Saturday, October 04, 2008

Martin Harris, 24th March 1966 - 4th October 1996


From Beyond The Big Blue

Twelve years have passed since we lost my younger brother Martin. He's the one on the right, above. Some time ago, I wrote a tribute for him, which show some of his furniture designs. Tonight, Laura and I will light a candle for him.

This blog had to go offline for a while, for legal reasons. Some inappropriate comments made by others had caused offence to someone whose name I am now not allowed to mention. So from now on, I will be moderating all comments, which means they won't appear until I have reviewed them.

I might have a dark, even warped sense of humour sometimes, and I can be quite critical about some issues. Yes, at times BTBB can be a one-man crusade against certain establishment practises, such as inaccurate media reporting. But I don't use my blog as a weapon against individuals. So if something appears on this blog, and you don't like it, then simply send me a mail. It's a whole lot less hassle than instructing a team of lawyers. For everyone.

Monday, August 04, 2008

Truth Defying Acts

Harry Houdini, one of the greatest illusionists of all time, can't compete with the press of today:

How Guy Pearce learned to stop hating himself and found the magic touch

Seems like a reasonable account doesn't it? Producers, safety men and insurance agents, panicking because Guy Pearce is being filmed on the set of 'Death Defying Acts' performing an underwater stunt. I don't think he ended up there by accident though, do you? And how many film sets do insurance agents actually attend while shooting is in-progress?? ( In my limited experience, I've never seen one, but if I'm wrong then please feel free to comment. )

Anyway, I won't argue that particular point. It just doesn't sound quite right, especially when I know the next sentence in the 'interview' definitely isn't. I have it on very good authority, that the free-diving record holders they refer to, was actually one individual, not many. As for the weeks of training...well, Guy was left with some 'homework' to do after his one day of training, but the afore-mentioned freediver wasn't involved in any follow up. Nor need he have been. The one accurate part of the story is that Guy was able to hold his breath for 3 minutes, after just a few hours training.

Which brings me around quite nicely to the point of this mini-rant. Why make something up, when the truth is more sensational. Try replacing, "... their 39-year-old Australian star has been training with free-diving record holders for weeks now, and that he can hold his breath for nearly three minutes" with, "...their 39-year-old Australian star has been trained over just a few hours by a freediving record holder, and is now able to hold his breath for nearly three minutes".

I can only suppose that journalists have to practise their art of illusion, and probably more so than Guy Pearce or Harry Houdini ever did.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Whatever is Wrong With You?


Your mission for today
Originally uploaded by samdive.
Fancy a quick sherbert? How about a Double Dip?? A fortnight ago, quite a few of us had that in mind. Those strange people who frequent cold murky quarries, not breathing for minutes at a time. Whatever is wrong with them? Seeking plastic tags, seeking blue glass? Or seeking each other??

I could give you a blow-by-blow account. Who went down, who went up. Those who saw their dinner on a plate, but couldn't quite reach it. ( We all saw the light though, not one surfaced in darkness. ) And what would it all mean?

Years ago, freediving was a dark art,shrouded in mystery. Some of us wanted to change all that, and we did. Through teaching, through the internet, through the media. Now there is something of a renaissance going on. Qualification levels in the UK at an all-time high, and training facilities struggling to meet demand.

So now, I'm not going to say too much about Double Dip. I wouldn't want to say nothing. I'm extremely grateful to everyone who made it happen – Sam, Laura, the AIDA judges, Angels, safety divers, timekeeper, photographers, staff at the National Diving and Activities Centre, coaches, helpers, and athletes. I don't think anyone who took part didn't contribute in some way. Every year it seems to get better. But as to what actually happened? Best way to find out is book up for next year.

Well done to Alan Barber. He's the man who can swim underwater for 186 metres with nothing more than a full breath of air ( unlike some of us who can't resist unnaturally pressurising our lungs with just a few centilitres more ). 18 months of freediving and two very respectable records under his weightbelt now. More to come, I say.

Two years ago a group of us had a play around underwater in Makadi Bay, Egypt. Matt Kitchen filmed us, and kindly passed the video footage on to me to do something with. So now I've edited and entered it into a competition being run by my favourite prog-rock outfit, Marillion. If you watch it, then it puts me one step closer to winning. So please do. I'd like to dedicate it to my friends Ben and Penny Noble.

Whatever is wrong with you?


Monday, April 28, 2008

Small fish, big pond


Small fish, big pond
Originally uploaded by altsaint.
It is beyond the Big Blue to understand the neglect it must feel right now. Dusted off after months of lying on the shelf. Competitions have come and gone, freediving records set, and other tid-bits of freediving trivia all left lying by the wayside. Unfortunately the author has been away, then on his return spent rather a lot of time photo and video editing. Probably too much. ( Well, definitely too much spent on the highly-addictive flickr site).

Even now I am only making a placeholder - a promise of things to come, once the season gets into full swing. In the meantime I am making emergency use of this journal, for the purposes I originally set it up; to record training and photographic knowledge for future reference. This entry falls firmly into the category of 'underwater photography'. On our trip to Kenya a few weeks ago, my underwater rig hit it's most problematic patch ever. Shutter locking up and strobe refusing to fire being frequent offenders. To my surprise triumph over adversity came into play, and I actually recorded one or two reasonable shots. The misfiring strobe was a worsening issue though, and needed sorting.

So on the hottest day to-date, of 2008, I took myself off to those nice people at Cameras Underwater, next to Embankment Station. Within minutes, the culprit was identified as the flash sync cable. Forty quid to replace that didn't hurt quite as much as a new strobe would have done. Discussion then turned to upgrade, as the back of my mind has been housing the thought of submerging an EOS400D at some stage. Out popped a book of underwater images, all taken with a recent compact digital ( and most without strobe ). The difference in quality between those images and the equivalent on SLR, I really don't think would have been appreciable. Recent compacts have superior lenses, reduced shutter lag, and nice big LCD screens. As long as you have the option to manually set the white balance, then you can think about putting it into a housing. I don't know why I have overlooked this in the past. My expensive set of filters not only reduce the light hitting the chip, but they are only effective at quite shallow depths. Seasoned pro's like Matt Kitchen have been advocating MWB on video for some time, but I suppose I'd assumed it would be fiddly for stills and not worth the effort. All the while having to do fiddly edits in Photoshop trying to correct the cyan colour cast.

The second part of the magic recipe, is to attach a decent wet-mount wide-angle lens. Now this I know will not work with my trusty Olys, as the built-in lens is too wide itself, and vignetting / distortion becomes a problem. But at least I now have a 2 stage plan - try out MWB on the existing rig, and make sure I'm happy with the replaced fibre-optic cable. As a slot-in upgrade in a year or so, see what latest compacts are on the market, and add one of these plus housing to my strobe / arm assembly. Oh yes, and make an investment in a decent WA lens. It's the way forward, I'm sure.

Next month, expect the usual mix of freediving news and gossip. In particular, there should be some news about Harry Houdini. Stay tuned.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Sent to Coventry


It's not called respiratology. It's respirology, and people who study it are called respirologists. Lung stuff, basically. There exists an association of these respirologists, and last summer they were looking for extreme sports people to talk at their annual conference. I'm all for lung power, so I volunteered.

As Christmas 2007 approached, I found myself spending hours hunched over my laptop, desperately attempting to piece together a PowerPoint presentation on my favourite topic ( meaning freediving this time, rather than myself ). All for twenty minutes' worth of stammering, wildly gesticulating, sweating profusely and nervously laughing. My after-dinner presentation style has been emulated worldwide, mainly by 19 year-old best man victims.

Location-wise, I was posted to the outer regions of Nuneaton, to a hotel called The Paramount Hinckley. Not nearly as bad as you might imagine, it was what I would like to class as The Hotel Babylon of The Midlands. Glitzy lighting and do-la-la-la lounge music. They put me in a room with a tiger stripe bed spread and black pillow cases. When I had told them that I could "gee, go low" perhaps they misunderstood.

Arriving there at about 7pm or so, my plan was to get a bite to eat, watch a movie in my room and then early to bed with the tiger. Food was being served in the bar, and so was the Leffe. Before the froth had time to settle on the first glass, a guy at the bar struck up conversation with me. An exercise physiologist from Loughborough University. He'd been talking earlier in the day, to a packed auditorium of 300 people. Up until this point, I'd guessed at a maximum audience being roughly a third of this. So he gave me the low-down on the layout, stage and equipment. Not to mention a heightened state of nervousness. The Leffe drained away quickly, and needed refilling.

My new found friend had another engagement, and I was nowhere near my original objective of attending to my growling gullet. No sooner had I ordered some food though, than I was next accosted by a group of Scuba diver respirologists. How do we all find each other? Must be a shape thing, as we all had size 7/10 T-shirts on. Diving tales and Belgian ales show no respect to timekeeping, and my early night developed into a late one. The saving grace being to avoid the Karaoke session at the end. I was prepared to make a fool of myself on stage just once on this trip.

Whenever I compete, the night before the performance I don't sleep. My nerves build up to a crescendo until the point I get into the water, and then they just dissolve. At the Paramount, I thought I'd try the same technique before the presentation by going for a swim beforehand in the hotel pool. The calming effect worked until I emerged from the water, showered and looked in the mirror. Panda eyes with dark circles stared back. Not so much lack of sleep, more that my goggles had been on too tightly. With an hour to go, I tried reciting the presentation in my head, but all I could think of was the audience wondering what I had done to get two black eyes.

I was slotted into a pre-lunch session alongside two other speakers in the same subject area. One was a researcher into hypoxic training, and the other a project manager for a recent experiment into altitude effects on physiology, where the research took place on Mount Everest. I was first off the blocks, and my competition calming technique kicked in. Perhaps a little rushed, it was all over in about 15 minutes ( aren't so many things? ), but at least left a good 10 minutes for the questions. The other two then took their turns. The next seemed infinitely more scientific than my presentation, and the final one seemed that bit more enthralling than my accounts of underwater derring-do. I wondered if my talk was just a little too anecdotal - light-hearted, but little substance of anything that really mattered to the audience.

As everyone dispersed for lunch, my exercise physiologist friend approached, along with a couple of others. The talk had been a resounding success, by all accounts - well, theirs at least. More importantly, they were keen to follow up on my offer of freediving volunteers for medical research. ( My freediving comrades are yet to be enlightened on this, of course. ) Several ideas were put forward. Neurological function measurement pre and post Samba or blackout. Performance gains through respiratory resistance training. Analysis into the effects of Buccal pumping. All worthy topics of investigation.

Perhaps we are moving toward a point where we freedivers need to think about putting something into medical research that doesn't involve ego massage. Of course it is superb to marvel at how much vital capacity we each have, and how our haemoglobin is so efficient at transporting oxygen. Isn't it what makes us so great? Going that little stage further though, there might be wider benefit in knowing a bit more about the long-term physiological impact of freediving. For all of us.

A final word on the photograph. It is a Triumph motorcycle, perched behind the Atria bar at the Paramount Hinckley. Not entirely sharp, but think of it as motion blur. And a triumphant presentation.