
There is nothing like the feeling of freedom of your first dive in warm, clear,
tropical water. You swoop effortlessly through the water, not held back by
the need to return to the surface. Even your scuba equipment, so heavy and
cumbersome on land, loses its weight and doesn’t impede your movement.
Thousands of irridescent fish fin past and as you
look down to the rocks below you see a moray eel, gaping at you from its den.
Clown fish nestle in their soft coral homes, parrot fish nip at the harder
coral fronds. Bizarrely-shaped box fish seem to peer at you as they float
by.
As you go lower the sound of the waves breaking on
the reef die down and all you can hear is the rumble of air passing your ears
as you exhale, otherwise nothing. With a slow barrel-roll you look up through
the clear blue water to see the silvery surface far above you.
Everywhere you look there is another wonder,
another beautiful thing to explore, another weird and wonderful creature to
follow. Perhaps in the distance you see a turtle gliding down to the colder
depths. A flash of silver bubbles stream in front of you as a bird dives into
the water in search of fish. An alien in this environment it must swiftly
return to the surface, while you carry on pottering, wandering through your
coral garden.
Beyond the reef lies an old wrecked boat, its
wooden beams sticking up from the sand, its cargo long plundered by divers
not observing the unwritten rule (take nothing but pictures, leave nothing
but bubbles).
You look at your pressure gauge and see it is
time to return to the surface. You signal your dive buddy, pointing to your
watch and motioning upwards. You both return unwillingly to the surface, a
steady stream of bubbles racing up as you breathe out.
You break the surface once more and you are enveloped in sound, the gulls
screeching overhead, the water slapping against the sides of the boat. The
sun, blisteringly hot overhead, as you spit out your regulator and climb the
side of the boat, with your heavy and ungainly equipment, like a fish out
of water.
Even if this isn’t always the reality
of scuba diving, it’s still pretty special. There are lots of great
diving destinations within the reach and budget of the amateur diver. If you
are based in Europe it doesn’t take long to get to the Red Sea, one
of the best diving locations in the world. It can get a bit crowded above
and below the water, though...
And if you are feeling lazy you can always miss the third dive of the day
and lie in the sun on the boat and just look out at the scenery.
Or perhaps you want to dive because you’ve
been watching more of those shark documentarie.....
Scuba diving offers a lifetime of exciting adventure.
Experience the thrilling sensation of flying underwater, and the wonder and
magnificence of inner space. Explore exotic islands and colorful coral reefs.




Wendy McSwain
PADI
Instructor #162421
281-530-0712 Home
832-858-9007 Cell
281-530-5517 Fax
9007 Rocky Valley Drive
Houston, Texas 77083
wendy@outbackdivers.com
