Archive for the ‘Technical Diving’ Category

First Female Advanced Nitrox Diver at TSD TEC

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

We would like to warmly congratulate Natasha Green who today became the first female to certify as an IANTD Advanced Nitrox Diver at TSD TEC!

I first chatted with Natasha on New Year’s Eve in Oscar’s Pub, at which time although she was the antithesis of a technical diver adorned in pink feather boas and a tiara, she was getting very excited about the course which she had planned for a long time.

Natasha in her feather boa.

Natasha in her feather boa. OK, you've got me, it's not Natasha, it's Rich

Natasha, Sian and Clare, the terrible trio from England, have been a delight to have around the diveshop ever since and certainly gave Mike a run for his money when they took the PADI Thresher Shark Diver Specialty Course with him last week.

But due credit to her, when it was time to knuckle down and take things a little more seriously, Natasha came through with flying colors.

She sailed through the academics in one day.  “Circle T?” she asked, “Is it that easy?”

The second day brought the first confined session, after which Trevor decided it was about time he retired.

But that afternoon, they both got straight back on their respective horses– or should I say straight back into their twin sets – and the dive was a complete turnaround.

Nat and Trev at the Tapilon WWII Wreck

Nat and Trev at the Tapilon WWII Wreck

Her first two deeper dives were on the Tapilon WWII Wreck and another on Monad.  Her skills improved with each dive and after an eternity of practicing SMB deployment, valve drills, gas switches and gas shares more times than either of them cares to remember, she was finally ready for her last dive, which she performed perfectly.

As if that wasn’t enough, it was a great dive at Monad that afternoon with 2 whitetips, 3 breaching thresher sharks, a school of massive tuna and dolphins!

Big BIG smiles when she got back.

Technical diving

Congratulations Nat!

Next up for Nat – Hammerheads on Thursday!

August at TSD

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

August was a bit of a rollercoaster month at TSD going from very quiet to hugely busy and back again.

Another IDC started on August 1 so a lot of last minute preparations were being made by all our candidates. Then it was full on classroom and in-water work for them for the next 10 days. But they all did really well and passed with flying colors.

A moment of relaxation between IDC sessions

A moment of relaxation between IDC sessions

Tech gear eveywhere taking over the shop!

Tech gear everywhere taking over the shop!

Then we had “TSD TEC Week”. The shop was inundated with all things tec. Rebreathers and twin sets were the order of the day and everyone was doing their own thing, but it all worked out quite well. Of course being tekkies, they dived all our wrecks, and Matt and Dave even saw a hammerhead shark at 60 meters!

Another Dave was here at the same time, also with a rebreather, just to really confuse things. He came with his massive HD camera, and was shooting a documentary of TSD and the island. I think he was possibly carrying more kit than I have ever seen on a diver.

For the first two weeks of August, the weather decided to be particularly uncooperative, and although we went diving every day, we had to transport all the gear and divers by motorcycle to the other side of the island. Still this added a sense of adventure to things.

Trevor and Mike coming back from their tec dive

Trevor and Mike coming back from their tec dive

Trevor and Mike FINALLY got out to dive the Pioneer after about 5 aborted attempts due to bad weather, strong currents etc. It was Mike’s first dive on the WWII wreck and he loved it. The trimix came in very handy to ensure they spent enough time on the wreck and made sure they weren’t too narked at 55 meters to appreciate what they were seeing.

August was quite the month for long termers coming and going and the TSD community shrank and grew accordingly. John, Kim, Dom and Mark sadly left, but to replace them we have Carley, Tony, Antoine, Yvette and Fred.

Welcome to you all!

Tec again

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Trevor returned from Puerto Galera having completed a series of tech dives in preparation for his upcoming search for wrecks and sharks in Malapascuan waters. His deepest was a dive to 90 meters on an industrial strength DPV. Boys and their toys – zooming round the canyons like teenagers….

THIRD New Dive Site!

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Strictly speaking this is not really a new dive site. We have known about it since we first arrived on Malapascua Island, but have never dived it before. The PIONEER WRECK is a WWII wreck very close to Malapascua Island. At 54 meters it is beyond the safe limits of recreational and air diving. As far as we know, no-one else dives there.

But today after weeks of problems with suppliers, we FINALLY managed to fill our twin sets with helium to do our first ever TRIMIX dive at TSD!!!

As we (Andrea and Trevor) made our way out to the dive site, the excitement was building. We have been wanting to dive this wreck for 5 years and it has turned into something of a mythological dive site for us, the stuff of legends, our Atlantis.

We kitted up on the boat, tested our air and checked it was indeed trimix by squeaking to each other in our high-pitched helium-laced voices.

As we made our descent, the dark leapt up to meet us, and I wished I had brought my faithful Kowalski. Down and down we went, 10 meters, 20 meters, 30 meters, 40 meters. When was the dark going to end? Would the bottom ever appear? Did we even have the right place? Was this dark mass of nothing really worth the months of effort that had gone into making this dive possible?

Then at about 42 meters I spotted a white patch below me. All of a sudden the visibility cleared and a whole coral encrusted wreck magically appeared before me!

“Woo-hoo!” I squeaked to Trevor as he beamed back at me.

We had found it!

What a sight. The boat was teeming with fish. Massive schools of small fish darted everywhere over the boat. A school of jacks swam by. Huge barramundi and sweetlips hung over the side, I’ve never seen any so big. And to top it off, three eagle rays glided over the deck without a care in the world.

The wreck was intact, covered with 60 years of coral growth. Incredibly, the massive propeller is still there, although one blade is missing. Further exploration will come soon.

Despite the trimix, our bottom time was up too quickly, and we started to make our ascent.

What an exciting day – two firsts, trimix and the Pioneer.

We will be going back again soon!

Announcing… TSD TEC!!!

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Technical Diving comes to Malapascua!!!

TSD TEC is now officially the only technical diving facility on Malapascua. With twins, stage tanks and helium we can now dive deeper, longer and more safely. Trevor is now teaching IANTD courses and Simon will soon be teaching PADI DSAT Technical courses. The helium should be coming soon, so we will have Trimix as well.

In the months to come we will be exploring the 56 meter WWII Pioneer Wreck as well as searching for other as yet undived wrecks we know to be in the area. We will drop over the side on Monad Shoal and see how the sharks and mantas live when they are not being cleaned, as well as explore the beautiful walls that are so rarely seen. And hopefully find bigger schools of hammerheads and dive for longer with them. Maybe even find that tiger shark that was spotted once at Kimud! The excitement is certainly mounting in the dive shop.

 

Trevor’s Triumphant Return

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Trevor returned today from Tech Asia in Puerto Galera. He was triumphant in having passed his IANTD Technical Instructor courses, not least of which was the grueling two hour swim test.

Accompanying him were endless boxes of goodies full of gleaming new and exciting gear. Backplates and harnesses, manifolds and tank bands, regulators with hoses in a wild variety of lengths and much, much more. Everyone is chomping at the bit, desperate to get out diving, but first comes the setup, the oxygen cleaning, and for some of us the courses. Stay posted…