Blub Story
A Very Deep Experience
by Dave Barry
I'm swimming about 20 feet below the surface of the Atlantic, a major ocean. I'm a little
nervous about this. For many years my philosphy has been that if God had wanted us to
be beneath the surface of the ocean, He would never have put eels down there.
But I'm not panicking. That's the first thing you learn in SCUBA class: Don't panic! Just
DON'T DO IT! Even if a giant eel comes right up and wraps around your neck and
presses its face against your mask and opens its mouth and shows you its
874,000,000,000,000 needle-sharp teeth, you must remain COMPLETELY CALM so
you'll remember your training and take the appropriate action, which in this case I
suppose would be to poop in your wet suit. I don't know for certain, because in my
training we haven't gotten to the section on eels.
Also, I am just now realizing, we haven't covered the procedure for what to do if a large
tentacle featuring suckers the size of catchers' mitts comes snorking out and grabs your
leg and starts hauling you into a vast, dark, hidden underwater cave whose denizens have
little if any respect for the Bill of Rights.
Also there is the whole issue of shar... of sha... of sh...
There could be s___ks down here, somewhere.
But so far, all the marine life has appeared to be harmless. Mostly it has consisted of
what I would describe, using ichthyological terminology, as "medium fish," many of
which are swimming right up and giving me dopey fish looks, which basically translate
to the following statement: "Food?" That's what fish do all the time -- they swim around
going: "Food?" You can almost see the little question marks over their heads. The only
other thought they seem capable of is: "Yikes!" Fish are not known for their SAT scores.
This may be why they tend to do their thinking in large groups. You'll see a squadron of
them coming toward you, their molecule-size brains working away on the problem
("Food?" "Food?" "Food?" "Food?"); and then you suddenly move your arm, triggering a
Nuclear Fish Reaction ("Yikes!" "Yikes!" "Yikes!" "Yikes!") and FWOOOSSHH they're
outta there, trailing a stream of exclamation marks.
This is a lot of fun to watch, because many of the fish are spectacularly, psychedelically
beautiful. I'm sure there are all kinds of practical reasons for their coloration, but I don't
want to know what these reasons are. I like to think that whoever designed marine life
was thinking of it as basically an entertainment medium. That would explain some of the
things down there, some of the unearthly biological contraptions you see hanging out in
the nooks and crannies of the reef or contraptioning along the bottom on a ridiculous
number of arms and legs with all kinds of feelers and pincers and eyeballs sticking out
randomly on the ends of stalks. It is a comical place, the sea.
So anyway, I'm swimming along the reef, with my nervousness gradually being replaced
by a sort of high -- a combination of fascination and amusement -- when suddenly I hear
my SCUBA instructor, Ray Lang, make the following statement: "Bmoogle." Everything
anybody says through an air regulator underwater sounds like "Bmoogle," which can
mean: "Hi!" Or: "Isn't this fun?" Or: "I'm having a coronary seizure!" So generally people
communicate with hand signs.
When I look at Lang, he's pointing excitedly off to my right, so I turn and see a large
ray, which looks sort of like a giant underwater bat. This is a major test of my ability to
not panic. The only other time I've been in this kind of situation was in 1970 in the Virgin
Islands, when I was snorkeling with a friend named Buzz behind a small, crowded
dinghy, and a ray swam directly underneath us. I have never seen a missile launched from
a submarine, but I can't imagine that it leaves the water at a higher velocity than Buzz and
I attained as we vaulted, arms and legs flailing, into the lower atmosphere, creating a
minor hazard for commercial aircraft before finally landing in the dinghy, which nearly
sank.
And that was a smallish ray, compared to this one. This ray has enough square footage
to qualify as a voting district. And it is very close, swooping along, flapping its enormous
wings and going: "Food?" Instantly I wish that I had brought my Miami Herald
identification card (which is laminated and would work underwater) so I could identify
myself as a journalist. As it is, I have no choice but to strike what I believe to be a fairly
inedible pose.
But the ray pays no attention to me. It just cruises by, very casual, very nonthreatening,
a ray taking care of ray business. And as it passes by, I find myself, without really
thinking about it, trying to follow it -- me, a weenie of legendary stature when it comes to
dealing with the Animal Kingdom; a person who has on more than one occasion fled in
desperate, armpit-soaking fear from chickens -- here I am, flippering through the bluegreen
Semi-Deep in pursuit of this nightmare-inducing thing.
Swimming next to me, Lang points toward the surface, up above the ray. I look, and
there, silhouetted against the surface, is a large school of: barracuda. Yes! The ones with
the teeth! In person! They're long and lean, looking very alert, all pointing in the same
direction, as if awaiting orders from their commanding officer. ("OK, men. Today we're
going to swim around and eat.")
But for some reason, the barracuda don't seem scary, any more than the ray does. For
some reason, none of this seems scary. Even the idea of maybe encountering a smallish
s___k doesn't seem altogether bad. It's beginning to dawn on me that all the fish and eels
and crabs and shrimps and planktons who live and work down here are just too busy to be
thinking about me. I'm a traveler from another dimension, not really a part of their
already event-filled world, not programmed one way or another -- food or yikes -- into
their instinct circuits. They have important matters to attend to, and they don't care
whether I watch or not.
And so I watch.
Before I took lessons, virtually everything I knew about SCUBA -- aside from the fact
that it stands for "self-contained underwater breathing apparatus" -- came from the
syndicated television series Sea Hunt. This was a very popular half-hour adventure show
that ran from 1958 through 1961 and starred Lloyd Bridges as "Mike Nelson, free-lance
undersea investigator."
There were 156 episodes of Sea Hunt, but they all merge together in my mind into one
basic plot, namely: Mike Nelson is swimming around, conducting a free-lance
underwater investigation when suddenly a bad guy swims up behind him and cuts his air
hose. Mike always acted surprised about this, which was pretty funny because in fact he
got his air hose cut about as often as the average person burps. You'd think it would have
eventually dawned on him that for whatever reason -- possibly related to the Gulf Stream
-- the waters around his boat were teeming with air-hose cutters, but old Mike never
seemed to catch on.
So the climax of Sea Hunt was always an exiting underwater fight (accompanied by
dramatic underwater horn music) in which Mike, his bubbles shooting all over the place,
would struggle to get some air into his lungs and subdue the bad guy and get back to the
surface and head over to the air-hose store, where he probably got a volume discount. Sea
Hunt was great entertainment, but it did not leave you with the concepts of "SCUBA" and
"safety" firmly cemented together in your mind.
The truth is, however, that SCUBA diving, especially at the relatively shallow depths
recommended for recreational divers, is quite safe. Bad things can happen, but not nearly
as many as can happen in a truly dangerous environment, such as the Palmetto
Expressway. And virtually nothing bad is likely to happen unless you go out of your way
to help it. So far, I'm pleased to report, I have not had my air hose cut one single time. I
did have one terrifying Lobster Encounter (which I'll describe in harrowing detail later,
when I feel you're ready to handle the emotional strain), but fortunately I was able to
handle the situation through a combination of (a) not panicking and (b) letting go of the
lobster. But I probably never would have thought of this without proper SCUBA training.
The training I got was the standard course authorized by the Professional Association of
Diving Instructors, or PADI. If you want to get into SCUBA diving, you should take an
authorized course. For one thing, you'll learn many useful tips that will help to make your
dive as enjoyable and fatality-free as possible. For another thing, if you don't have a card
certifying that you've been properly trained, reputable dive shops will not rent you
equipment or fill your tanks with air, which, as you can imagine, comes in very handy in
the aquatic environment.
The guy who trained me, Ray Lang, 39, knows a lot about the aquatic environment. This
is ironic because he was born and raised in Wichita, Kansas, a locale you very rarely see
featured on Jacques Cousteau underwater specials ("Henri excitedly gestures to Pierre
that he has found a piece of the sunken tractor.") But in his early 20s he became obsessed
with SCUBA diving and moved with his wife, Teresa, to South Florida, where they
eventually opened a small chain of dive shops called Divers Den.
Lang's true passion, however, is competitive free-dive spearfishing, a moderately insane
sport in which you wear only a mask and flippers -- no air tank -- and, holding your
breath for two minutes or more, dive down as far as 100 feet, trying to locate, stalk and
spear the largest possible fish without blacking out from oxygen deprivation and maybe
getting hauled back to the surface, but maybe not, which has been known to happen.
Lang and two other men won the 1988 national team free-dive spearfishing
championship; he also holds world spearfishing records for six species of fish, including
three species of s___ks.
Lang has dived all over the world and had some fairly remarkable experiences, which he
describes in a flat, Midwestern-style twang, often employing unconventional but
surprising useful words such as "motate," as in:
"... so I look up, and I see I'm about to swim directly into this large tiger shark, has to be
15 feet, and I think, whoa, time to motate out of here, so ...."
Or:
"... so I figure, how hard can it be to catch one of these things? So I grab it, and I'm
trying to motate on out of there, but it gets one tentacle wrapped around a rock, and now
it has hold of me, and I mean those thing can develop some suction, so I'm thinking,
whoa ...."
I should stress here that this type of anecdote does NOT form the basis of the diving course
curriculum. When you take the course, you start out with some classroom sessions
wherein you learn basic diving theory, including a lot of information concerning how
Pressure relates to Volume. This is of course exactly the kind of thing that put you to
sleep in high school, but you find yourself paying very close attention in SCUBA class,
once you realize that the volume they're talking about is the air in your own personal
lungs, and that if you take a deep breath from your tank at a depth of, say, 40 feet, and
then, while holding your breath, you shoot, missile-style, to the surface, your little air
sacs could start exploding like defective balloon, a situation which, as Lang put it, can
be "very fatal."
Fortunately, there is a very simple preventive measure: All you have to do is keep
breathing. That's it. You'd think there'd be no way you could forget it. But it turns out
that's the biggest danger you face underwater -- not eels or s___ks, but the failure to
perform an act so simple and natural that you have presumably been doing it on a routine
basis since early childhood. Yet it was stressed so heavily in SCUBA training that I found
myself writing it repeatedly in my notes, as if it were some kind of radical new science
breakthrough. "IMPORTANT TO KEEP BREATHING," I would write. And:
"NEVER STOP BREATHING!"
The highlight of the classroom training, for me, was when we learned about the
equipment (or, as we SCUBA veterans say, the "gear"). Your basic diving outfit is a
mask and flippers, plus the breathing apparatus, which you can rent. But there are all
kinds of other neat gear objects you can get, the neatest one, as far as I'm concerned,
being: a knife. All my life I've wanted an excuse to wear a knife, and here I have found a
sport where it is actually encouraged. "Diving knives are practical tools," states the PADI
course manual, "providing you with a means to measure, pry, dig, cut and pound under
water..." But the REAL advantage, which the manual fails to note, is that you can wear
your knife strapped to your leg.
There's something about striding around with a knife strapped to your leg that makes
you feel exceedingly James Bondlike. If you can keep a little secret, I will confess to you
that right at this very moment, as I write these words, I have my knife strapped on. Just in
case somebody comes along and, for example, tries to cut my word processor cord. As
Ray Lang put it, during one of his colorful diving anecdotes: "You never can tell when
the inevitable is gonna happen."
Speaking of the inevitable, there comes a time in your SCUBA training when you leave
the classroom and get into some actual water, usually in the form of a swimming pool.
This was where I encountered my first major diving challenge, namely, putting on the
wet suit. The wet suit does an excellent job of protecting you and keeping you warm even
in cold water, but putting it on for the first time is like trying to get into a giant
foundation garment that has been possessed by an evil spirit. You wind up lying
idiotically on your back, legs in the air, tugging and straining at this malevolent piece of
rubber, fearful that if you let go, it will leap to its invisible feet and start dancing around
you, laughing silently and making invisible but unmistakable hand gestures.
My first SCUBA exercise was equally exciting. Lang and I were standing in about five
feet of water, and all he wanted me to do was kneel on the bottom. That was it. So,
bearing firmly in mind the Two First Rules of Scuba Diving -- Don't Panic and Never
Stop Breathing -- I put my air regulator in my mouth, ducked my head under water and
immediately, with a natural effortlessness that suggested I had been doing these things all
my life, I (1) panicked and (2) stopped breathing. My feet started inexplicably drifting
upward of their own accord, my mask started filling with water, I started choking and
flailing my arms ineffectually around and the lone thought I could summon into my brain
was: "Yikes!"
So I thrashed my way back to the surface, a failure. If you want to feel like a complete
dweezil, the best way I know to accomplish this is to stand in front of a guy who has
swum down into the depths with no air tank and speared a 10-foot hammerhead, and
explain to this guy why you seem to be unable to accomplish the mission of kneeling on
the bottom of a swimming pool in five feet of water.
But Lang, who's used to this, was patient, and before long I was motating around the
pool like a regular frogperson, making all kinds of astounding underwater discoveries.
When you consider that approximately 0.0000000000003 percent of our planet is covered
with swimming pools, it's shocking how little we really know what goes on beneath the
surface of these mysterious bodies of water. It turns out that there's a whole world down
there: cracks, leaves, the occasional dead worm and -- for those with the courage and skill
to challenge the deep end -- a drain.
In between my groundbreaking exploration, Lang had me practice various skills, such as
removing my mask and air regulator underwater, then getting them back into place. This
is not difficult if you simply remember what you were taught, although at first your
instinct is to yell, "Time out!" and make all the water go away while you get yourself
straightened out, which of course would not be a practical solution if you were 50 feet
down.
Another skill I learned, I'm pleased to note, is "buddy breathing," which is when two
divers share one air tank because one of them has run out of air or had his hose cut. I had
no trouble with this skill because I had seen it so many times on Sea Hunt. As Lang and I
swam along the pool bottom, passing the regulator back and forth, I could almost hear
dramatic horn music.
But the true drama came the day I dove in the ocean. We went to the John Pennekamp
State Park/Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary complex, which is one of the world's
most popular dive sites because of its spectacular and accessible reefs. These are made up
of several jillion living and deceased little creatures called "polyps," whom we might
think of collectively as nature's own enormous halftime marching band because of their
ability to form themselves into amazing formations. The reefs, and almost all the life
forms that thrive on and around them, are protected by strict laws, as Lang explained to
me in detail before we went out.
"You may not spear or possess any snook," he informed me. Frankly this had never
crossed my mind, but I wrote it down anyway, because the last thing you'd want to do is
to wind up in prison and have the other inmates ask you what you were in for, and you'd
have to answer: "snook possession."
Lang said I could take a lobster if I found one big enough, but I figured there was no
chance of this. I hate lobsters. As far as I'm concerned, lobsters are large underwater
insects. I don't like to be in the same restaurant with them. Unfortunately, I failed to
mention this to Lang.
(Sound of horn music starting to play quietly but dramatically in the background.)
I will spare you a gushy description of the dive itself, except to say that when you
finally see what goes on underwater, you realize that you've been missing the whole point
of the ocean. Staying on the surface all the time is like going to the circus and staring at
the outside of the tent. At first Lang had me practicing my SCUBA skills, but after that I
basically just motated along, very relaxed, grooving on the scenery, the fish, the comical
marine contraptions. Even the giant ray, even the barracuda, merely served to heighten
my enjoyment. The whole thing was going perfectly.
A little too perfectly.
(The horn music gets louder.)
OK. So I'm swimming along, and suddenly Lang gestures to me to swim down to where
he's crouched in the sand, next to a coral ledge. He is pointing to something, but I can't
see what it is. Suddenly his hand flashes out.
(Very loud music now.)
And now Lang is thrusting something into my hand, and it is, as you have deduced, the
dreaded Big Bug of the Deep. And I am holding it. And it is gesturing violently with all
758 legs, clearly conveying the underwater message: "HEY! Let GO, darnit!!" Which
of course I do. Instantly the lobster motates at very high velocity in reverse gear back
under the ledge, causing bmoogles of chagrin to erupt from various watching divers, who
were hoping to eat it.
Perverts.
That was the only upsetting thing that happened. Although I did see an eel. This
happened near the end of the last dive; I was following Lang back to the boat, and as he
went by a cave, he casually gestured for me to look inside. I did, and there, maybe 10 feet
away, was Mr. Moray.
I looked at Lang, and held my arms way apart, the international diver gesture, for, "Hey!
This is a BIG eel! Right?"
Lang shrugged, the international gesture for, "Nah. Maybe six feet," he told me later.
Nothing to gesture home about.
But I am here to tell you that this is one bad-looking creature. You could barely see his
body -- just his whitish head, hanging there, mouth open, a grinning skull floating in the
gloom. Not that I, personally, was nervous. It takes more than a moray to scare a man
who has made a lobster back down.
Now Lang is drifting in front of me. He makes a circle with his thumb and forefinger,
the sign for, "OK?"
I make the OK sign back. But that isn't enough, not for what I'm feeling -- the
adrenaline, the elation, the high. This is way more than merely OK.
"Bmoogle," I inform him. It comes from the heart.