Nan Yang
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That's great. Watch out for sharks in slightly murky water like that! We just had a fatality from a shark bite yesterday in the state of Maine, just 1/2 states north of Antidote and myself. We have a serious great white shark problem here that's getting worst by the year.
It just the photo. The water in Maldive is crazy clear. You could see the boat from 60 feet below. Underwater photography is never easy. All your photos will come out pretty much like that. Fortunately we had 2 photographers in our diving club and so I am very lucky to have some diving photos.
In warm tropical waters usually there are only small reef shark. Does not border me when I am underwater. I only get shark phobia after surfacing splashing my way to the boat.
Largest shark I came across was a shovelhead shark resting on the seabed. A dive marshal led us very close to it. Since he is the dive marshal I guess it must be safe.
There were no GPS 35 years ago. And no affordable sonar either. Boat captain uses a compass and sea charts to navigate. And at night, observed the frequency of the lights of the beacon and lighthouses.Very true. It's no fun at all when you ground the boat, especially on hard rock. Sand is one thing but you can ingest a lot of it into the engine and cause it to seize which is another big problem, but hitting shallow rocks is probably the worst. That's why I have 2 GPS navigation MDFs with depth markings for the entire US east coast. So anywhere we go, I know exactly how deep it is even if I'm unfamiliar with the waters. And having two is redundancy since it's not just for water depth, but many other functions as well as the primary one which is navigation. GPS gets you from point A to B and back to A the easiest and safest way.
All those numbers are the depth in feet at low tide. White water is water that is 20 feet or more and blue water is 20 feet or less. The black marks are "bread crumbs" so that when you leave your home base, they leave those black bread crumbs so you can follow them back easily.
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It even gives you a digital depth reading as well.
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In South East Asia you can drink pretty much anywhere. On the beach, on the boat, on the street. Nobody cares.That's one of the first things they teach you is to always come off plain slowly so you don't submerge your transom and get engulfed by water. Some boats are designed worst than others but with ours, the built-in (integral) swim platform in the back has a 8" step up to the walkway to prevent that from happening. But we still stop slowly just because it's good practice.
These basterds are almost always boarding me to check papers and if anyone is drinking. They're always disappointing haha.
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US has to many rules. Sometime we set off fire works on the beach just for fun. No problems.
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