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Posts Tagged ‘dive shop’






Golden Horseshoe Expedition: Krabi Caves

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Technical Divers arrive in Ao Nang resort town for deep fresh water cave diving.

sra-keow-krabi-15-225x300 Golden Horseshoe Expedition: Krabi Caves

Krabi, Thailand - Big Blue Tech arrived in the town of Ao Nang in Krabi province in southern Thailand today to set up a base for diving in Sra Keow Cave located in the jungle about 25km outside of Ao Nang Town which is reported to be 240m deep in a fresh water pool.

Sra Keow cave is clearly sign posted from the main road as a tourist destination in the region. During our initial visit today we saw many tourists enjoying the rope swing and swimming in the pool.

This resurgence fresh water pool has been explored by many divers in the past with some claiming to have reached a depth of 240m inside the pool which forms a cave. All this activity on the diving forums and in magazines and even then controversy over claims of who actually dived the disputed record breaking dive all lead us to want to check it out even more.

Although we’re conducting deep air dives to maximum 60m it will still be a good chance to check out this pool and see if it’s worth returning with trimix to explore further and continue to visit the pool in the future.

After checking out Sra Keow and other dry caves in the region we headed off to “One Stop” dive shop in Ao Nang where we met with Dave who works there. One Stop is the only distributor of Halcyon gear in Thailand and is very tech friendly. With a bit of shopping done and some logistics sorted for gas fills we checked into a hotel and relaxed for the evening with some starbucks coffee and Thai massage. The following day would be a great challenge both logistically and physically so a good nights rest was needed.

Tomorrow we would conduct 2 deep dives on site and then moving on to Phi Phi Island.


Another reef project for Phuket

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

phuket-depth-perception-a-20-meter-vessel-donated-by-the-thai-hotels-association-awaits-its-final-voyage-at-the-phuket-marine-biological-center-at-cape-panwa-1-qykqorz-300x201  Another reef project for Phuket

Local divers will welcome the news that three old ships are scheduled to be sunk off Racha Yai Island to create a new artificial reef. The project, organized by the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources (DMRC) regional office in Phuket and a host of other local government agencies, is scheduled to start next month.The initiative enjoys private sector support from local dive shop operators.

So far their combined efforts have raised 400,000 of the 600,000 baht needed for the operation. It is hoped the project will alleviate stress on natural coral reefs in the area. Approximately 15 tour operators ferry over 200 divers daily to sites off Koh Racha Yai during the high season according to the DMRC.

Two iron-hulled ships, 18 and 28 meters long, were donated for the project. The larger of the two was donated by the Thai Hotels Association. The third ship, made of wood, was donated by the Phuket Provincial Fisheries Association.The project also enjoys financial support from The Racha hotel.

Paitoon Panchaiyapum, director of the DMRC office in Phuket, told the Gazette that the project has been four years in the making. Unfortunately, unless an additional 200,000 baht can be raised soon it is unlikely all three vessels will be sunk by November, he said. Mr Paitoon said he expects more than 5000 divers a year to visit the new artificial reefs, generating an estimated 10 million baht annually for the Phuket dive industry.

This latest project is the fourth artificial reef put in place around Koh Racha Yai by the DMCR. The office is also awaiting 22 million baht in government funding to greatly expand an existing artificial reef in the area, from an existing 300 concrete modules to 3000.


Contact Us

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

By Mail

info@bigbluetech.net

Big Blue Tech
P.O Box 3
G.P.O Koh Tao
Surrathani
Thailand
84360
Dive Shop: +66 (0)77 456 415
Administration: +66 (0)77 456 179
Fax: +66 (0)77 456 772
Tech Room: +66 (0)852 328 892


By Locations

similan technical diving

Big Blue Tech - Similans
(Opposite Mcdonalds)
Middle of Main Street
Khao Lak
Thailand
+66 076 485 544

Bangkok Technical Diving

Big Blue Tech - Bangkok
(Beside Seatran Ferry Office)
Viengtai Hotel
Bangkok
Thailand
+66 026 293 830

Chumphon Technical Diving

Big Blue Tech - Chumphon
(Across from Farang Bar)
Chumphon
Thailand
+66 077 504 441

Koh Tao Technical Diving

Big Blue Tech - Koh Tao
(Next to Fizz Bar)
Sai Ree Beach
Koh Tao
Thailand
+66 077 456 415

Big Blue Tech Facebook

You can find us on facebook by joining our group here.


About Technical Diving In Thailand

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Big Blue Tech is a technical diver training and expedition dive shop based in Koh Tao, Thailand. Big Blue Tech also has smaller offices and shops around other places in Thailand including khao Lak, Chumphon, Khao Sok and Bangkok but our main dive shop is in Koh Tao.

Big Blue Tech provides technical underwater skills development and training from all levels of technical scuba diving in Thailand

Big Blue Tech provides training from TDI (Technical Diving International), BSAC (British Sub Aqua Club) and DSAT (Design Science and Technology) by being a certified dive centre from each agency. When not training new divers were planning and executing alternative expeditions to cave diving destinations and wrecks located all around south east asia.


Our Location

Sai Ree Beach

Lonely Planet rated Big Blue Diving resort as a highly recommended destination in Thailand for its relaxed and friendly atmosphere located directly on the beach. We have many different options for accommodation from bungalows with a sea view to multi floor air conditioned rooms; all of which offer the standard amenities expected with a island resort. Our resort also has a restaurant and bar offering a full selection of food and drinks which is available all hours of the day.

Getting here and getting away is easy with full time taxi’s who can transfer you around the island and to your next connection on your trip, we’re located only a few hours from Samui International Airport. If you want a bit of independence you can rent a scooter from our in house motor bike rental facility who would be happy to give you a quick introduction if you’re new to riding bikes.

To find out more information about the resort visit our main website at www.bigbluediving.com.


Our Facilities

Equipment Room

We provide all mixes of  nitrox, trimix, triox, heliox, normoxic and hypoxic mixes; 200 bar of boosted oxygen or trimix for rebreather divers.

Free wireless internet access, tea and coffee with a secure private gear room with service area.

All our classrooms and teaching environments are on site with air conditioning and multi media tools for a comfortable learning environment.

Being a small and mobile diving school our facilities follow us when diving in remote locations with portable compressors and air banks.

We have 6 boats in different locations:

On koh tao we have 3 boats called Mv Banzai, Mv Navakid and Mv Big Blue. All are used by both technical and recreational diving until. When deeper and longer dives are needed we utilize the one of our boats for just technical diving.

In Khao Lak we have a large liveaboard called the Mv Pawara and 2 speed boats for long expeditions and day trips to the similan islands.


Diving Options

Equipment Room

Beyond training new divers we also provide professionally lead diving for already certified technical divers. These destinations include the east coast of Thailand with wreck diving liveaboards and day trips. Sunken Temple and Cave Expeditions in Khao Sok National Park and Similan Islands liveaboards and day trips.

With more boats and locations we provide the greatest variety of technical diving destinations and expeditions in Thailand


Diving Equipment

Equipment Room

Big Blue Tech have a large storage facility with an abundant amount of technical diving equipment for our divers to choose from. This equipment is maintained in accordance with standards of a BSAC diving facility. Our compressors all meet HSE Air Quality Standards and we use the latest equipment.

As standard all our regulators are balanced Apeks series and leading OMS and Halcyon buoyancy compensators. Divers can choose from fixed or adjustable harnesses with different accessories from pockets, back pads, weight systems and sizes.

This equipment is included with our training, you can rent this gear if you are already certified.


Environmental Commitment

Equipment Room

Living and working in a tropical paradise takes responsibility, we take this responsibility seriously by supporting local efforts with technical divers and logistics. We donate boat space, diving equipment and facilities for individuals conducting ecological assessments, clean ups, bio rock initiatives and training.

We also use our popular news section to create awareness of global ecological problems.


Military Resettlement

Tim Klein

You served your country now we’re here to serve you, unlike other companies we don’t take money from you just for paperwork. The get paid out of the courses you do, the rest is yours to do what you like. However we do not support military funded holidays. If you’re not looking to getting to this type of diving with serious intentions then this won’t be a good place for you to visit.

We have many x-forces who have completed training with us from the MOD who we can put you in contact with for references.

Many former british forces enjoy this challenging and rewarding style of diving beyond the recreational diving.


Getting Here

Tim Klein

Thailand is the land of sun, sand and smiles, it’s probably the easiest place to get to for diving. We are here to help you any way we can. We have access to book flights and transport cheaper then you can from home. We have offices in Bangkok and Chumphon where a rep will meet you and help you to your destination. And we have 2 resorts on both sides of Thailand for you to relax and enjoy when you arrive.

We reccomend that our customers fly to Surrathani Airport or Koh Samui Airport and then take the 1 hour boat to Koh Tao. Or fly directly to Phucket Airport and then a 1 hour taxi ride to Khao Lak. If you’re not flying then contact us and we will help you plan your journey.


Shark Decompression in Thailand

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

tech-thailand-diving-diver-26-225x300 Shark Decompression in Thailand

Today Big Blue Tech celebrates the graduation of Matt Payne and Emily Billingham from their TDI Decompression Procedures course on Koh Tao, Thailand.

The course began with advanced decompression techniques with running schedule with required stops along with buoyancy, gas switching methods, lift bag deployment, while on the small wreck at Japanese Gardens dive site. Emily had completed her Advanced Nitrox over a month ago and required a minor refresher but Matt had just completed his course the following day and was rolling through the curriculum with ease.

After 2 hours of diving we returned to the dive shop to plan the following days diving at Chumpon Pinncale with a dive profile of 45m for 30 minutes. Because the students excelled in their buoyancy control we allowed them to use pure oxygen for decompression for stops 4.5m and shallower.

This morning Big Blue Tech cruised to Chumphon Pinnacle and jumped in to the water early in the morning. Descending to 45m the visibility was in excess of 30 meters. Cruising down to depth we could see the recreational divers above pointing frantically out into the blue. Looking out in the direction they were point we could see a large bull shark skimming the thermocline. Moving away from the shark area Emily pointed out two lion fish huddled at the base of the pinnacle. The students followed their schedule bringing them safeyly to the surface in just over an hour. The students were also given a Suunto Vytec gas switching computer as a backup to their slates.

Finishing their accelerated decompression the divers were met by a Box Jellyfish which has been reported stalking divers around the pinnacle for a few weeks now.

Matt continues on to Khao Sok for his TDI Cavern Course and Emily returns to teaching recreational diving for Big Blue with plans to continue on to Extended Range in the Similan Islands.


Evelyn Dudas, a “living legend” of the deep

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

evelyn-dudas Evelyn Dudas, a living legend of the deep

It was June 1967, and the 22-year-old woman with a toothy smile from West Chester was aboard a smelly fishing boat with 11 men eager to dive the offshore wreck of the famed Andrea Doria, 220 feet below the Atlantic.

Evelyn Bartram Dudas didn’t recover the best artifact - the ship’s compass, which went to her future husband, John Dudas - but she returned from the trip a hero as the first woman to reach what is considered the Mount Everest of shipwrecks.

It was a defining moment in the life of the now 64-year-old scuba entrepreneur, who owns a well-known Westtown dive shop, teaches, and leads diving trips around the world, and it landed her a spot as a contestant on TV’s To Tell the Truth.

Four decades later, on a warm summer afternoon, Evelyn Dudas is back in the water - only this time, it’s 12 feet deep. In Malvern Prep’s swimming pool, she is teaching a class of mostly young would-be divers a gentle frog kick. They are probably unaware of the exploits that have made Dudas famous within the diving world, leading to her induction in the first class of the Women Divers Hall of Fame in 2000.

Though she is hobbled by osteoporosis - from improper decompression in the early days, she believes - and a series of ankle, hip, and foot surgeries, Dudas still glides through water like a porpoise.

But a dive 18 months after her Andrea Doria adventure nearly ended her career - and her life.

She and John Dudas were exploring the skeleton of a World War I freighter off the New York shoreline but kept getting caught in fishing line. With an ill-fitting wetsuit and crude equipment, she couldn’t control her ascent and rose too quickly, getting the bends.

“I couldn’t grasp the anchor line, then my feet didn’t work, and now I can’t control my legs, can’t kick, and I rolled over on my back, a floating blob,” she recalled.

At one point, she went blind.

“I thought, ‘If this is what it feels like to die, it’s a very peaceful way to go,’ ” she said.

“She’s got balls. She’s a real adventurer,” said Kevin McMurray, who wrote the book Deep Descent about the Andrea Doria. He is one of many who calls Dudas “a living legend.”

Most recreational divers don’t go below 60 feet or so. Dudas and her gutsy ilk explore the collapsing hulls of ships in depths of 200 feet or more. The dangers are many, and the risk was even greater for pioneers who risked nitrogen narcosis, a disorienting condition that occurred at great depths before the use of mixed breathing gases.

But more important, Dudas is a survivor. Not only did she come back from her near-death experience, which put her in a hospital bed for two weeks and kept her out of the water for a year and a half, but she also kept going after her husband died at the same wreck in 1982, leaving her with three young children and a fourth on the way.

Diving “wasn’t something that I wanted to get away from - and I didn’t know anything else,” she explained.

Instead, as a single mother of four, she built a successful business, Dudas’ Diving Duds, around her life’s passion. Her early frustration with the lack of proper scuba equipment for women led her to design, assemble, and sell female wetsuits in the incongruous setting of an old barn on her family’s ancestral property in Westtown. (John Bartram of Bartram’s Garden fame is her sixth great-grandfather.)

Scuba diving is a relatively young sport, built upon the exploits of Navy frogmen in World War II. By the start of the 1960s, around the time Evelyn Bartram first strapped on a tank at age 15 at the West Chester YMCA, there were only a handful of active women divers. Many of those pioneers say the reason they got involved was to get the attention of a man, and Dudas was no different.

“When I went to college, I met this beautiful man with a very beautiful girlfriend,” she recalled, and she learned his hobby was diving. “And I thought, ‘Aha, this is something that we can do that she didn’t want to do.’ ” She didn’t get her man and left school, but she continued diving after returning home.

She started diving the wrecks off the Atlantic coastline every weekend and met her future husband on a trip to the Stolt Dagali, a large Norwegian freighter that sank in 1964 in the so-called Wreck Valley between New Jersey and Long Island.

That area is among the most challenging diving environments in the world, with dark, freezing, turbulent water, strong currents, and ships with live ammunition, said Hillary Viders, cofounder of the Women Divers Hall of Fame.

Dudas, she added, “is probably one of, if not the most famous female wreck divers of all time.”

Perhaps no vessel is as alluring as the Doria, a cruise ship that collided with the smaller MS Stockholm in fog-laden waters off Nantucket and then sank to the ocean floor the next morning, July 26, 1956. John Dudas had plundered its booty on an expedition in 1966, and the following year, Evelyn wanted to join the party.

“I thought I was a better diver than those men going out, so why couldn’t I go out, too,” recalled Evelyn Dudas, even though women were considered “a bad omen” on boats. On the last of three dives, John Dudas got his prize.

“John lifts the covering of the compass, sticks his hand in, and the compass comes out,” she remembered. “Why the Andrea Doria compass wasn’t bolted down, I do not know.”

Today, the compass remains on display at her shop, along with assorted ships’ bells, a captain’s wheel, and dishes and glassware with the Italia insignia.

On July 12, 1982, John Dudas was diving the Sommerstad, the same shipwreck site where Evelyn had nearly died about 14 years earlier. A companion found his lifeless body on the bottom of the ocean, with the cause of the accident as murky as the waters. His wife was seven weeks pregnant. With each pregnancy, she had mentally rehearsed standing at her sink and learning of her husband’s death. To this day, her tone is stoic.

“I wasn’t the one who died,” she said, when asked if she had considered giving up diving.

In fact, in 1992, Dudas took up cave diving - one of the more difficult forms of scuba - because she thought it would make her a better instructor. She now leads expeditions all over the world and has been back to the Andrea Doria three times.

“She is tough,” said her friend Richie Kohler, a Brick, N.J., wreck diver who was cohost of Deep Sea Detectives on the History Channel. “Any one of the things she has had to deal with would be enough to take a lesser person out of diving, yet she continues to excel.”

All four of her children dive, and one even set another Andrea Doria record. Suzy Dudas, 33, was the first woman to reach the ship with a re-breather, an air recycler that allows divers to remain underwater four or five hours, and Evelyn and she are the first mother-daughter Doria divers.

And on July 4, her son Michael explored the famed vessel “without a will, which bothers me to no end. We’re losing them left and right down there,” his mother said.

But she added, “I’d be right there with him if I could.”

Young local divers are in awe of Dudas, including Geoff Nunemaker, 17, who works in her shop. “She’s forgotten more than I’ll ever know,” he said. “I’ve been to dive shops in the Caribbean and Mexico, and they know her.”

Dudas herself rarely takes much time to reflect on her accomplishments. She’s too busy. On that recent afternoon, as her students dried off, she prepared her equipment for another class that night at the West Chester YMCA, where it all began 49 years ago.


Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Recent news releases from IANTD drew our attention to yet another in depth book from Tom Mount. The news release said.

 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

“Tom Mount, D. Sc., Ph.D., N.D. is a diving pioneer in cave diving, deep diving, mixed gas diving, rebreather diving and wreck diving. His career also includes saturation diving, supervision of saturation diving, scientific diving and 50 years of diving leadership. While reviewing accidents in adventure sports, Tom became interested in why some survive difficult challenges while others perish in more simple predicaments, which led him to research survival mechanisms. It is apparent that the psychological and mental outlook as well as the physiological and physical demands contributes to who lives and who dies in critical situations. EXPLORATION & MIXED GAS DIVING ENCYCLOPEDIA, THE TAO OF SURVIVAL UNDERWATER addresses these issues. Joseph Dituri, M.S., is an avid rebreather, wreck and undersea explorer who pushes the technical edge of diving. A Navy Diving and Salvage Officer by trade, he continually seeks to improve his knowledge of deep diving and share his discoveries with others. Joe’s initiative has spurred changes in the way that conventional and military diving is being accomplished. He is the CEO of the Association for Marine Exploration, which conducts and facilitates innovative scientific exploration of undersea environments often in the twilight zone. While being responsible for the safety of others, Joseph developed an understanding of the physical and mental skills it takes to survive as a diver. His objective to share this knowledge is fulfilled in the pages of EXPLORATION & MIXED GAS DIVING ENCYCLOPEDIA, THE TAO OF SURVIVAL UNDERWATER. Tom Mount and Joseph Dituri are widely published and have written or contributed to numerous books, papers and many of the IANTD training materials. IANTD materials are located at www.IANTD.com and are available in your local IANTD Dive Shop. Tom & Joseph thank the expert contributors in their individual and collective areas for making this the definitive reference for How To Survive in Exploration Diving.”

So we thought it would be worth the hundred dollars (plus shipping) to order the manual for all the eager readers here at Big Blue Tech .

Our early attempts to get it shipped from America to Thailand were futile, so we had a third party order it from Canada and later ship it to us.

A few weeks later a large box arrived in the office looking in surprisingly good condition considering the distance traveled.

The sheer weight of the book is impressive. At almost 400 A4 glossy color pages the book rivaled every other book on our shelves taking first place in “the big book category” previously held by DAN ‘Deeper into diving’ on our bookcase..

the-tao-of-survival-underwater-1-300x200 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

First impressions when looking on the cover reveal that Tom Mount (the author) has a lot of friends who have been through a fair bit of education with several abbreviations at the end of their name. Our last most impressive book, the DAN Deeper Into Diving had the name “Richard E. Moon MD, FRCPC, FACP, FCCP” and that was a good read.

As we flipped through the pages we found over saturated reds and purples, with photo’s of 1980’s technical divers in pink and orange wetsuits proving a bit unsettling. If you had read any of Tom Mounts previous books like “Technical Diver Student Workbook for the Technical Diver & Normoxic Trimix Diver” you would be used to this style of presentation. Despite having read his previous work we thought twice about showing it to people as a representation of the new and emerging community of technical divers who prefer things simple, streamlined and certainly not pink.

the-tao-of-survival-underwater-3-300x200 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

Despite the books unique layout and color the content is amazingly rich in theory covering all theoretical aspects from physiology in great length, psychological aspects, decompression models and decompression sickness. I’ve stressed the word theoretical because beyond theory there’s nothing necessarily practical about the book, failing to expand or explain the technical function of things. At one point, the book begins to describe fins and other general equipment which climaxes with a one paragraph mention of a CCR and then moves on to Daltons Law (theory). When I gave this to someone who was thinking of getting into technical diving it simply confused them and overwhelmed them. I realize this book is designed for the more advanced technical diver but it could of been toned down a bit to appeal to a broader audience.

the-tao-of-survival-underwater-4-200x300 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

We continued to read through the content to see what was added further, instead of the essential ground works education and we found a lovely little section on meditation where the author demonstrates how he’s a Grand Master and uses Qi Gong to build energy. At that point we were lost…completely lost. The chapter that held this obscure section was referred to as physical fitness which would lead someone to think there would be practical (opposite of theoretical) examples of building physical strength for technical diving. There were examples like “eat right, exercise and get good sleep” but there were also the more disturbing “Chase, Age 8, Ha(s) received special energy training exercises from grand master mount in order to - force tom backwards when pressing against a knife”, so basically Tom is putting knives to the throat of 8 year old and having them push him away using only their Qi Gong’ness, maybe his next book should read “how to repel old men with sticks and knives with your throat” and put only theoretical information about scuba diving in it, image below.

the-tao-of-survival-underwater-2-300x200 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

Now I’m not knocking the power of the spiritual world, i beleive there’s a lot there to be discovered but I think there should be books then. The practical guide to surviving technical diving and one which is more theoretical.

The one saving grace about this book is you can always pick it up and learn something you had forgotten or simply overlooked. Additionally, the expedition chapter is a very good section with some helpful planning tips for people wanting to do their own expeditions in the future.

Looking at the back of the book is quite revealing when reading about the contributors and realizing that the authors of this book also wrote many “bibles” used in the technical diving community today. These other books may be black and white and very old but a lot of the methods used 30 years ago are still taught today.

I think the book should be labeled clearer for future people who can’t read it first or see a preview of it’s content because this book is not essential nor should be considered an encyclopedia for everyone. Additionally those who would consider this book a great source of information and a rich resource probably already know much of what’s being said inside. Those who don’t already know the things inside would probably get confused quite early on.

This leaves us to still refer to the DAN Deeper into Diving as the true encyclopedia of technical diving as a reference and resource for true survival.

the-tao-of-survival-underwater-5-300x200 Book Review: The Tao of Survival Underwater

Exploration and Mixed Gas Diving Encyclopedia; The Tao of Survival Underwater can be bought at http://www.iantd.com/


 


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