Each dive, we get in the boat for the stunning ride to the dive site. Then we pull up our wetsuits, check our tank pressure, spit in our masks (yes, I actually do still do that), strap on the fins, do a check…
]]>I mean, of course, it’s the fish and the warm, blue water and all of that…but I think one of the best things is the mystery.
Each dive, we get in the boat for the stunning ride to the dive site. Then we pull up our wetsuits, check our tank pressure, spit in our masks (yes, I actually do still do that), strap on the fins, do a check with our buddy and fall backwards into the drink. And all of the time we are doing this, in the back of my mind is the anticipation of the unknown. What is going to greet us down there? Will it be a fast paced current ride with a gazillion fish? Will we discover one we haven’t seen yet? Will there be charismatic megafauna? It’s a surprise around every coral head…. Each and every dive has the potential to be the best one of my life…how could I not be excited about THAT each and every day?
And we’ve had great surprises for sure here in Raja Ampat, Indonesia the past three weeks. Yesterday we did some muck diving. Sounds pretty horrible doesn’t it? Well, muck diving, TRUE muck diving is spending a couple of hours skimming the bottom of a sandy bay(usually volcanic) for the wild weird critters that live there. Nowadays, I see people using the term to mean that they are going to take you to a crappy dive site and say it’s muck diving. Anyways, our muck dive yesterday was at the base of these gorgeous, jungle topped volcanic rocks dotting the sea. We never got past 30 feet but in the sand and muck we found sea horses, baby wobegong sharks, juvenile cuddlefish, a plethora of nudibranchs and shrimp and crabs. At every turn, nature shared incredible secrets!
The second dive was called the Passage. Now in terms of finding cool fish, it was difficult in the ripping current, not really the point of this dive. But this dive was more for the ride. It was a literal river within the sea and we jumped in and flew across the bottom for an hour at close to three knots. Eventually the “river” spit us out into a large bay where we poked around in the coral. Since it was a different environment, we found different fish and new ones we hadn’t seen here before. We spend hours pouring over the fish books most every evening.
Today, we went to a dive site we’ve been to at least eight times. However, each day the same dive site can produce completely different mysteries. Today the hoards of fish were SO large, it was disorienting! Absolutely incredible.
Approach each and every day with the attitude that life is a great mystery to be revealed. You can find mystery in everything you do, not just in diving. Take an attitude of curiosity in life, explore and wonder and participate in solving life’s puzzles. It makes each and every day special.
To Your Adventures!
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Have no fear, however, some of the best conversations I’ve ever had, have been “non” conversations. It’s amazing how easily we can communicate without the spoken word. Of course, as scuba divers, it is essential we have a basic form of non verbal communication, a global language of hand gestures to indicate basic commands and questions such as: go up, go down, stop, how much air do you have or look at the big shark!
Here in Indonesia, our dive guides have a smattering of English words and I have an even smaller smattering of Bahasa but I had a lengthy and hilarious conversation yesterday with Eddy, my guide, underwater. It went something like this:
Eddy found a scorpionfish and pointed it out to me. This is an extremely poisonous fish, well camouflaged within the reef and if you are not careful, you can fall victim to it’s excruciating sting as I did one day a year ago by stepping on one off the beach. Anyways, Eddy pointed out the fish. I returned his gesture with a pantomime motion of stabbing it to death. Since my unfortunate encounter, I wish them all ill fortune (in a simple joking manner!). Eddy agreed with me saying we should kill it and eat it. Not being one to indulge in seafood, I waved off his invitation to dine and pointed to my foot with a stamping motion indicating my past history with the fish.
Here we were at 70 feet under the water with schools of fish swirling around us, concentrating on telling stories!
Eddy wiped his brow in understanding and what I thought was sympathy and then a huge burst of bubble erupted from his regulator. He was laughing hysterically at me probably for doing something so dumb as stepping on the fish! He laughed so hard his mask flooded. I rubbed my eyes with closed fists to tell him that I was a cry baby from the pain of the sting which sent him into more peels of laughter. Of course, laughter being infectious, it send me into giggles as well.
So here we are the two of us, masks flooded, doubled over in fits of hilarity, bubbles bursting from our mouths over a simple story of the worst pain in my life as the current hurls us down the reef. We kind of slapped each other on the shoulder and then just continued with our dive. We didn’t talk about it after the dive, the whole story had been told and understood under the sea, conversation over.
Sometimes it’s the wordless conversations that are the best way to communicate and build a base for a friendship. I wonder what Eddy and I will “talk” about today in the blue?
To Your Adventures!
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Dominica – the Adventure Island 2012 Turkey Day in the Tropics November 17-24 2012 Make a Reservation- email sharkman@globaldivingadventures.com
It’s lucky number 13! Our 13th year of the incomparable Turkey Day in the Tropics! This year, it’s an all out adventure on one of the most magnificent Caribbean islands! Stay in your own private jungle cottage in a serene, natural setting. Here are a few of the things we…
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It’s lucky number 13! Our 13th year of the incomparable Turkey Day in the Tropics! This year, it’s an all out adventure on one of the most magnificent Caribbean islands! Stay in your own private jungle cottage in a serene, natural setting. Here are a few of the things we can do and see on Dominica, a towering volcanic island in the middle of a blue sea! A week is not NEARLY enough
PLUS all the things you’ve come to love about TURKEY DAY IN THE TROPICS including:
*Same time next year friendships with highlights like: Leroy’s hilarity, Liz’s new dress, Marcia’s blue toenails, Lee’s laugh, Chris’s photos, Laurie’s stack of romance novels.
*Thanksgiving feast (of some sort!)
and MORE……
Join us at Jungle Bay Resort and Spa for GDA’s 13th!!!! Annual Turkey Day in the Tropics!
Included: 7 nights accommodations at Jungle Bay Resort, 5 days of diving (weather permitting), BLD for 7 days, group transfers, use of underwater digital camera and video, services of expedition leaders including any specialty courses taught, slide shows and other fun stuff including whale watching and waterfall hikes.
Not Included: Air transportation, travel insurance, dive insurance, alcoholic beverages, items of a personal nature, departure tax where applicable, excess baggage fees, SCUBA or snorkel equipment, marine park fees where applicable, dive staff gratuities.
ARRIVAL AIRPORT: DOM
This is a TRIO of adventure with luxury to match! It’s what we call Surf and Turf which means both the best on land and in the water. We have rented an…
]]>This is a TRIO of adventure with luxury to match! It’s what we call Surf and Turf which means both the best on land and in the water. We have rented an incredible villa for ONLY FIVE COUPLES (plus Sharkman & Mantagirl) on the quaint and fun island of Isla Mujeres, Mexico. When?
It is during the summer that the largest gathering of whale sharks in the world arrive! And last summer over 500 whale sharks gathered here. That’s right, literally hundreds of whale sharks; Schools of whale sharks. And they swim at or just below the surface of the water. So while you could go whale shark diving, all you need to do here is put on a mask and get in. We will spend two days snorkeling with them and the experience as well as the photographic ops will be immense. If you’ve ever wanted to swim with the largest (harmless!) fish in the sea, NOW is your chance.
For divers, we’ll be doing two days of diving the beautiful reefs so it’s a PERFECT adventure for those with non diving spouses who might like to hang out at the villa and get a massage by the pool.
A multimillion dollar villa with private infinity pool and dock, 6 luxury suites (4 with jacuzzi!) private chef and concierge service. Choose your suite! First come, first serve basis so HURRY!


FLIGHTS : Fly into Cancun, airport code CUN. Tons of flights from tons of airports at good prices. Go to Kayak.com to easily source your flight.
PRICING : per person, dbl occ. $2895
INCLUDED: 7 nights luxury accommodations, BL for 7 days and D for 5 days, 2 days whale shark snorkeling, 2 days two tank diving, group transfers, services of expedition leaders including any specialty courses taught and slide shows.
NOT INCLUDED: Air transportation, travel insurance, dive insurance, beverages, items of a personal nature, departure tax where applicable, park fees where applicable, excess baggage fees, SCUBA or snorkel equipment, dive/snorkel staff gratuities.
This morning Ridlon found a list of things we wanted to have, be or do that we wrote at some point in 2010. Considering they are major events/experiences or purchases, we were surprised at how many we…
]]>As 2011 comes to a close, it always makes Ridlon and I think back on the year. Like many people, we do a end of year review of what worked, what didn’t, what we accomplished and what lies ahead.
This morning Ridlon found a list of things we wanted to have, be or do that we wrote at some point in 2010. Considering they are major events/experiences or purchases, we were surprised at how many we could check off the “bucket list” since then. It’s not a yearly list but a continual, organic, dynamic document. And it is simply amazing how intention works. Once we write it down, put it on a dream board and open up to opportunity, how it all falls into place. Just for fun, here is the list. What is in red is what has been completed.
1.Purchase/learn Final Cut Pro editing software
2.Purchase lights for video system (did it but have to do it again!)
3.Train on a diving rebreather
4.Get our dry suit diving certification
5.Become a published author
6.Dive with whales
7.Stay at the ice hotel in Finland
8.Fly to London with our friend Lee at the helm (an AA pilot)
9.Dive the Sardine Run
10.Dive with the mantas in the Maldives
11.Do a Civil War battlefield tour with Dad (Ridlon)
12.Take a trip with our nieces and nephews
13.Climb the Seven Summits (ONE of seven summited so far)
14.Climb Mt. Rainier
15.Three month speaking tour for Ocean of Hope (our non profit)
16.Dive Raja Ampat for a month (headed back again in 2 weeks!)
17.Dive the southern Red Sea
18.Travel/Dive Cuba before it opens up
19.Safari in Africa
20.Climb Torres del Paine (Patagonia)
21.Argentina wine tour
22.See the sandhill crane migration in Nebraska
23.Swim with whale sharks using a biofin
24.Fly an Ultralight
25.Dive the cownose ray migration in Mexico
26.Take a luxury cruise with mom (Ridlon)
27.Costa Rica birding tour with brother and dad (Ridlon)
28.Hike the Great Himalayan Trail
29.Buy a red jeep
30.Dive Cocos Island (did it twice!)
31.Spend a season in Antarctica diving
32.Fly at Mach 2
33.Go into space (orbit)
34.Film a documentary
35.Speak at a Fortune 100 company
36.Have a personal assistant
37.Have a massage every day
38.Go to the bottom of the Marianas Trench
39.See polar bears and tigers in the wild
40.Dive with sailfish at Isla Mujeres, Mexico
41.Dive the Line Islands
42.Buy at Yeti mountain bike (Ridlon)
43.Do Ocean of Hope village projects
44.Dive Fakarava (again)
45.Round the world expedition (IN PLANNING for a July departure!)
46.Live in a foreign country for a year (non English speaking)
47.Dive with the Great White sharks of Guadaloupe Island
48.Learn to Kiteboard
49.Go to Greenland
50.Bike the Telluride/Moab trail
*adventurous divers wanting something off the beaten track
*big megafauna – humpback whales, whales sharks and mantas
*healthy fish populations
*possibly the best white sand beaches in the world
SCUBA Diving Mozambique is Not Great For:
*divers looking to be coddled
*divers not wanting physical dives
*hard coral reefs
*highly developed infrastructure or nightlife
We were headed over to…
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*adventurous divers wanting something off the beaten track
*big megafauna – humpback whales, whales sharks and mantas
*healthy fish populations
*possibly the best white sand beaches in the world
*divers looking to be coddled
*divers not wanting physical dives
*hard coral reefs
*highly developed infrastructure or nightlife
We were headed over to Africa and had heard about the diving in Mozambique for quite some time. The timing wasn’t right for the zenith of all divers’ wish lists, the Sardine Run, which turned out to be a blessing as the Sardine Run of 2011 was basically a bust.
But we had been invited to visit friends in Maputo, Mozambique and as we began researching the area we found Tofo Beach. Two of our Dive Master friends had recently worked there and raved about it, calling it their favorite diving in the world. Not well known in the US market, Tofo Beach is a very laid back beach town, an eight hour drive north of the nation’s capital with some very interesting surprises!
In order to get a full assessment of the area, we set up different types of accommodations and arranged to dive with three different dive operators. Most divers fly into the nearby town of Imhambane just a short drive from Tofo but we opted to drive to get a better look at coastal East Africa.
Mozambique is quite a different animal from it’s neighbors of South Africa and Tanzania. Just after realizing its independence from Portugal in 1975 it plunged into civil war from 1977-1992 leaving the country in vast disarray. Driving up the coast it is easy to see that it remains one of the least developed countries in the world. We passed village after village of reed huts with dirt floors, no electricity or running water. Thousands of children walked the road back and forth to school and the small cities we passed through were flooded with people in the markets selling anything they could to make ends meet. Women and children walk with oversized plastic containers balanced on their heads coming home from the local well. Along the way, roadside stands sold an array of goods but seemed to specialize in two things, cashews and hot sauce. The cashews are picked and roasted by hand and packaged in plastic bags which are then tied to the trees. It’s easy to spot these “plastic bag” trees from hundreds of yards away. And with a price of 200 Meticals ($8) for a huge bag, they were impossible to resist! The hot sauce, called Peri Peri varies from household to household but all are made with the bird’s eye pepper, tomatoes, garlic and who knows what else… all I know is that it’s HOT HOT HOT. It can be found at hundreds of stands along the way bottled in whatever empty bottles the family has. Don’t worry, any contamination is sure to be killed by the spice!
The highways, however, were in good repair all the way to Imhambane (courtesy of Chinese investment in exchange for commercial fishing rights. That in itself is another story!). Though you couldn’t see the coastline for much of the drive, gorgeous white sand beaches and dunes hug the shoreline for hundreds of miles. Mozambique may be the most beach rich country in the world. From Inhambane, it takes about 30 minutes into Tofo and we arrived just after dark with no reservations for the first night. We decided to check out the “backpackers” lodge and checked in to the only remaining room at Bamboozi Beach Lodge. The parent company, Barra Resorts, owns a few different levels of accommodation in the area and Bamboozi is at the bottom. We were given a bamboo “chalet” which was quite spacious with a double and two single beds. Many travelers in Africa like “self catering” style accommodations which means they have kitchen facilities and many sleep four, six or eight people so a group or family will rent larger units. While we were expecting “backpacker” level we didn’t expect dirty. Our water came out brown and it never drained from the shower. The mosquito netting over the bed had holes and we were both completely eaten alive that night. We went to the restaurant where we were served pretty good food on very dirty tablecloths. I tried hard not to think of what the kitchen looked like! While food in Mozambique is plenty expensive (due to corruption and the fact that it is all imported) hotel accommodations are reasonable. Our dinner (one appetizer and one chicken main plus three beers ran about $40). They were “out” of wine. The hotel ran $60. We left our small flashlight in the room when we checked out and when we returned the next morning to get it, it was gone and was never turned in to lost and found. The room had been cleaned but no one else had checked into the room.
In the morning we were excited to get to the diving. The Tofo Beach area is mainly known for big and abundant megafauna including , humpback whales, manta rays and whale sharks… what a combo!!! We set out for Tofo Scuba just a few minute drive up the beach. We were greeted by Joan, the manager, as Nikki, the owner was out of town for a wedding. Joan had been fully briefed on our impending arrival and went about getting us set to dive. As the domestic airlines LAM, had “misplaced” all of our luggage en route from Kilimanjaro to Maputo, we arrived without any of our dive gear. The staff at Tofo Scuba went over the top helping to outfit us and some of the Dive Masters lent us their personal gear.
The shop has a great area for “kitting up” and a small pool for teaching. The front side of the building sits on an incredibly gorgeous stretch of beach. Chaise lounges, picnic tables and a small restaurant serving a hearty pre dive breakfast and lunch complete the picture. The only part of this laid back dive shop that didn’t meet my expectations was the locker room which was a bit dank and dark. However, the never ending hot water showers were luxurious!
At Tofo Scuba the majority of the Dive Masters were expats mostly from S. Africa. They were all young and fun and upbeat. They gave thorough dive briefings and knew the dive sites well. Considering that none of them were probably over age 25, they had a good level of experience. Matt and Nick were our main DMs for the three days we dived with Tofo Scuba.
The process of diving at Tofo Beach is quite unique and not for the pampered diver! There are no jetties to tie up the dive boats and often there is a large swell pounding the beach. So the completely rusted out Land Cruiser (what else would you expect in Africa!) hauls the eight meter RIB on the trailer to the long flat beach. Then they throw it in reverse and floor it towards the water. Then just when you think the Land Cruiser is going to turn submarine, they jam it into forward gear and the boat comes flying off the trailer! The divers all run over to the boat and together we push and pull and turn it around to face the waves.
Once the boat is floating they yell, “ladies up!” and all the girls clammer into the boat. Then once the boat is in shoulder deep water the men jump in and we pound our way through the surf. One day the surf was so big, a wave smashed out the plexiglass windshield!
Off to the dive site we go. All of the deep sites 60-100ft are about a 30-45 minute boat ride away, the shallow sites only 5-15. On the way, the boats always keep a look out for whale sharks. At first we thought, right, what are the chances but then soon enough the cry came, “whale shark!”. The boat stopped and we all grabbed for masks, fins and cameras and jumped overboard. The Tofo Beach area, it turns out is one of the largest areas for whale sharks in the world. 20% of all identified whale sharks worldwide have been identified in this small stretch of coastline (300 out of 1000). Enough so that a manta and whale shark research station is set up here with a small staff working hard to protect these incredible animals.
Sometimes it can be difficult to find out the truth of when is the “best” time to dive an area. Most dive operator websites say, “year around” is best. We were told that October was a great time of the year, though it was at the end of the humpback season. Turned out we saw just a couple humpbacks but missed most of them by about two weeks. It was said it was a banner year for the whales who breach incredibly close to shore and many divers have had the chance to see them underwater. But we knew that mantas and whale sharks would be our main attraction. However, what we weren’t prepared for were the total “unusual” conditions we found. The water, which is normally about 26c (78.8F) this time of year varied from 20c (68F) to a mind chilling 16(60.8F). Since I am normally cold in a 7mm in 85 degree water, you can imagine my shock in a rented 5mm in 60! Not only that but because of the upwelling associated with the unusual wind direction the normally clear water was very green and fairly dark with a range of 20’ to 30’ visibility. I didn’t even to rig my video the whole week.
Over the next five days neither the temperature nor the visibility improved. However, it was GREAT for whale sharks. We had plenty of opportunity to freeze our butts off chasing whale sharks and watching them turn vertical and suck in the plankton soup. The mantas were also there and probably in more of a force then we could see, we simply had to imagine that behind the two or three we saw on each dive, there were more following. Given the number we saw splashing and leaping on the surface, this was undoubtedly true.
What we saw at Tofo was great POTENTIAL. When the water is clear and warmer, which probably occurred the day after we left (smile) it would be fantastic. Tofo has some beautiful, Fiji like soft corals (dendronepthya) – which took us by surprise – and very abundant fish populations including large groupers on almost every reef. . Interestingly, the red toothed triggerfish is the staple of the reef. Tofo is not known for lush reefs. To find the lush reefs you would need to head further north to the Bazaruto. There you will find nice lush reefs but a lack of megafauna. It would be a nice combo trip.
We had arranged two days of diving with Tofo Scuba and then our next stop was to dive with Peri Peri Divers, a relative newcomer to the scene. All I had read about it had been great! However, when we arrived, even after the owner had told us to come on down and dive, we were told, “They are not currently doing business”. That would have been good information to have been given by the dive shop! So we returned to Tofo Scuba who were more than happy to have us back diving with them again. The day before we left we caught up with one of the employees of Peri Peri who informed us that the other dive shops were trying to run them out of business and they were now having problems because the other dive shops paid off someone in the government to shut them down. At this point, we don’t know the truth but the claim seemed far fetched to us.
After our now three days with Tofo Scuba, we went around the corner to dive with Diversity Scuba. They were also warm and welcoming and again, lent us whatever gear we needed and again, some of the DMs lent us their private gear including computers. Diversity Scuba is not on the beach like Tofo but just a block away. They have a new, clean facility as well as a teaching pool. They have a cool upstairs deck where the dive briefings are held in cozy chairs. They have a small bar but no restaurant. That’s okay however, because one of the beach’s best restaurants, Waterworks, is right next door. We found that Diversity and Tofo both were safe and well run dive operators and I would gladly dive with either of them again. Diversity owns and operates a hotel on the beach which is undergoing a huge renovation and Sergi, the owner, promised us photos of the new place in the next four months! I did feel that one of the Dive Masters we were with was definitely not as experienced and a couple of times he appeared lost on the dive. He had broken his dive computer and was diving on the deep reefs without one, swimming over to his other DM to check for time and depth. However, one thing you can never bank on is for Dive Masters to be there when you get back. Like every other diver on the planet, they too want to dive the world.
If you have a chance, you can also take an Ocean Safari. At Diversity Scuba, they offer the opportunity to go out with a biologist to look for whales, dolphin and whale sharks. Any chance encounter, they stop the boat and you can get in with them. The biologist does an informative talk at the shop before you go. Then you help out by identifying each whale shark’s sex and size and if you can take identification photos. It’s definitely worth spending an afternoon doing.
After our stay at Bamboozi Lodge, we stayed next at Casa Barry. Casa Barry is advertised as the most upscale lodge on Tofo Beach. Yes, it is more upscale than the backpacker’s lodges but we were still in a bamboo room with cement floor and a basic bed back off the beach. There are a few larger A-frame units right on the beach which were definitely nicer than our back of the house casita. The hotel has a nice beachside restaurant which is probably the most expensive in the area and a very nice bar. One of the great things about Casa Barry is that they have given free space to house the manta and whale shark research station. Three nights a week there are talks. On Mondays, Dr. Andrea Marshall (star of the BBC documentary, Andrea – Queen of the Mantas) who started it all here at Tofo speaks. Unfortunately, on our Monday, she had missed her flight as she was returning from another part of Africa so we never heard her speak. On Wednesday, Dr. Simon Pierce speaks on his research of whale sharks. He is funny, interesting, poignant and a must see. On Friday is a general talk on the ecology of the area by one of the PHD students. It’s a nice touch and a great way to learn about what’s going on in Tofo.
After three nights at Casa Barry we moved on. We were still searching for THE truly upscale hotel in the area. We spent one entire rainy afternoon searching out areas nearby Tofo. We went and looked at Barra Resort’s other lodges, Flamingo Bay and Barra Resort. Flamingo Bay is nice with overwater casitas with air conditioning, something we often did not find in Tofo. However, during our inspection the pool was a horrible green and the tide was out exposing the mud flats. Our preference was something more on the beach. Barra Lodge is a family resort and if you are not into the family thing, I would steer clear. Otherwise, it is on a nice stretch of beach.
But then we came across Barra Beach Club. We pulled in and as we walked in our eyes lit up. In front of us was a gorgeous dining room with white linen, high end wine stems and a true European flair! We excitedly asked for a tour. The eight rooms and one “honeymoon cottage” gave it a distinctly boutique feel. The beds were soft with high quality linens. The pool area was beautiful and well kept. At the beach was an upscale beach bar with another beautiful swimming pool. We arranged to stay the night. When you book here, room, dinner and breakfast are included at a very reasonable price of about $250. However, if you have dinner a la carte as we did, it was over $100 just for the meal.
The manager, Evan, has big plans for the hotel. Currently, they work in tandem with Tofo Scuba though it is about a 30 minute drive to the dive shop. He plans more boutique rooms in separate buildings and a huge dive facility. It will be interesting to see if they can execute on these grand plans. Meanwhile, we feel that this will be a place that an upscale market will appreciate.
Our final night was at a wonderful B&B called Baia Sonumbula, run by a gem of an Italian woman named Laura. The B&B is small with just five rooms. It sits just on the beach next door to Casa Barry. The two rooms inside the main building have a large bed with plenty of storage and large bathrooms. They do not have any views and are in the back of the house. However, the three remaining rooms are fantastic. They have sliding doors that completely open up the rooms with sea views. They are decorated with low platform beds, Asian style with raised basins in the large bathroom and open showers. They have A/C and we used it to keep out the mosquitos which can be an issue at sunrise and sunset if you don’t have a breeze. . It was heaven to open the doors in the morning to watch and listen to the waves roll in and the breeze float into the room. Above the rooms is a sun deck and a covered area with a dining table where made to order breakfast is served each morning. It’s truly a place where you know you will make friends and a place you will want to come back to.
Tofo Beach grows on you. My very first impression was that it was a little dumpy with sand streets and some run down backpacker hotels. But within a day, I was starting to feel at home. At every turn, we would meet someone we had already met. We sampled most of the few restaurants and kept meeting more and more people. By the fifth day I think we knew everyone! One night, Waterworks put on a steak night. For only about $10/pp we had fabulous steaks on the grill, spicy potatoes and salad. Our Dive Master, Nick, from Tofo Scuba was the main entertainment and he showed incredible talent on the guitar. Everyone showed up, from the Dive Masters to the owners of the shops to guests we had met from the hotels, other divers and even the two gals who run the only up-end deli in town. There were probably 75 people there that night and we must have know 80% of them.
We will return to Tofo Beach at some point to have that hometown feeling in a little funky beach town in the middle of struggling Mozambique. We’ll return to all the restaurants and dive with both Tofo Scuba and Diversity. But we will call in advance and make sure there aren’t any unusual conditions because we want to see more than the just the potential for great diving. We want to see reefs packed with fish, mantas, whale sharks and the humpbacks in all their glory.
And, there is no denying the grand scale of Mozambique’s amazing beaches – something only the South Africans seem to really know about. But now, you do too.
•Amazing Whale Shark Encounters
•Fantastic Beaches
•Peri Peri Divers
•Bamboozi Beach Lodge
•Unusually Crappy Conditions
TO YOUR DIVE ADVENTURES!
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Every year, nearly 20,000 people die and 21 million medical visits are needed due to home accidents in the United States, says the U.S. Home Safety Council.
Here are six of the top accidents waiting to happen in your home.…
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Here are six of the top accidents waiting to happen in your home.
1. Cutting yourself with a knife. 150 people stab themselves every day while trying to open a jar or a packaged meal with a knife!
2. Slamming fingers in doors/windows. 30,000 people are rushed to the US Emergency rooms each year with an amputated finger and one of the top reasons is slamming them in doors!
3. Falling down the stairs. More people end up in the US Emergency rooms because of fall related injuries than from any other cause.
4. Getting burned while cooking. 60,000 people are hospitalized every year with burn related injuries and cooking is one of most hazardous.
5. Falling out of windows (really??). According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, thousands of young children are killed or injured from falling out of windows every year.
6. Electrocution. About 1000 people die each year from this.
Of course you can argue that the reason this happens is because most people spend most of their time at home and these numbers also include children. And you would probably be right. I’m simply making the point that staying home is not a safer way to live life. Get out and experience the world. Don’t let FEAR stop you from life.
What on earth made me think of this? The irony of a situation that happened last week. In 2009, Ridlon climbed and summited the 6th highest peak in the world at 26,906’ as well as two 20,000’ mountains in the Himalayas. Last month we summited Mt. Kilimanjaro at 19, 341’. Not a scratch on him! Last Friday he ran up the stairs in the dark and slammed his foot into the couch. Result? Spiral fracture of the middle toe!
I’m convinced!!! It’s safer out of the house… I’m leaving and going traveling…..I’m going “out there” where I don’t have to fear for my life……I just hope I don’t slam my fingers in the door on the way out!
But this morning, I was contemplating a Bucket List timeline. Initially, not in the sense of what I…
]]>But this morning, I was contemplating a Bucket List timeline. Initially, not in the sense of what I want to accomplish in the next number of years but in terms of the past. Has the time come and gone for parts of your bucket list?
Between the years of 1995 and 1997 I had one of the best adventure jobs in my life. I was living in Tahiti (say no more!) and working on a luxury cruise ship. I was running a scuba diving program, diving six days a week, feeding sharks and educating people on the ocean. I had all my expenses paid for including a bar allowance (say no more again!). It was an extremely physically demanding job so I was in the best shape of my life. I was working alongside my husband, making life long friends and was always tan. It was the right time in my life for that job. I was living the bucket list!
Eleven years later, I went back to the same cruise line to work for a year. The ship had changed. The job had changed. We did much less diving and more handing out of DVDs. My tendonitis bothered me to the point of cortisone shots now that I was more than a decade older. I had all my expenses paid for still but now I also had a home mortgage that I didn’t have in the 90’s. I realized that the time for me and cruise ship life had passed.
I started to relate this to my bucket list. When I was a kid I always wanted to hike the entire Appalachian Trail. I read all the books, did a lot of backpacking in various places in the country but I never did the entire trail. Now, 30 years later, my bucket list has changed. The AT is not at the top of the list anymore. The time for the AT may have passed for me simply because other things have replaced it. I wish that I had done it when I was eighteen like I had planned.
I realize this as an opportunity lost. As life changes so do our desires. I don’t dwell on it or spend my life in regret over it but it causes me to stop and think now about the present and the future. What is on my bucket list NOW that the time is right to accomplish? What will change in the next five years to make me rethink the list due to age or finances or health or simply desire. There is a window of opportunity for many things on your bucket list.
Pull out your list, make a timeline, realize the timing of opportunity. DO NOT live in regret of those things for which the time has passed, look to NOW and see what you can accomplish in this window of your life.
My neighbor came by the other day and when he came into my house he was in hysterics. I chuckled with him and asked what was so funny. He said,” I always laugh when I see the plaque at your front door which says, “If you’re lucky enough to be in the mountains, you’re lucky enough.” It’s hilarious because you’re never here!”
Only minutes before I…
]]>My neighbor came by the other day and when he came into my house he was in hysterics. I chuckled with him and asked what was so funny. He said,” I always laugh when I see the plaque at your front door which says, “If you’re lucky enough to be in the mountains, you’re lucky enough.” It’s hilarious because you’re never here!”
Only minutes before I had been thinking that it had been ages since we had traveled, which to us meant three weeks. Guess it’s all in the perspective! I began to think about the triggers that signal the death sentence of an over-extended home stay.
So for all of you adventure travelers out there, those whose lives consists of airports, exotic locations and a stack of TSA notices, here is a list you can tack on the fridge to indicate when it’s time to bail……
Top 10 ways you know you’ve been home too long.
And the number one way to know that you’ve overstayed your welcome in your own house……
You wake up in the middle of the night and recognize where you are.
…yep….time to hit the road!
]]>I’ve been home 27 days.. if you count today and the day I landed at the airport. About 22 days too long. Not that I don’t like home, in fact I LOVE my home. But when I’m home, I’m not traveling, simple as that.
My biggest fear is living an ordinary life.I abhor allowing even a single day to pass without some kind of adventure. Even as…
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I’ve been home 27 days.. if you count today and the day I landed at the airport. About 22 days too long. Not that I don’t like home, in fact I LOVE my home. But when I’m home, I’m not traveling, simple as that.
I abhor allowing even a single day to pass without some kind of adventure. Even as the world gets smaller, there is more to see and experience and learn than could ever be accomplished in one life. It’s like never getting to the end of the internet, you can never come to the end of adventure. This is why it’s both a gift and a curse. It’s infinite.
Many people say I’ve been lucky to do what I’ve done in my life. I will be bold here and say, no I’ve worked VERY hard at it. In fact, I’m obsessed with it. I’m always planning and thinking and scheming and figuring a way to the next plane ticket, the next “never been to” destination. And it never seems enough.
As the year 2011 winds down, I think about what I’ve done this year and I feel that I haven’t been very adventurous. Then Ridlon shakes his head and recounts the year.
Well, I guess when he says it like that, it’s been a pretty busy year.
Now, I’ve spent an entire 27 days at home….. sigh… I feel I’m living an “ordinary life” once again. I feel I’m wasting precious time.
It makes me feel alive. It ignites my sense of wonder and encourages my sense of wander. I sit here today and wonder what people are doing in Uganda or who’s diving today in the Galapagos or who’s beginning an adventure of a lifetime? And every day I think I should be there.
When I am out adventuring I feel I have this gift I can’t hold in my hand. It’s sand through my fingers and so I need to keep digging back into the beach and refilling my hands. I need to live and experience it at each and every moment. Traveling and connecting with the world through people and culture and nature is the fabric of life and I am furiously weaving as fast as I can. It’s a rush of a lifetime.
I used to have a swing in my house. Yes, a real swing and yes inside my house and yes, I had very high ceilings! And I used to swing on it every day, pumping my legs and reaching as high as I possibly could. The thrill of being at the top of the pendulum was exhilarating. Flying high, half out of control, in a state of constant movement was key. And in order to keep flying high, you have to continuously pump your legs and work towards it or else you will slow down and stop at the bottom… and when it stops it’s no better than simply sitting on a chair…. or living an ordinary life.
The dichotomy of adventure, the curse of the addiction and the precious gift…..
To Your Adventures,
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