Saturday, June 14, 2003 (Sharm El-Sheikh - Egypt)
Not used to having a
nice
breakfast. Settling into a diving routine. The best diving location in the best
diving location
is
definitely all it's cracked up to be. What? Does this mean we have to dive with
our clothes
on?
Technology gets very old very quickly. Internet banking is a wonderful
thing.
Day 94. Our breakfast this morning was very
much better than anything we’ve had since we arrived in Egypt. It was
nicely laid out, buffet style, warm and there was plenty to choose from. It
makes the hassle that we went through to move hotels that much more worth while.
As was the case in Tanzania, there were even fried potatoes and some sort of
sausage or salami meat. Once again, then, I was able to eat sausage, egg and
chips for breakfast - delicious.Our
daily routine has now settled in and we completed the ritual waiting around at
the dive centre followed by the short trip to the dock to embark and sort out
our gear. Since today was the first of the two days we will ultimately spend
going through the Advanced Open Water curriculum, we brought along with us the
course reference material to read through on the boat. We both read through much
of it last night and the plan was to polish it off this afternoon. The knowledge
requirements are not that substantial and most, if not all, of it is really just
basic common sense. After our two remaining daylight dives and the night dive
tomorrow, we will be quizzed on the course material.
If all goes well, our dive master will certify us and we will then be able to
dive almost anywhere in the world, thus increasing the quantity and quality of
dive opportunities available to us. There are still plenty of dive locations
that we intend to visit during the coming year or
so.We were particularly looking
forward today’s dives, as they were inside the Ras Mohammed National Park
area. This is reputed to be one of the very best dive locations in the Red Sea.
We were not to be disappointed either since both dives were excellent with a
wealth of spectacular corals and colourful marine life. Just a few minutes after
entering the water for the first dive, a drift dive, a two-foot long turtle swam
by us. We had the camera with us but the batteries were low and we had agreed to
hold off with the photography until we saw something particularly worthy. This
was our first turtle sighting and it certainly qualified. Our dive master
pointed it out to me and motioned for me to take a photo so I followed it until
I got close enough to get a decent shot. Unfortunately, I misjudged the
direction in which the majestic beast was gliding and ended up at just below
twenty-two meters. By the time I had noticed this and had started to ascend a
bit, the dive master was already on her way towards me to tell me off. Getting
carried away with the camera in my hand is something that I must try to do a
better job of managing.
We’ve dived in drift currents before and always seemed to want to
instinctively fight against the current. Our training material went into this a
bit and we were both ready for the sensation this time around. Accordingly, we
actually spent less energy during this dive as opposed to all the previous dives
as we allowed the current to do the swimming for us. It was necessary to fight
the current just a couple of times as we went around the curve of a reef island
and tried to stay close to the inside of the
curve.Our dive master was very
pleased with our performance during the dive, with the exception of the turtle
incident, and we moved to a secluded bay to pause for lunch, after everybody was
aboard. I still have a hard time with Egyptian food so I never eat the onboard
lunches provided (which I otherwise would have had to pay for). Instead, I
decided to join some of the other divers on a couple of neighbouring boats in
the water for some impromptu snorkelling. It turned out to be a good move as the
marine life right there at the beach was no less spectacular than anything
we’ve seen to date, complete with corals and the full gamut of marine
fish.The discipline for the second
dive of the day, and course, was the naturalist dive. Much to my disappointment,
this didn’t mean that everyone had to dive in the nude. Instead, it meant
that we had to pay close attention to the marine life and ecosystems of the
underwater world. We had to demonstrate that we could identify vertebrates and
invertebrates and we were given a slate to write down our observations. This
dive turned out to be the very best dive to date.
Even our dive master and all the others on the boat were praising the dive as
nothing less than spectacular. We saw dozens of shoals of fish both big and
small as well as an enormous wall of coral that we on in all directions as far
as we could see. A Leopard shark was also spotted by our dive master but by the
time she was able to signal this to us, it had passed out of visual range. There
was also quite a strong current towards the far end of the dive circuit but we
managed to hang around long enough to have a good look at the wreckage of a
sunken and near completely destroyed commercial vessel. By the looks of it, its
cargo included some porcelain toilets and I managed to get some nice photos of
these, which will be a unique addition to my ever-growing collection. The wreck
location is also where we saw the most shoals of large fish and I near depleted
the camera batteries trying to take it all
al.Several other people have digital
underwater cameras here and most, if not all, of them are of a higher quality
than ours. Some of them are already up to five mega pixels and produce some very
nice photos. Ours was one of the best at the time we purchased it but the
digital camera industry is moving forward so fast that it is now showing its age
already. Instead of buying a new digital SLR camera for Sandy, as we had decided
a month or two ago, we may instead elect to buy a top-end digital camera with
underwater housing. The idea is that we can use it both above as well as beneath
the waves.
We returned from our day at sea this afternoon thinking that we might never top
the experience but tomorrow is another day and there’s another one waiting
for us after that too. The night dive should prove to be interesting and I have
high hopes that we will see some great things
then.Back on dry land again, we
filled in our logbooks and our dive master stamped and signed in the necessary
pages. We are now approaching twenty dives each and our underwater confidence is
riding at an all time high.Instead
of using our credit cards or our remaining Egyptian cash reserves to pay for our
diving, we hooked up to the Internet and electronically transferred the money
directly into the dive centre’s bank account, which just happens to be a
Rabobank account just like our own. It was the first time since we left Europe
over three months ago that I had bothered to check just how much cash we had
left in the bank. I was preparing myself for a bit of a shock but actually the
figure was exactly where I had predicted it to be by this time when we were back
in Cape Town. This month’s credit card bill still has to be paid but we
will still arrive back in Europe in a couple of weeks time with about thirty
thousand Euros (approximately $35,500) to our name, after taking Jordan and the
United Arab Emirates into account.We
ate at the bar this evening in the company of Henk and a couple of dive
instructors. The food was good and was prepared right in front of us. We have a
just a little bit more knowledge review to do for tomorrow and then we can call
it a night.
Posted: Sat
- June 14, 2003 at 08:33 AM
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Published On: Sep 25, 2005 10:32 PM
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