richie again started with a brass something or another, and, on his second dive, came up with a matching chamber pot, pitcher, and butter dish, probably from the captain’s cabin. OK, it isn’t a butter dish, I don’t know what it is, but it’s freakin’ cool. China fever had hit the Spree. So we moved onto the U-boat U-2513.

 

The U-2513 was sunk with Hedgehogs and Weapon Alfa’s (ASROCS for the old navy guys) in the 50’s during the cold war. We captured the 2513 from the Germans and brought it back to the US as a war prize. No collecting is allowed on the submarine as it is still owned by the US Navy, but it is penetrable, has cool placards on the torpedo tubes, has some monster goliath grouper and a big baitball on the conning tower, and is really really cool to boot. After 2 dives, we were supposed to go on to the S-16, but china fever had taken hold, and the vote was to return to the Araby Maid.

 

Day 4 found us anchored over the Araby Maid once again, with divers wanting to borrow gloves and prybars (no!). Even without, some real finds were discovered. Mike found a porthole with glass intact, Richie found a globe from a hurricane lantern, Terry found an intact red globe from a lantern of some sort, many brass door locks, hinges, and many pieces of catch and release junk were brought back to the Spree. The junk was released unharmed. Wade and the scooter got a little misplaced, but not lost!!

 

Day 5 found us at dawn on the USS Wilkes Barre off of Key West. When we arrived, conditions were slick calm, no current, and a beautiful anticipated dive. After dropping the anchor, current picked up to a knot and a half, and visibility dropped to about 25 feet. The anchor was hauled and the dive turned into a live boat. Some divers did not understand “drop hard” and missed the wreck altogether. Some hit the bow section, and some got to dive the whole thing (by Braille). After 1, most divers were ambivalent about a second dive, and the rest were drinking beer. Off to the dock we went, looking for more beer, as well as getting home a little earlier. The guests universally had a great time, most signed up for one of three trips planned for next year, including a rebreather-only trip to the Key West Ghost Fleet, max depth 420 feet.

 

Capt. Frank

M/V Spree

Stock Island, FL 

 

Not much more can be said except I cannot wait until next year.  Maybe I can even dice more!

Filed Under: Digital, Dry Tortugas, Open Circuit, Photography, Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Activities, Scuba Diving Equipment, Travel, Trimix, Underwater, Wreck Diving

June 17, 2008 by Eric Keibler

Wreck Crawl

Our Deep Wreck Charter begins on Monday and you can come into Key West on Sunday evening or Monday morning.  Here was an opportunity to do some more diving and maximize the weekend.  Of course most of the diving around the keys is shallow reef diving which did not sound like a way to start our Dry Tortugas wreck adventure.  But, we could do some more wreck diving…this sounds like the perfect fit.  Of course getting everything put in place for such an adventure took advanced dive planning and coordination.

 

The only way any of this made sense is if we used the early dives as a tune-up for the more advanced dives in the Dry Tortugas.  This meant that everyone needed their doubles, decompression cylinders, or rebreather cylinders and. bailout cylinders along with appropriate amounts of absorbent.

 

Thanks to Barney Corbin, who traveled to Florida over Memorial Day delivering our cylinders and the ever friendly UPS divers who delivered copious amounts of sorb, cartridges and Dave’s dry suit. We were set.

 

Our diving adventures for this part of the trip were with Conch Divers from Tavernier Florida.  They operate two boats and offer Technical as well as recreational charters.  We had 9 divers so we were able to charter our own boat.

 

The first day, Pam Radford, Geoff Streitel, Ron Hicks, Dave Snyder, Terry DeWolf, Wade Sparks, Jess Stark and your’s truly all decended on one of Florida’s premier recreational wrecks – The USS Speigel Grove and artificial wreck sunk in the late 90’s.  Of course, we were not doing it like most divers.  Our intent was to dive it on a more technical basis – one long dive!

 

We all jumped in and as we sank down the mooring ball, the ship came into sight.  Our group would spend the next 90to 120 minutes exploring the both the inside and outside of the ship.  Diving to below the decks, through the superstructure, down to the engine room through the galley, crews quarters, officer’s mess, and other spaces our group explored the vessel ending in the shallows of the wreck and then up the mooring bal back to our waiting boat.

 

The next day Jerry Kiselwinski joined us for our dive on the USS Duane, a Coast Guard Cutter.  This ship rests on her side but in clear water.  More penetrations are available for the group, especially by the bore and tunnel crew.  Another 90-129 minutes passed underwater and then after a quick lunch, a chance to refill the OC bottles and it was off the USS Bibb, the sister ship of the USS Duane, which sits upright.  The penetrations continued and another two hours underwater clicked away.

 

We have one more dive before we zip down to Key West to meet up the M/V Spree.  This morning’s dive is on the Eagle, another ship resting on her side.  The intrepid divers whiled away another 120 minutes exploring this wreck and fine tuning their equipment and diving style before the deep diving begins.  Another 120 minutes underwater.

 

After the dive, we checked out of the condominiums, loaded the trucks and headed out for Key West where the MV Spree and the remainder of our group awaits our arrival.

Filed Under: Dry Tortugas, Open Circuit, Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Activities, Scuba Diving Equipment, Travel, Trimix, Wreck Diving

April 29, 2008 by Eric Keibler

DUI Demo Days

 


Chef Eric
Chef Eric
 

It is hard to believe it has been a year since we were last here for a rebreather confined water for Mark Conrad, Wade Sparks and Terry DeWolf.  But here we are again for the DUI Demo Days at Lake Travis and this year the water level is up to a reasonable level. 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

his year I was joined by a number of our staff including Dive Mom herself, Pat Croll, Vernon Dittrich, Bob Sloan and Wade Sparks.  Vernon and Pat were finishing a class, And I had scheduled this weekend as a practice session and a chance to get some skills out of the way for our Grand Cayman and Inner Space experiences.  Joining me for this session were CCR Normoxic Trimix students Harvey Sisco and Matt Booth.

 Saturday found most of us in the water except for Wade who became the cook for the day, keeping all of the


Chef Wade
Chef Wade

 participants well fed.  Vernon and Pat ran their students through their drills and mine were troopers as well, accomplishing most of the skills leaving only a few for our later dives.

Sunday found me with a plugged up head and students who had accomplished a lot the previous day.  Matt had to teach a class of his own, so Wade and Harvey went diving so Harvey could continue working on his trim.   This left me with Wade’s job from the previous day – that’s right Chef for a day.  Of course, during the night a storm blew in, dumped a lot of rain which continued the next morning.  This made cooking more ao a challenge although it had slowed to a slight drizzle.   The biggest challenge was sinking in the mud in front of the grill or walking around with 20 pounds of Texas Clay caked to my feet.
 

 

All-in-all we had a great time and the event was a success.  On top of that, we all had a good time.       

 

 

 

Filed Under: Demo Days, Dry Suit Diving, Local Diving, Open Circuit, Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Activities, Scuba Diving Equipment, Travel

November 17, 2007 by Eric Keibler

Cold Water & 101 Divers

Diver Exiting Water At Demo DaysDiver Exiting Water At Demo Days“45 minutes, too long, we need more staff in the water.”  These were not the words or a deep water recovery supervisor but the staff at DUI’s Demo Days in Terrill Texas.  With a 101 divers coming through the tent on Saturday, there are never enough instructors in the water to take in-experienced divers on a dry-suit demo and tour.   Pat Outfitting a DiverPat Outfitting a Diver
Pat Outfitting a DiverVernon, Wade Pat and I spent the day up at Clear Springs Scuba Park for the annual DUI Demo Days. What a great event.  As Ann likes to say, where else can you  try out over $3,000 in equipment, get a hat and eat a hamburger lunch all for $8.00.  For an additional $8.00 you can eat dinner and be eligible for numerous prizes from DUI, Diversatea and DAN. 
Mneung from tent duty to the water took all of 2 hours. and the call for more help trumped the schedule so carefully put together from “volunteers” early in the morning.  Wade and Pat, being Diver Coordinators add to the instructors numbers and soon they were headed out to show the new dry suit divers challenges of dry suit diving while searching perch and bass (elusive with all of the bubble noise emitted by the divers)  I entered the water a short time later and was not able to get out of the water until 5:00 pm a full 5 hours later.  Luckily I grabbed a burger before jumping in.
Vernon also completed a dry suit open water for Jerry Keiselwysky who plans on getting his own dry suit.  Welcome to the club Jerry!
Of course riding up and back with Pat awarded him the privilege of listening to me talk about the dive industry and prying questions.  To top all of this off, he shared a hotel room with me and found out what Dave already knew – snoring!  Pat was a good sport and didn’t complain at all. Of course the real key is whether he will ever share a room with me again. It was a great weekend and we had a good time.
small-wade-fitting-divers-2.jpgIf you see them, ask Wade and Vernon about their Boyle’s Law test…

Filed Under: Demo Days, Open Circuit, Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Equipment Tagged With: demo, DUI, scuba

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Phone: 713-523-DIVE (3483)

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People choose their friends carefully just as they should choose their adventure partners and Scuba Diving Instructors.  Oceanic Ventures is the premier scuba dive shop in Houston, Texas, and the Southwest because of our exceptional service and our sense of adventure.  In talking with our clients and friends, people choose us for a number of reasons such as: Passion – We love what we do and we want to share the beauty and excitement of the underwater world with everyone we meet. Caring- Our clients tell us they love us because we truly care about people and strive to make their scuba diving experiences safe, fun and enjoyable. Professional – Our staff members are the … [Read more …]

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