
Does your tank have cobwebs on it? Has is been months since you enjoyed the exhilarating feeling of being able to breathe underwater? Do you want to try SCUBA for the first time but are nervous? If you answered yes to any of these questions then you should join Just Add Water for their first Pool Party of the year. Come join us as we kick off 2012 with a fun night of diving in the Orange High School Pool from 4-6pm this Saturday, February 18. Cost is $7 per person with your own gear or $7 per person plus the cost of a half off gear rental. And since diving makes people hungry we will all go out for food to get to know one another and to recall heroic dives of our past and dream about future dives.
The night will include half priced rentals, but bring your own gear if you have it, $10 off a SCUBA tune up and $10 off the Discover Scuba Experience. This night is perfect for seasoned divers and new divers alike. Bring yourself, friends, family or a special someone as a belated Valentine’s Day Gift to the pool for some good ole fun. Guys do you remember the man who proposed to his girlfriend via SCUBA…works every time! But on a more serious note this pool night is actually a really important night for new divers to experience the uniqueness of diving and for experienced divers to brush up on simple skills such as neutral buoyancy.
Being neutrally buoyant is a very important skill needed for being a successful diver. It should be practiced by seasoned divers and should be a main goal for new divers. Unlike fish that have swim bladders to control their buoyancy, humans must use a weight belt, a BCD and controlled breathing to achieve neutral buoyancy. Fish have the ability to increase or decrease the amount of air in the swim bladder allowing them to sink or rise in the water column. A diver's BCD is the same concept as a fish’s swim bladder. Fish are born with the innate sense and physiological ability to control their buoyancy, whereas us divers who are meant to live on land but like being underwater so much better must learn how to control our buoyancy. Buoyancy is first controlled by our weight belt, which is easily adjusted before we get in the water. Second, once we are underwater, then we must rely on our breathing and the amount of air we put in or let out of our BCD to control our buoyancy. Neutral buoyancy takes practice to achieve, but it helps create a relaxed, confident and less destructive diver. Being neutrally buoyant allows a diver to control their underwater experience. I know that from personal experience if you are not in control of your buoyancy because you keep rising and sinking you start to freak out. As you freak out, you breathe more, thus using more air. You are also using up your breathing air as you try to adjust your BCD so you are finally able to just “float” beneath the water. And now you have just cut your dive in half because you used all your air trying to achieve neutral buoyancy.
Neutral buoyancy also helps create divers that are less destructive. The reason I dive and why the majority of people dive is to see the wonderful creatures that exist in the ocean. I have dove in New Zealand where I glided just above the kelp looking for hiding eels or in the Galapagos I have dove along walls lined with sponges, tunicates, sea stars and many other vibrantly colored creatures. Since I am in control of my buoyancy, I can go wherever I want under the water and not worry about sinking too low and destroying a coral. Most of our reefs that are damaged by divers are damaged because people could not control their buoyancy and kicked a fan coral or sat on top of a brain coral. This is harmful to people and the reef. Some coral, such a fire coral, cause a burning, itchy reaction to peoples bare skin. Touching coral or kicking coral with our fins can have negative effects. Coral can be broken off or the coral can be weakened by our touch making it susceptible to disease. Coral grow at a very slow rate, on average about 0.2-1 inch per year; therefore, lots of non-neutrally buoyant divers on a reef can do a lot of unnecessary damage. So do yourself and the coral a favor, practice being neutrally buoyant so that you can be a confident diver diving in amazing places with no impact on the ecosystem. If Yoda were a diver, he would have said, “May the neutral buoyancy be with you.”
Turn off the TV, grab your gear or rent some for half price and come spend a glorious night brushing up on dive skills or learning how to dive in the Orange High School pool with Just Add Water. We are so excited to see you there. Please call the store to pre-register and rent gear if needed (440) 942-7575. If you are busy this Saturday join us for Pool Parties later in the year on April 14th and May 5th.
~Your dive buddies at Just Add Water




Great boat. Great crew. Great divers. (Just when you really needed them to be.)Tuesday, May 19, 2009: It’s two days before I leave for a nine-hour drive to Key West to lead Just Add Water’s four-day trip to the Dry Tortugas aboard M/V Spree. And what am I doing? I’m on my back, in bed, trying desperately to overcome the effects of a week-long bout with stomach flu.
I’m dreading what is to come. If you’ve ever had stomach flu (or food poisoning, for that matter), you know that you just don’t wake up one day to find that everything is back to normal. Even when you can start keeping food down, you’re weak, you’re tired — and the last thing you want to do is jump on a rocking boat and go diving.
Naive young dive instructors often buy into the whole “Do what you love for a living…” lifestyle, in part, because they think that, as trip leaders, they’ll get “free” dive vacations. Get real.
So far, I’ve published two articles on DiveRetailing.com that outline some of the myriad responsibilities trip leaders may have. These can (and often do) include activities such as:
Believe me, it’s generally no vacation. I even know of one group leader who spent an entire, week-long Bonaire “vacation” dealing with local police and hotel officials after thieves broke into several guests’ room and made off with their valuables. She managed to get in three whole dives in a week’s time. (And here I am in no shape physically to deal with any of this.)
Much of my pre-trip anxiety, however, was relieved when I went to the SpreeExpeditions.com website and spoke with the office manager, Kevin, over the phone. If there was a question the website couldn’t answer, Kevin supplied the missing information.
Thursday Afternoon, May 21: I get my first good look at Spree. It looks clean. It smells clean. And the hardware I can see on the aft deck (fill whips, tank racks, seating, etc.) is first rate. These are good signs.
Passengers continue to arrive and drop off gear. Most I don’t know (more anxiety). In fact, only four of our group are actually from the Cleveland area. For some reason, we’ve managed to attract divers from as far away as California, Texas and Connecticut for this trip. They all seem nice. (This doesn’t mean they can actually dive.) We’ll see.
The first order of business before boarding is dinner at the Rusty Anchor, courtesy of Captain Frank. What a great idea. We get to meet each other, I get to quiz group members about their diving backgrounds, and the crew gets to set the tone for the trip. One thing I discover right away is that, with the exception of our newly-certified guppy, Kevin, this is a surprisingly experience group.
After dinner, we board, settle in — and get the two-hour Everything-You-Need-to-Know-About-Anything briefing from Captain Frank, Divemaster Melanie and the rest of the crew. One thing is immediately apparent: This isn’t your typical dive boat crew (who sometimes look like they’ve been shanghaied from an alley, sobered up, then put to work against their will). Most of these folks are actually IT or tech professionals whose ongoing success enables them to crew the Spree largely for fun. That is unusual — but nice.
Friday, May 22: After transiting the 90 miles between Key West and the Dry Tortugas overnight, we make our first dive at a site called Alice in Wonderland. Typical of the Dry Tortugas, depths range from 65-80 feet and coral, both soft and hard, is plentiful.
It’s here that I get my first good look at how both the passengers and crew are under water. And, in doing so, my anxiety level goes down several notches. Even “new” Kevin (we have two), making his first dives following certification, looks like he’s been doing this forever. We have our one and only instance of divers surfacing away from the boat. It’s not repeated.
Following the first dive, we surface to breakfast. This, too, sets the tone for the balance of the trip. The food is plentiful and good. No one goes hungry. In fact, we most likely all gained five pounds over the next three days.
Following a second dive at Alice in Wonderland, we make our only shallow dive of the week. It’s also our only “bust” as far as conditions are concerned.
Under good conditions, the Avanti (aka the Windjammer Wreck) is a great shallow reef and wreck dive. Not today. Viz is down; surge and current is up.
Despite this, the majority of the passengers find their way back to the boat in one, nice tight group. Nobody gets lost. No one needs a chase boat pick-up. It’s at this point I realize that these divers need a “trip leader” like a fish needs a bicycle.
It occurs to me that, after more than 30 years in the business, I might have actually found the one trip where being a group leader actually is like getting a “free” vacation. Which was good because, after a week-long stay at death’s door (well, that’s what it felt like), about all I wanted to do is sleep.
I should mention that Frank and Melanie also gave us the opportunity to go ashore at Fort Jefferson between dives. This historic fort was, among other things, where Dr. Samuel Mudd was incarcerated after making the mistake of innocently treating John Wilkes Booth’s broken leg.
Saturday, May 23: By now we’d all settled into a comfortable pattern: Wake up at 7:00, enjoy some fresh fruit and juice, then go diving at a brand-new site. We’d surface to a large, filling breakfast, make a second dive at the same site (to see all the stuff we missed the first time around), then move on to another site for the afternoon and evening.
It’s important to note that these sites are sufficiently large that it really does take two to three dives to see it all. Dives at the Dry Tortugas are typically in the 70-80 foot range. If you want to make the available five dives a day — and have more than just a few minutes bottom time on each — Nitrox certification and a Nitrox computer are essential.
In addition to lush, plentiful coral and abundant reef fish, the Dry Tortugas are distinguished by the amount of relief one finds. Reef structures, coral mounds and pillars are typically 10 to 20 feet high, with sharp drop offs and lots of undercutting canyons and tunnels.
It’s also a rare dive in the Dry Tortugas when several divers do not see sharks, turtles and huge Goliath Groupers and Jewfish. Once common throughout the Keys, the Dry Tortugas are among the few places you can count on seeing these mammoth fish. In fact, all of the Dry Tortugas remind me of the way Key Largo looked when I first started diving in the 1970s — only better.
Monday, May 25: It’s Memorial Day and, regretfully, time to head back. This dies not mean that diving is over. Captain Frank has dive sites picked out along the way. so that every couple of hours, we have another place to dive.
The first two of these dives are drift dives — something most of our group has done before. Nevertheless, Melanie provides a very detailed briefing and everyone manages to hit the water as a group, descend as a group and, most importantly, surface as a group. See these and other photos on our Flickr gallery.
Prior to our last dive, crewmember Chris Parsons shows us the video he has put together over the past few days. It’s great. I especially like all the shots he got of me…sound asleep.
Our last dive is the wreck of the Cayman Salvage Master, just off of Key West. The next time we do this trip, this dive will most likely be the 500-foot Hoyt S. Vandenberg, which is scheduled for sinking as I write this.
Back on shore, we adjourned for dinner at Finnegan’s, followed by a night of karaoke and other foolishness. Or that’s what they tell me (I had to call it after dinner).
This was a great trip. And, at a little over a thousand dollars to make 17 dives in four days, one helluva bargain. Shame on you if you miss this opportunity when it comes around again. — Cave Diver Harry

Too many divers in the Cleveland area think of diving as something you do only on vacation. Just Add Water can keep you immersed right here at home. For example:
On top of this, we have three St. Lawrence Seaway Trips and two Niagara River trips scheduled for June, July, August and September. (See our Travel page for more info.) And don’t forget our extensive schedule of continuing education classes taking place throughout the summer.
Now you have no excuse. It’s time to get wet.