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Countdown to: Building a New House...
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There are many who lust for the simple answers of doctrine or decree. They are on the left and right. They are not confined to a single part of the society. They are terrorists of the mind. - A. Bartlett Giamatti
About Me
I've recently arrived on the Big Island of Hawaii with my wife of 20 years and our 11 year old Conch (he was born when we lived in Key West where I worked with aquaCorps and Billy Deans).
I've been diving since 1956. My Dad was an archaeologist and got the idea to recover Babylonian artifacts from a barge that sank in the mid 19th century where the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers come together. So he bought two tanks, two regulators, and a copy of the Science of Skin and Scuba (a later edition of which I was later honored to be permitted to contribute to), and we learned how to dive.
I continued to dive recreationally (lakes in New York, the New England Coast, North Carolina, Florida, California) till high school when I hooked up with a group that styled itself Beta Oceanographic Research Inc. It was basically a dive club that had an agreement with the Pt. Lobos administration that in return for mapping and doing some baseline work they could have unlimited access to the park.
I went to university and had a part time job prepping bodies for autopsies at the Coroners Offices that led to becoming a phlebotomist at a local hospital. The guy who ran the hospital lab was a PADI Instructor and I became his AI (this is about 1970). At the same time I became involved in the research diver training program at the university. I took the 100 hrs. Research Diving Course in the spring quarter, did underwater research in Central America over the summer, was an Assistant Team Leader (AI) in the course in the fall, and a Team Leader (Instructor) for the next course. I remained active, both teaching and conducting research until I received my degree in Zoology.
I was accepted to grad school at a major oceanographic institute where I continued my research diving, but there was no organized diving program there. In 1975 I attended a two-week NAUI ITC at the University of Michigan run by Dr. Lee Somers. I returned to my home institution and began teaching other students the 100 hour course I learned during my undergraduate days. To make a long story short, I wound up as the Diving Safety Officer and had a chance to do some interesting things and make what where, I hope, some small contributions to the diving communities.
Ive held certifications at many institutions of higher learning, up to a 200 foot card, surface supplied, NITROX, mixed-gas, rebreather, chamber operator, instructor, etc. Ive been an aquanaut (habitat based saturation) and a deep submersible pilot.
I helped found the American Academy of Underwater Sciences, served as a national officer of AAUS, and contributed to their standards; I waws a member of both the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society and National Science Foundation panels on Shipboard Diving Safety. Ive been invited to provide testimony before a number of governmental entities including the Department of Labor, the National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmosphere and the Vice President's Committee on Governmental Deregulation. I was in on the early days of the formation of the technical diving community as an editor for aquaCorps Magazine and an organizer of the Tek Confereneces.
I was elected a National Fellow of the Explorers Club and I am an Associate Member of the Boston Sea Rovers.
I'm now semi-retired and work as a consulting taxonomist for a photo agency that represents twenty or so of the top nature (including underwater) photographers in the world. I continue my interests in underwater science; I teach a few private programs each year and write. I am currently working on a book addressing research diver training from both an historical and practical perspective.
Vitals
Location: South end of the Big Island of Hawaii Occupation: Consulting Taxonomist Gender: Male Interests: Old dive gear, old sports cars, old fighter aircraft
Dive Profile
Certification Agencies: My Dad, and Certs from: Scientific Diving Programs, PADI, NAUI, CMAS, TDI, IANTD Certification History: Over the years I've completed:
Introduction to Disaster Relief
Community CPR Instructor
Professional Rescuer CPR Instructor American Red Cross
CPR Instructor, American Heart Association
First Aid Instructor
Water Safety Instructor
LA County Lifeguard
Basic Diver
Gas Blender
Chamber Operator
Assistant Instructor
Instructor
Oxygen Provider Instructor
Rescue Diving Instructor
Deep Diving Instructor
Nitrox Instructor
Deep Air Instructor
Instructor Course Director
Research Diver: 30, 60, 100 130, 150 & 200 ft., Surface-Supplied, Decompression, Variable Volume Dry Suit, Blue Water, Saturation, Nitrox, Mixed Gas, Rebreather, Submersible Pilot and Instructor.
International Certificate for Scientific Research Diving Certification Level: Course Director Dive History: I am most familiar (in no particular order) with the waters of Northern California, New England, Greenland, Iceland, the Gulf Steam, the Florida Keys, Grand Cayman, Puerto Rico, Vietnam, Thailand, Caribbean and Pacific Coasts of Nicaragua and Costa Rica and the lakes of Nicaragua. Dive Classification: Instructor / Assistant Instructor / Dive Master / Dive Con # of Logged Dives: 3,000+ Years Certified: Ten Or More Years Equipment Setup: On a dive (14 March 08), I used: Swimsuit, Tekna Mask, Farallon Snorkel, Fenzy, ScubaPro CamPac, triple AL 30, MR-12 Navy Regualtor w/o auxillary, Jet Fins, SeaQuest Weightbelt, Randal Knife, Sunnto compass, Mares Genius Computer.