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Gruntenheave, Joan

August 17, 2008

Dive: 20
Season Dive: 5
Site: Gruntenheave, Joan
Max Depth: 41 feet
TBT: 79 minutes
Grand Total: 15 hours, 28 minutes

Curtis, Kristen, Nick and I woke up at o’dark thirty to get our dive in yesterday. We loaded up the Explorer the night before so the only thing to do when we got up was eat breakfast and pack some snacks. We hit the road shorty after 7am.

After going through the tangle town of the mine pits and doing a turn around or two we arrived at the dive site Gruntenheave. Our mission was to find the submerged F-350, complete with dualies and chromies.

I got my tank hooked up and wetsuit on without a hitch again. Had to wait for Nick to use the bathroom so I put my BCD on myself. It was a tad bit cumbersome, but not too hard to do. Again I put my own weight pouches in. Last time I felt I was still a little bit too heavy at 20 pounds, so I ended up using 18lbs this time. We had to tackle a steep hill with our gear on in order to get to the pit. I think Curtis was afraid I would tumble into him. I wasn’t too worried, I figured the tank on my back would put an end to any perpetual rolling that might occur if I fell. The four of us got in the water. The surface was all scummy and a nasty film covered my gloves and mask. Nick and I swam out a bit into the clearer water to finish suiting up. We were on our way shortly after.

At first I was afraid I wasn’t going to sink. I hovered right below the surface for a little bit. Once I got to the 5 foot mark I started going down faster, but not so fast that it was uncomfortable or that I had to kick to slow down. Finally, the perfect amount of weight. The water was 73 degrees at the surface but seemed to get chilly early right around 20 feet. I didn’t want to stay too shallow because I knew the top of the truck was around 35 feet and I didn’t want us to swim by it. There were strange patterns in the water, almost like fog. There were whispy white spots and deep blue streaks. At first I thought it was the sun shining through, but I’m sure that wasn’t it. It looked really neat. For some reason it reminded me of the old Scooby Doo cartoons. After what felt like an eternity Curtis turned around and gave the victory fists, we finally found the truck.

I got an extreme case of vertigo as I approached the F-350. I think it was a combination of 1) it being at such a steep angle and 2) I’m not used to floating weightless around any vehicle. For some reason I had pictured the truck pristinely preserved under the water, shiny black with sparkling chrome rims. Quite the opposite was true. It was covered in moss and algae. Apparently it was red underneath all that business. The chromies weren’t as impressive as I pictured either, but then I realized I have no idea what makes rims impressive if they aren’t shiny. But according to dive instructor Dan, “if there was some way a guy could retrieve those chromies…”

I hovered around the bed of the truck for a little bit and tried peering in through the missing back window when suddenly I felt a bit of claustrophobia coming on. I quickly scurried away from the truck. Underwater vehicles give me the heeby jeebies. I reflected for a moment what it would have been like to have been in the truck when it slid down the hill into the pit. At 35 feet it must have felt like an eternity of a swim to get to the surface.

I didn’t have my camera with. I remembered seeing it somewhere when I packed up all the dive gear at home, but I kind of forgot about it until I had my wet suit on and at that point I was hot, stiff and didn’t feel like searching around for it. Then I remembered that the batteries were almost dead and the spares were still at the cabin, so that pretty much sealed the deal on not looking for it. [Side note: I just went to retrieve my laptop charger and found my camera in my laptop bag, so the search efforts would have been in vain.] Fortunately Curtis had his camera with and took a lot of photos of the truck.

Awesome pictures over at .:cklahr.

After leaving the truck I realized how cold I was. We ascended to 15 feet and I felt the drastic change in water temperature. My dive computer told me to do a 3 minute safety stop, so I tried to stay below the 15 foot mark.

The remainder of the dive we stayed above 20 feet as we made our way around the perimeter of the small pit. There were lots of beaver dams and real tiny fishies. We saw a couple of northerns. The boys saw an eel pout, but Kristen and I missed it.

Somewhere along the lines my hood flipped back and my mask started leaking water. It wasn’t hard to clear out, but it was starting to become a pain in the arse. I thought about taking a glove off and fixing it, but at 40 minutes I assumed the dive would be ending soon so I didn’t bother. My snorkel was also in my face the whole time and it ended up pulling my mask a few notches tighter so it was really doing a number on my nose and upper lip. Had I known my TBT would be 77 minutes I would have fixed it.

I attempted blowing air rings a couple times. The first time I had four good ones in a row. The second time I had one good one. I was hoping to get another chance at the end, but there was really no where convenient to stop and do it, besides the fact that Nick was low on air and had surfaced and Kristen was already at the surface for what seemed like 90% of the dive. Oh well, maybe next time.

I liked diving at Gruntenheave. It was a one tank kind of place, but there seemed to be a lot to look at.


Filed Under: DivingTagged: blog reader kristen, chromies, Diving, dualies, gruntenheave, joan, scooby doo

PADI #79, Mahnomen II & III, tank 2

August 17, 2008

Dive: 19
Season Dive: 4
Site: PADI #79, Mahnomen II & III
Max Depth: 65 feet
TBT: 51 minutes
Grand Total: 14 hours, 09 minutes

My goal for the surface interval was to leave my suit half on because I didn’t want to deal with getting my legs back in it while it was wet. Problem was I had to use the bathroom so bad that I had to take it off. While we were having our surface interval a few car loads of divers arrived. We decided it was probably a good time to head back in for dive #2. My suit went on surprisingly easy. Not as good as when it was dry, but much better than the week before. I dropped my weight down to 20 pounds. Curtis dropped 10 pounds (pipe dream). We started our second dive well before the other group of divers was ready… even with Curtis discovering he had to get out and get more weight.

There definitely wasn’t as much visual stimulation this time around. There were a few giant northerns. One gave Curtis quite a shock and he had to take out his underwater slate to express his feelings. We went much deeper on this dive, 65 feet to be exact. It was much colder than it was at 45 feet and my entire body knew it. It was also the deepest I had dove in non tropical waters. I held the regulator to my mouth a couple times because I was afraid my lips would go numb and it would fall out. I wasn’t too concerned about free flowing because it wasn’t that cold. I was, however, afraid that something with a giant set of jaws would come out of the abyss and swallow me whole. Must have been from watching Shark Week on the Discovery channel for the last 5 days. I kept telling myself that there was no way for a bull shark to get into the pits and that I was safe. But them my mind wondered to the Loch Ness Monster. “What if there was some similar monster here? That’s not logical or there would be rumors. Someone else would have had to have seen it already, right? Maybe no one has lived to tell about it…” Gotta love the fear of the unknown. Too bad the cold water couldn’t numb my ridiculous thoughts.

We weren’t down there very long before heading back up to shallower water. Since Curtis had a smaller tank we made our way back after coming up from the depths. We passed by the platform as the other group of divers was congregated there and opted to blow bubble rings in the sand instead. I had a few good ones. Ok fine, they were mediocre at best. We swam back in through the minnow farm where I got to be ALL POWERFUL again. As we got out we saw a couple speedy boats fly by. It made the surface pretty choppy and I imaged the visibility becoming horrible as the red bottom was being churned up. Talk about good timing for Curtis and me. Not so much the other divers. That’s what you get when you don’t get up at o’dark thirty!!

ALL POWERFUL:

Random fish:


Filed Under: DivingTagged: Diving, mahnomen, padi #79

PADI #79, Mahnomen II & III, tank 1

August 17, 2008

Dive: 18
Season Dive: 3
Site: PADI #79, Mahnomen II & III
Max Depth: 47 feet
TBT: 66 minutes
Grand Total: 13 hours, 18 minutes

Curtis and I had the pleasure of being dive buddies on Sat Aug 9th. I headed up to the cklahr cabin alone on Friday night, dive gear in tow. Nick stayed home to attend Bolin’s baseball game and BRKristen couldn’t be bothered with renting an exposure suit… although I think second thoughts were setting in when we were all up at o’dark thirty.

I slept horribly from the excitement of knowing I was diving in the morning, but was wide eyed and bushy tailed at 6:30 when the alarm went off. We had some breakfast and hit the road at 7am. It was my first time driving to the pits. We decided to go to PADI #79 located at Mahnomen II & III. We were the only ones there so it was pretty quiet except for a sheep bah-ing in the distance. I assembled my equipment and got my suit on without a hitch. Much different than the week before. Curtis helped me with my last couple inches of zipper and lifted the BCD on my back. I managed to get my own weight pouches in. I decide to cut back to 22 pounds to see how that felt.

It was a fish filled dive. We were greeted with a bunch of small mouth bass. When we crossed over the training platform we practiced some air bubbles. Not too bad for my first time, but not good by any means. It was pretty much same diving, different day. Lots of trees, good visibility, fishies, etc. We ended up going to 45 feet and it was pretty chilly. I could feel the cold on my exposed face. Burr!! The cold surrounded me, but it wasn’t seeping into my semi-dry suit. It was quite comfortable for being 50 degrees. We ascended to the mid 30s. I was just thinking how I was feeling pretty warm when Curtis gave me the cold signal and we went up another 10 feet. The water felt really warm up there, but better than being really cold.

We took the rest of the dive at a leisurely pace in shallower water. Curtis searched under rocks for crayfish and used them to lure the bass closer. The sunnies were friendly, coming right up and peeking into my mask. I tried to snatch some up like Nick did but that didn’t work so well. I kept envisioning my hand moving so much faster than it actually would.

On our way back we stopped at the platform again for more air rings. Close but no cigar for me. Curtis had quite a few good ones as usual. The sun was hitting the shallow water just right, and on our swim in I realized we were surrounded by millions (yes, millions) of minnows. I kept making quick jerky movements of my hands and they would turn on a dime in synchronization, their little bodies reflecting the sun like shiny coins. It made me feel like I was ALL POWERFUL, so I kept doing it in what felt like a band conducting type manner. Soon we were back where we entered and started our surface interval.

More air rings by Curtis:

Random trees:


Filed Under: DivingTagged: Diving, mahnomen, padi #79

Diamond Cove, Hopkins

August 17, 2008

Dive: 17
Season Dive: 2
Site: Diamond Cove, Hopkins
Max Depth: 32 feet
TBT: 61 minutes
Cumulative: 12 hours, 12 minutes

On Friday night, 8/1, Nick and I headed up to the cklahr cabin early to get a Friday night dive in since Kristen and I were running in the Cross Lake Dam Run 5k marathon on Saturday morning. We finally got all of our dive gear and were eager to try it all out. We met at MSD, got some last minute necessities like clips, extra weight, tank covers, a noise maker to get Nick’s attention underwater, etc., drove to the cabin, consolidated our dive gear into the explorer and took off to Diamond Cove.

Once there, a bunch of dumbheaded actions by me took place. I grabbed my shiny new pink tank and started to hook up my brand new reg, an Apeks ATX50 with Suunto Gekko dive computer, when Nick advised me to put my BCD on the tank first. Woops, I knew that, I was just so excited. I strapped my brand new turquoise trimmed Diva XLT onto my tank then proceeded to put my regulator on. The first stage swivels for maximum mobility and I was real confused as to how it went on. First I put it on upside down. Woops. Then once I got it on it was backwards. What the heck? Then I realized my BCD was on the tank backwards. Good grief. I redid my whole set up. Next step, putting on my new Pinnacle semi-dry suit, which is really just a glorified wet suit that you don’t want to pee in. It’s a one piece suit with hood attached. It was quite a struggle to get it on. I needed Nick’s help to yank it up and he pulled me right off my feet. It was a hot day and the layer of sweat my body was producing wasn’t helping the suit go on any easier. “All right,” I thought, “now just for the hood.” I looked down in front of me at an empty hood, something didn’t look right. The opening of the hood was pointed at me. Then it dawned on me that my suit was on backwards. AAARRRGGHHHHH!!

At this point Kristen was already in the water yelling, “Are we going diving?” The struggle of getting it off and back on made me very frustrated. I was ready to say screw it and sit in the car for the night. The hood seemed tight and felt like it was choking me. The suit made me a lot less mobile than the farmer johns I was used to. Nick had to stick my weight pouches in for me. I decided to go with 24 pounds, afraid that the suit would make me more buoyant.

We got in the water. My new black Atomic split fins with spring backs went on quickly. Finally something worked out for me!! My mask, tried and true, went on quickly as well. The gloves didn’t work out quite so well. I couldn’t get them over my wrists. They came free with my suit, which I bought online at Leisure Pro, so I couldn’t really complain, but it was a damper on the already tainted dive. I was going to go without gloves as the surface temp was quite comfortable. Nick poo-pooed that idea and gave me his gloves to wear since he wanted to stay in the shallows and play with his dive computer. I didn’t want to wear them because they were quite large on me and I was worried they would make it difficult to use my camera, but once underwater they snugged right up and I was very glad to have them.

Curtis, Kristen and I headed out while Nick stayed back near shore. There wasn’t a whole lot to look at underwater, so I spent a lot of time checking out my computer and making sure Kristen was still in her favorite place, directly above me. We made a few resurfaces during the dive. One was over 5 minutes because my computer started recording it as a different dive. Eventually Nick caught up with us, bare hands and all. I had a real hard time with my buoyancy during the dive. I could tell I was over weighted. Better that than severely under weighted. It’s all part of the learning curve with new stuff I suppose.

The thing I enjoyed the most during the dive was knowing that everything on me was mine. No more questionable rental equipment. All my gear would be with me the next time I dove and each time after that. It was very comforting knowing that this was all the gear I would come to trust and get to know like an extension of my body. Maybe I would even learn how to put it together correctly on the first attempt!!

My purple tank, modeled here by Nick:

Scuba Nick:

Air ring by Curtis:


Filed Under: DivingTagged: blog reader kristen, diamond cove, Diving, hopkins, zipperheads

Sleepy Hollow (Mangan)

July 12, 2008

Dive 16

Finally, Nick and I got to go diving this year. We headed out early Saturday morning (approx. 9:30) with Curtis and Blog Reader Kristen. Kristen and I rented gear from MSD on Friday night, Nick was using Ted’s gear and of course Curtis has his own. I bought a dive computer on Monday (along with a BC and another dive computer for Nick, both on back order, the BC of which I’m going to exchange right away) but decided against using it because I didn’t want to unhook any of the rental stuff.

We decided to go to Sleepy Hollow, part of Mangan, because of some Beaver dams and fishes. It wasn’t terribly hot outside, mid 70s, but once the farmer john wetsuit is on it becomes quite uncomfortably hot. It took a while to get everything set up, we haven’t had to do it since October and I was a little rusty. The water was a bit chilly, but it felt good considering the wetsuit. The dive went good other than a little fiasco with my weights. One of my pouches slipped out of my BC. I thought I felt something tugging, then I looked underneath me and saw the swirling of the silty bottom and something black. I thought it was my camera and I did a panicked check for it. I found it still attached to me but suddenly I started rocketing to the surface. I figured I just didn’t have my buoyancy under control because I’d been struggling with it for the dive… I think I was a bit over weighted. Anyway, I let some air out of my BC and started swimming along. My tank kept falling over to one side. At first I didn’t know why, then I realized my weight pouch was gone. I was about equal distance from Nick and Kristen and assumed Nick would be the better diver for assistance in recovering it. I struggled to lopsidedly swim to him while staying at the same depth. I grabbed his fin and gave the thumbs up sign. He looked at me and immediately turned around and kept on going. Fortunately Kristen saw the event transpire and surfaced with me. Then we waited for the boys to realize we were missing. It only took a couple minutes for them to return and find us. I tried to assist in finding the weights, but without the extra 9 pounds I was helplessly stuck at the surface so Kristen and I stayed while the boys went searching.

It wasn’t a very fun time at the surface for me either. I stayed fully inflated and upright. I couldn’t snorkel around, swim or even look underwater because I’d just tip over sideways. Nick ended up finding my weights, Curtis got them back in my pocket and away we went.

The dive was fun, although most of the dive was uneventful. There was a spot with a lot of fishes. Curious little buggers. I tried to stay really still so they would come up to me, but I was having trouble with my buoyancy, so I tried my best not to get in Curtis’s way or stir up the bottom and ruin the visibility.

On our way back there wasn’t much to look at again other than trees, so I snapped a couple pictures of Kristen and Nick.

After the dive Kristen and I were pretty tired so we hung out while the boys dove again. Maybe next time I’ll be up for two tanks!! Maybe next time I’ll have more of my own gear as well :D

More pics in the gallery.

Read Curtis’s account of the dives.


Filed Under: DivingTagged: blog reader kristen, Diving, mangan, ripping on nick, sleepy hollow

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Writer, dancer, scuba diver, makeup lover, closet geek, minimalist, murderino, occasional fitness enthusiast (but mostly I like to eat things).

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