Exploring Shipwrecks, Diving with Sharks and Getting SCUBA Certified with the Citizen Promaster ?Fujitsubo? in Black Super Titanium
At the dive platform?s edge located at the Phoecena?s stern, the aqua marine Bahamian waters sloshed around my SEAC F-100 fins. Any experience I had related to diving up to that point had been limited to a bit of low-stakes snorkeling and freediving, as well as reading about the exploits of Jacques Cousteau and Dr. Sylvia Earle or the fictitious adventures of Dirk Pitt and Julian Tusker. The week of PADI e-learning was helpful to develop a mental foundation of the do?s and don?ts down under and the pool session the day prior helped me trust the Aqua Lung regulator would deliver the precious air supply beneath the surface, but nothing was going to compare being out in open water for the first time. There was no longer the safety net of sitting behind a computer screen or being in the confines of a training pool ? just the ocean. Gazing out past the platform, there was nothing but pure blue skies, crystal clear water and a silhouette of New Providence just visible in the distance. This was the real deal. With my left hand securing the SPG (submersible pressure gauge) tucked into the waist belt of my BCD (buoyancy control device) and my right over my mask and regulator, I attempted my best version of the giant stride.
The Calm Before The “Giant Stride” / Image via Kristin Paterakis
The partially inflated BCD kept me at the surface and following protocol, I immediately turned to the boat to give them the ?okay? sign. The water was a bath-warm 83 degrees and a s...
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