Dec
15
2009

Shark through cage floor - photo by Meghan
It was just one shark at first, then three, then five. When the day was out, we had seen 11 great whites ranging from 7-16 feet in length, their dorsal and tail fins sticking out of the water like the slate-gray triangles you see in movies. The boat picked up speed and the captain tossed a seal-shaped piece of tire-rubber attached to a rope off of the back of the boat. A shark took it. Then he threw out another one, and managed to reel it back it – the number of teeth marks imprinted in the thing was astounding. After witnessing this act, I decided that it was now or never: I volunteered to be the first (and ultimately the only) one to venture off the boat and into the cage.
Continue Reading »
Read more:
Diving,
Nature & Wildlife,
Oceans,
Scuba,
South Africa,
Travel
Dec
04
2009

Shark Sighting - photo by Meghan
It is impossible to be a diver in South Africa and not consider, or know someone who has considered (who in turn forces you to consider), cage diving with great white sharks. I too considered it.
And there I was, all alone, my chicken friends at home in their warm little beds. I woke up extra early, it seemed like it was barely dawn, and set out to risk my life. I signed up for a great white shark cage diving trip a half hour or so out of Cape Town, in Hermanus. I was going to the famed Seal Rock – where hundreds of seals gather, making a rock full of steaks for great whites who have been seen here – and virtually no where else – jumping clear out of the water to snag one. With sharks this crazy-eyed and hungry, it seemed like the worst place in the world to be dressed in a wetsuit with a hood, thus looking the most like a seal that I have ever looked in my life. So what – this was an adventure!
Continue Reading »
Read more:
Diving,
Nature & Wildlife,
Oceans,
Scuba,
South Africa,
Travel
Nov
27
2009

Breathing under water - photo by Meghan
There is nothing more exciting than breathing underwater. And by exciting, I mean the awe-inspiring, nervous excitement that land-lovers get when they see the local view from the top of a really high roller coaster. Watching bubbles leave your regulator and run for the safety of the surface is neither comforting nor an affirmation that you are doing the right thing in exploring this other world… but they are ‘pretty.’ Whether you’re snorkeling or using scuba – the strange sensation of staying in an environment that should kill you is a cultural experience in and of itself. And a country’s underwater residents can be as varied and can eat even stranger things than their counterpart’s topside. For these reasons, I love scuba.
Continue Reading »
Read more:
Cape Town,
Diving,
Nature & Wildlife,
Oceans,
Scuba,
South Africa,
Travel
Apr
02
2009

Sea of Glory --by Nathaniel Philbrick
I know it is not the most “sophisticated’ way to evaluate a book, but if the book is so engrossing that I miss my stop on the subway…I consider it to be really good. Sea of Glory by Nathaniel Philbrick is one of those books. I am only halfway through the book, but it caused me to do some exploring of my own this morning as I totally missed my subway stop and ended up in a part of Boston I have never been to before.
Philbrick tells the story of the voyage of the U.S. Exploring Expedition of 1838 – 1842 led by Charles Wilkes; an exploration of the Pacific Ocean. Growing up on the Pacific Ocean, one would think that I would have heard of or possibly learned about this historic feat. But I really don’t recall ever hearing about Charles Wilkes, and I lived in a town where all the schools were named after Pacific Northwest explorers. (I went to McLaughlin.) In this book, Philbrick explains why the U.S. Exploring Expedition–who mapped nearly all of the Pacific Ocean, named Antarctica, and collected a sizable collection of exotic specimens that became the foundation of the Smithsonian Institution–is basically unknown. Just don’t pick it up if you have any pressing engagements.
Read more:
Adventure,
Book Reviews,
Exploration,
Hidden Treasures,
Nathaniel Philbrick,
Oceans,
Pacific Northwest