Ten years!

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Congratulations Lynne! I was certified in 1971 and I remember the day as if it were yesterday...I thought I had failed because I had taken two tries in the pool to locate my gear with a blacked-out mask! You are one of ScubaBoard's greatest assets and I look forward to the honour of diving with you someday in the future. Cheers!

Bob
 
I still remember that day very vividly. My instructor and I went to do our first descent (which I was, of course, doing on my back) and I got caught in current and blown away from him, landing on the bottom in 45 feet of water, very much alone. I sat up, looked around, and thought, "Hmm. No buddy. They taught me a procedure for that . . . " which I proceeded to execute. I don't know whether I don't have enough imagination to be frightened, or whether my medical training has raised my panic threshold, but that's kind of the way I've been throughout my diving career.
 
have always enjoyed your posts
10 yrs .. time to tell us what TSandM means
 
Congrats on the Big 10 !!! Gonna make it 40????
 
TSandM stands for Tizzel, Squeeter and Mini, who were our three cats when we started our horse breeding operation. We were TSandM Associates, and I just used the name when I came here. I'm LCF on all other boards.
 
July 5th, 2005 . . . I climbed out of the water from the second dive, and my instructor shook my hand, and told me I was a certified diver.

It's been an amazing ten years. I've done somewhere around 1300 dives, in most of the major regions where people go diving. Australia, Indonesia, the South Pacific, the Caribbean, the Philippines, and up and down the Pacific North American coast. I've been fortunate enough to see a great many amazing things, from a humpback whale off Lanai, to the giant mantas in the Socorros, to the unbelievable profusion of beautiful and bizarre nudibranchs that enliven almost all dive sites. I've had training from a variety of organizations and people, which has been an interesting (and sometimes very frustrating!) process. I've even gotten to go somewhere that no one else had ever been before, and yes, I have a line arrow at the end of a previously unexplored passage, which likely no one will ever dive again :)

And ScubaBoard has been with me for almost all of it. I was sent here by a mentor not long after I learned to dive. I met NW Grateful Diver here, and he's a large part of the reason I still dive, and haven't killed myself doing it. I found out about DIR here (I miss Uncle Pug) and it was a perfect fit for me. I met a lot of people here who I later got to know in person, who have enriched my diving and my life: Mo2vation, HBDiveGirl, KMD, RLee, Bismarck (now GShockey). I've gotten advice on dive ops and lodging (thank you, Red Hat Mama!). I've learned about diving and marine life (thank you, Doc Intrepid, Doppler, and people like Max Bottomtime).

It's been a great ten years, and I'm looking forward to what the next decade brings, in travel, diving, discoveries, and people!

Then:
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Now:
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God bless you, Lynne - you were liked and respected and the diving community benefited greatly from your wisdom, you will be missed.
 
For those who don't know, Lynne went missing on a dive yesterday about 11:30 am PST. We are hoping against hope for her safe recovery. She is without doubt the most respected and beloved poster here on SB and will be missed.
 
For those who don't know, Lynne went missing on a dive yesterday about 11:30 am PST. We are hoping against hope for her safe recovery. She is without doubt the most respected and beloved poster here on SB and will be missed.


I agree, she had to be the nicest person on this board. The only person she was ever openly critical of - was herself.

She seemed to make a point of talking about her two biggest challenges: a very pronounced susceptibility to vertigo when presented with no visual reference and a seemingly unusually low tolerance for narcosis, which if I understood her various posts, made her very reluctant to dive more than just 100 feet without the benefit of helium in the mix.
 
unbelievable...such a lovely person.
 
She seemed to make a point of talking about her two biggest challenges: a very pronounced susceptibility to vertigo when presented with no visual reference and a seemingly unusually low tolerance for narcosis, which if I understood her various posts, made her very reluctant to dive more than just 100 feet without the benefit of helium in the mix.

Both of which could be issues in a strong down current. Sad.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/peregrine/

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