Sunday 28 October 2012

Diving the Reef at Budleigh Salterton 9th September 2012

Really great dive on the Reef at Budleigh, 10 mins swim out from the shore. Two cuttle fish caught on video, odd they did not change colour when they posed in their 'threatening position'. The large wrasse were out and the viz was near 6 metres!

I would say that this is the best shore dive site, better than Chesil beach. A bit boring during the 10 min swim on way out and and back. You have to correct for the tide drift on the out and back from the reef. otherwise you find you have a long walk at the end of a dive with all your kit!!

The only down side to the whole thing is the parking, where you are limited to 2 hours on the road. You could drop the stuff off and park in the nearby main car-park but then there is the fag of getting the car and getting a nearby parking place on the road.

 clink on the link to view the video on the YouTube site: Diving the Reef at Budleigh Salterton

Lobster Pot Diving 12th August 2012

This was a second attempt to dive in some really unusual places. Roger and Tony own and run the fishing boat Kll, their problem is the loss of a string of lobster pots!
Anyway they have a number of lost pots and hoped that we could retrieve them. Last year we failed to retrieve any pots but we had hi hopes for this year.
The Kll is not a dive boat and therefore we needed to sort out a plan to carry out the search and the location of the string of pots. The Kll has a satnav system that can record the position of the boat down to the nearest metre.

Therefore like last year we had a meeting with Roger the skipper to plan out each phase of the dive:
The diving period
Dive entry
Search technique
Lobster pot recovery technique.
Dive recovery
Emergency measures.

The search techniques proposed by Roger was the same as last year excellent with line being laid between two shot lines that would be in the same position as the missing lobster pots. Therefore all we had to do was to follow the newly laid marker line between the shot lines along the bottom until we found a pot line.

Like last year during the dive I would record, by video, the seabed to discover the reason for the snagged and cut lobster pot lines.

Dan and I are what I would call experience divers and have dived in virtually zero viz without getting lost! Even so we did not undertake this dive lightly and both of us carried our normal complete set safety and retrieval equipment.

This time we located a pot line and pots right away tied them to the main line and un-snagged the pot lines. Sadly as can been seen by the video our knots were not up to the mark with heaving up a string of pots as we lost the string.

We repeated the dive but the shot line and the marker line were laid going in the opposite direction with an overlap where we could the pots. This time we just cut the pots loose and tied each one on separately and success we pulled up two pots.

So a lot better than last year!


To view the video from the YouTube website click on the link: Lobster Pot Diving

Diving the A1 & Fossil bed drift 9th August 2012


This was one of those dives that as a diver, one has to do. The submarine is a real piece of history that is mostly intact and of a size that can be appreciated under water.

There is an interesting spread of life of crabs, gobies, a wrasse at the stern, one rather nice lobster under the bow with a shoal of Pollock around the top of the bow. There was a shoal of junior bib halfway between the stern and the conning tower.

I would have said that it is a 30~40 minute dive to see it all, enjoying it, and at 11 metre down is a relacking dive. Dan and I stayed on the wreck for 52 minutes, which was a bit too long as once seen does not hold ones interest for that long.

I never have much luck with the drift dive on fossil bed drift, too many dives when I have just seen a muddy bottom for 40 minutes in a 1 metre viz hanging on until mentally I gave up!

This dive was better than that with a bit of rough surface and some life, with Dan finding a lobster. I just don’t know how he does it, I get the feeling that he could find a lobster in a garden pond!  The viz on this dive was 2~3 metres, which was hard work with three divers on a drift dive.

Once I came across an area at the end of a ‘good’ fossil bed drift that looked as if I could find some shark teeth. So I always live in hope of hitting the ‘jackpot’ with a future fossil bed drift.
To view the video in the YouTube website click the link: Diving the A1 & Fossil bed drift

The A1 is a protected wreck and was the Royal Navy’s first submarine. The A1 was launched 9th July 1902. The A1 was accidentally rammed by the SS Berwick on the 18th March 1904 with the loss of two officers and nine ratings.The wreck was salvaged and modified with a second water tight hatch at the base of the conning tower. The A1 was put back into service but was finally used as an underwater target and finally lost in 1911.

After the wreck was found in 1989, by a fisherman who snagged his nets on an underwater object, Martin Woodward dived on the object and identified it as the HMS/m A1.The AI was then subsequently bought by Martin Woodward in 1994. In 1997 the wreck of the A1 came under the protection of wrecks act 1973.

Taking extracts from the Archaeological Report:
HMS/M A1, BRACKLESHAM BAY, WEST SUSSEX.
April 2006 Ref: 53111.03jj
Prepared by: Wessex Archaeology

The wreck of the HMS/m A1 represents the remains of the first truly British designed and built submarine, following on directly from the Holland Class design bought from America. After the HMS/m A1 was constructed it was decided to make major changes to the A class boats, such as increasing the firepower by adding a second torpedo tube (to lie side by side), therefore making the HMS/m A1 a unique example of early British submarine design.

While the site itself has been subjected to the illegal removal of a considerable amount of internal and external fittings the main hull structure remains in relatively good condition for a wreck that has lain at the bottom of the Solent for nearly 100 years.

Type: A Class
Dimensions:     Length: 103 feet 3 inches, diameter: 12 feet 8 inches
Lost:                 1911
Cargo:              None, not carrying torpedoes at time
Complement:   12 crew, none on board at time of sinking
Built:                Vickers Sons & Maxim Ltd at Barrow-in-Furness
Launched:       9th July 1902
Length:            103 feet 3 inches
Length of remains: 24.5m
Beam:              12 feet 8 inches
Draught:           11 feet 6 inches
Displacement 165 tons surfaced/180 tons submerged
Lost:                 1911
Cause:             Tow line parted
Armament:       One 18in torpedo tube in bow, with two reloads carried (total of three). The A1 is not thought to have been carrying torpedos when it was lost.
Complement:   11 (not manned at the time of its loss in 1911). Two officers and nine ratings were lost when it first sank, when it was rammed by SS Berwick Castle on 18th March, 1904.

Diving the Nab Tower 13th June 2012

After suffering a rather bad cold, sort of man 'flu, for over a week and now with my head blocked I am getting fed up with eating warm oysters!

So a bit of a chance to update my diving blog, poor as it is this year with the weather so bad this summer/

This was a rather dark dive on the Nab Tower, lots of fish at the upper level, which I should have taken more video of. This was one of those rare occasions that the Nab tower was at a slack tide so we were able to explore the far side, sad it was so dark!!

As this was an evening dive and as luck would have it we we were treated to a 'show' by the RNLI on the way back into harbour.




to view the video on the YouTube website click on the link: Diving the Nab Tower




Saturday 6 October 2012

Drift dive on the Bembridge Ledges 30th May 2012


I have been far to slow in uploading this dive video to my blog, just a bit too many other things going on in my life at this time.

This dive could have been one of the longest drift dives I have undertaken but if you call up a dive time of an hour then after an hour you should be up. The reason was that at the end of the dive the sea bottom was had the most interesting I have ever come across. So many unusual rock formations caused by the sea currents.

There is a nice cuttlefish at the beginning of the dive, some crabs and a number of other fish during the rest of the dive. Not a lot, but enough to keep one interested. Very nice dive and I hope to persuade the skipper in future drift dives to 'drop' us off in the area where he picked us up on this drift dive.

Jason is the youngest diver I have dived with and as can been seen on the video stays close to me and regularly checks on me during the dive. A lot better than a few older divers I have dived with. With a bit more experience it should sort out his hand movements and his buoyancy control, which is at it’s hardest at the shallow depth of this dive.




 If you want to see the dive video on the Youtube site click the link below:
 Drift dive on the Bembridge Ledges