Wednesday, 26 October 2011

111 Days

Today I did a bit of studying for my Adventures in diving course. I did allot of handy man work around the house which I really enjoy doing. I love fixing stuff. I joined Tegan for a cup of coffee at Bamboo café. It was very nice, we basically had a DMC (deep, meaningful, conversation- lol) She’s a real nice girl and I can see us becoming good friends. I made my way back home and packed my gear and made my way to the beach to do my final dive of the course – navigation. It was a very cool dive but a lil tricky. I had to do a search and recovery exercise with a compass and counting your kick cycles. Neil the sneaky bugga knew I would come pretty close to the ship wreck which made my compass go crazy which in turn made me lose my count with my kick cycles. He knew this would happen and threw me off course :P once we exited the water Neil congratulated me and said not many people recover the object so quickly J YAY.

We made our way back home and cleaned our gear and prepared for a night dive J I was pretty stoked, I was about to clock my 70th dive.  We eventually made our way to the beach (because girls were taking forever -lol) we made our way into the water and our decent to the first hull where we decided to turn off our torches and saw hundreds of flash light fish! It’s truly something to see! I made my way to the starboard side of the ship (alone) and turned off my torch for 5 minutes and when I turned it back on again and I was surrounded by some BIG fish! It was fantastic, I really enjoy my night dives. They so calming and peaceful kind of like doing tyche. We came home and listened to tons of WWII stories from the dude staying in my room. It was very interesting J












Sunday, 23 October 2011

114 Days

This morning I woke up feeling like death with having come home at the crack of dawn.  I made my way onto the patio where I bumped into Bow who invited me out for a dive with him and Adam. I got my things ready and loaded them onto the truck. Sam, Adam, Bow and Sara made our way to the beach for our dive. We were really excited because it’s not very often that we get to have a dive not having any students or guests where we can go crazy and do our own thing. We made our decent to the stern of the Hirokawa Maru at a depth of 58m with the vessel lying on its Portside. Upon reaching our depth Adam pointed out the 4 artillery pieces mounted on the ship which I had never noticed before. We made our way to the rudder and up the starboard side of the wreck were we entered a hole from where a torpedo had helped this huge vessel to the bottom of the sea! On entering Adam turned on his torch which was like day underwater, I didn’t feel bad forgetting my torch back at the shop anymore ;) we did quite a bit of exploring going in and out of different passages. Adam found 8 bullets that must have been from a box of ammunition.

On our way back to the shop we stopped and purchased some food from the side of the road which was awesome. It’s the only kind of fast food you get here on the Island J we got back to the shop and rinsed the salt water off our gear when Bow shot home to get Barbra’s dog so we could give him a wash – man it made me miss Rock Star LOTS!!! Haha this dog doesn’t like water just like my girl :P

I then had the pleasure of meeting the guy who discovered the USS Aaron Ward who will be sleeping in my room for the next two weeks. He is here for the next month or so with a vessel from New Zealand. His job is to discover lost wrecks from WWII which is quite exciting! Hopefully I can tag along one day (or a week) but we’ll see how it goes. And hopefully we find something J


Sandfly Passage





Sandfly Passage


Sandfly Passage


Sandfly Passage





Sandfly Passage The size of this rock wall is huge! (at the bottom of the wall in the centre, just to the left is a dug out canoe -if you can even see it :p ) 


Erick + me


a local shoving coconut in my face





Jess + me

Saturday, 22 October 2011

115 Days

On Saturday I made my way down stairs and met a lovely old geezer that has been in the Solomon’s for 3 weeks now. He is here repairing and servicing hospital equipment and was keen on doing some diving on his stay here in Guadalcanal. Sam and I took him down to Bonegi beach for a dive on the Hirokawa Maru ship wreck. Upon entering the water and making our decent to the mast at about 30m, Sam and i came across a diver that was in trouble. One of his regulators was constantly purging HUGE amounts of air! In a case like this your tank would be depleted in a little over a minute. We rushed over to help the guy and by the time we got to him he was already making an emergency accent with his dive buddy. I felt like I was quite prepared for something like this and knew exactly what to do J Sam and I escorted the couple to the surface and then continued our dive with our guest.

Later on that afternoon I joined Tegan at the Heritage Park Hotel for a few drinks and to watch the sunset next to the pool facing the sea, it was amazing. When we were joined by a friend of Tegan’s (I’m really bad with names, sorry) but she’s a helicopter pilot here on the Island – which is friken cool! The amazing sun had set and we made our way to the Taj mahal for supper where we met 6 men from the Australian military. I had a really awesome time because they were all in my age group which is not very common on the Island –they are also extremely funny men! I should hopefully be going to a Halloween party this weekend on the base depending if I can gain access or not.

After finishing dinner we made our way to the King Solomon Hotel for a few drinks in the pub, army boys included. Ha ha it was quite funny because the boys have all these rules they have to follow when off the base.  They not allowed to have any sort of alcohol, so every sip of beer I had I made it seem as if it tasted like heaven ;) they didn’t like me very much after that =D They all had a curfew and had to be back on base at 2300 hours. Tegan, her friend and I joined a group of pilots and we had a few drinks with them which was very entertaining before making our way to club Extreme to end off the night with a lil dancing J all in all I had an awesome night- met and experienced a whole lota new things :P


Savo Island











Comfy chair @ one of the dive sites


Haha


Dug out boats


Sam + me


Road kill


Road kill


Tegan + me


Jap Bullets (8)

116 Days

Hey there all you faithful followers. I sincerely apologize for not posting anything in the last few days due to no Internet connection from our service provider. This is the case throughout the island and I hope “Telekom” would pull up their socks soon :p I am so far behind on my posts that it would be impossible to write a post for everyday that I missed.  This post will be an update of all the cool things that have been happening for the last few days… Please enjoy (o_0)

I’m going to try fill you in as best as possible from where I left off. We had a group of 21 tourists from Australia to do two and sometimes three dives a day. This meant hulling 42 tanks onto the truck every morning, driving to the yacht club, off-loading all the tanks, guests gear, putting all of it onto the boat and then waving good-bye to the guests as they head out to do some AMAZING dives (with my lip on the beach floor)! One of which is an American destroyer called the “Aaron Ward”. This is the one dive I can’t wait to do!!! Less than 500 people have ever had the chance to dive this amazing wreck with it being discovered in 1995 at a depth of 70m! In diving terms this is considered as an extremely deep dive! The vessel landed on the sea bed in an upright position, with its cannons on deck still pointing in the same direction they were last fired. I was a little disappointed that I couldn’t do this dive with the guys but you know what they say, “the best things in life are worth waiting for!”

On one of the evenings I took the boys down to Bonegi Beach for a night dive.  Four of the guys were about to clock there 100th dive and were doing something, ummm “crazy” for their century descent. One guy came prepared wearing a Borat swim suit which was (trust me) not pleasant! After rigging up my gear I entered the water with a few of the boys and three of them shortly after entering threw their shorts onto the beach! (o_0) they were going Free Willy so to say. I hoped I wouldn’t bump into any of them during the dive and (I’ll just say) I saw things that shouldn’t be mentioned *face palm* upon exiting the water one of the girls that had been waiting on the shore hid the guys shorts which was quite a good laugh for all of us. With their fins being used to cover up there bits.

After our eventful evening we made our way back to their hotel after a really long day! I was super beat! One of the guys came up to me, shook my hand and sincerely thanked me for “the best” dive he had ever done! The feeling I got was truly amazing, I’m REALLY happy that I can make such a difference to people’s lives!  

On their last day diving in the Solomon Island I took them to Bonegi beach for an early morning dive and to see the sun rise with four guys that were willing to be up at 5am! This was one of my most memorable dives to date! My dive buddy and I made it to the front of the wreck at about 10m when out of the blue four figures started to become clear! They were about 2m in length, 4 Manta Rays in a row next to each other “flying” gracefully. My buddy and I just sat up in this weightless environment and watched these beautiful creatures pass us by! The moment only lasted about 45 seconds but what a memorable moment it was! <3 <3  

This past Saturday I did a total of four dives in one day. I took some guests for two dives in the morning and then another two dives later that afternoon with Adam. He was busy with an Advanced diving course with Anna Lisa. She’s such a cool gal and I got to know her really well J she comes from Italy and will be leaving the island soon to go back home. Later on that evening after completing our dives we were all super hungry and made our way to a Chinese restaurant in town. We sat at a table that seated 8 people with only the 3 of us eating. Shortly after ordering, the food arrived and it honestly covered up every possible space on the table! I felt like I was eating like a king! The food was really good (I really should work on my chop sticks skills – ha ha)

After only a few hours of sleep I was up early to pack my gear and loaded the boat for our trip to Tulagi. We had about 8 crew on board all such amazing and funny people, including Erick (you can read about him in my previous blogs) which would later on be my dive buddy for the day. Upon arriving at our first destination I dove into the water for the mooring line and soon found out that we were floating above the Twin Tunnels. The water temperature was amazing as per usual at about 30 degrees. Once Neil had given us a short brief we were in the water in pairs and shortly after we started our decent to the twin holes at the top of this reef. We started our descent and I realised that everyone was sinking at a much faster rate than I was. I was quite puzzled actually. We made our way to the bottom and I realised that I had left my 3kg’s of weight on-board. I was already at a depth of 20m and it was too far to go back and I’d just have to live without it. This was such an amazing dive! I saw so many different species of fish including 6 sharks!! One of which thought I must have been a really injured fish and made his way straight towards me. Now the reason for having a dive buddy is for safety reasons and I seriously was contemplating stabbing Erick with my dive knife and swimming away REAL fast (so that the shark would get him first -lol). But instead -being the nice guy that I am- just waved my arms around frantically (hoping, not to look like a retarded seal) which to my surprise scared him off =D
Before we knew it we were back on the boat and off to our next dive site which was called Sandfly passage. This was a dive I had never done before and was eager to do. The thing that made this dive so spectacular was that you’d enter the water, make your descent and get pulled along by the current. There is minimal effort needed when diving there, you can literally cross your legs and just drift à its awesome!  Erick and I eventually reached a point with 50bar left in our tanks and had been in the water for 71 minutes. We decided to make our accent. Upon surfacing we had to wait for the boat to pick us upJ  We drifted at least 3km in the time we had spent underwater (o_0) later that evening Erick and I went to the Rain Tree for supper to bid him fair well. It was time to say good bye to another good friend made here in the Solomon Islands.

Sam and I had the opportunity to buy some road kill (food purchased on the side of the road) during this week which was awesome! I also met an amazing tourist named Jess and had dinner with her listening to a band that plays cover songs at the heritage park hotel. I have also been making underwater videos which I want to make into a short film when I get home, for everyone who is interested in having a glimpse of Iron Bottom Sound.

 


 Awesome sun rise + calm seas!


rolling mountains


 Nudibranch - size of your pinky











B-17 American Bombers engine and propeller





B-17 Cockpit





Sea Cucumber (fun to play with)








from the deck of the Rain Tree Cafe


from the deck of the Rain Tree Cafe



the deck of the Rain Tree Cafe





Savo Island


Joy, lady that works with us












Bob :) 


a Local