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My $10 room, looking NW.

My room, in green, looking SE.

Looking West towards Oceanfront Street with Playa Del Carman just on
the horizon (~9 miles).

Oceanfront Street, looking South, panning to west.
The armed Army guy happened to walk by on his way to work.
The bike has low enough gears that the 150# trailer and hooka gear
pulls
pretty easy, if slow, plus there are no hills here.
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I was locking my outfit up to this street sign with a cable but
discovered
it is against local ordnance so now I use a nearby palm tree.
=)
This location is on Oceanfront Street just above the beach I dive from.
It's a little over three miles South of my place.

The beach club and beach I use is on the right of the pier I'm
standing on in this next panorama. The beach club is named Lapa-la-pita;
roughly translating to little grass shack. It is across the street from
the Villablanca Hotel.
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The beach club owner, Isaac, is cosmopolitin and well traveled. He
has even visited several towns in Minnesota. This next pano is another
view of his beach, this time from the beach. Several dive operators use
this site for their "pool" exercises during their diver certification
classes. The previous pano was taken from the end of the pier on the
right with the white arch over it. My hooka is set up at one of the few
sand entrances to the sea on the typically sharp rocky shore. At the
far right are the steps up to the street and, hopefully, my bike.
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My hooka setup is factory built in Fort Lauderdale and known as
Brownie's Third Lung. A 3 hp gas engine drives a 2 cyl air compressor.
The motor and compressor are bolted onto a reinforced fiberglass pan
that rides in the center of a float. There is a thick skinned skirt on
the float to protect it from the rocks. I flop the deflated float down
on the beach and set an upside-down 5 gallon pail in it's center. I
then set the compressor pan on the pail and start it up to inflate the
float, shutting the motor off when it's full. Next I strap the float up
onto the pan. A thick black air hose goes directly down through the pan
into the water to keep it cool in use. The black hose then attaches to
a 30' or 60' yellow hose which ends up attaching to a special SCUBA
second stage regulator that I breath through. When the hooka is all set
up I
get into my wet suit and other gear. I usually get a volunteer to help
me carry the hooka off the pail into the water. It weighs about 100#.
I've had to do it alone and it is doable but not pretty to watch.

Why do I wear a full rubber suit and hood in 84 degree water? It's
like wind-chill. After a half hour I really start to feel cold without
my rubber suit. There are several innocent looking stinging things in
the sea and the suit helps protect me from them too.

I brought my Mac laptop computer along to Mexico and I use a photo
editing program called "Photoshop Elements" to work on these pictures.
(work, work, work) =)

Some times it can be a real chore trying to edit all the great
colors up out
of the blue of the sea water. Here is a before and after example of the
same picture.


The spidery little Arrow Crabs have blue tips on their pinchers. The
white specks in the foreground are very young fish. I found clouds of
them around certain coral heads.

Can you see the little fish in the center of this picture

This 'Sand Diver' is one of the few fish that just hangs around. The
rest are usually so busy trying to earn a living they are difficult to
photograph.

This is a 'Stoplight Parrotfish'

If this Yellow Stingray hadn't been moving I never would have seen
him.
It's easy to see how someone could step on one and get a painfull spike
from its tail.

This is a popular aquarium fish called the "Sergeant Major" keeping
company with some
cousins called "Damselfish"

I think this fish is called a "Spotted Trunkfish"

These "Grunts" are actually more yellow than green. The silver and
black
ones I can't identify.

We are still only in 10'-15' of water and mostly a sand bottom. As
we go out into 25'-35' water the coral heads become more frequent and
start forming 'patches' of coral.

The fun part for me is working on the pictures afterwards and
finding
out what
I was actually looking at down there.

This is a small section of a larg patch of coral in deeper water.
On my third day out with the hooka it ran out of gas with me at 35'.
I made a controlled ascent to the surface without any problem but
towing the outfit to shore was a long slog.

At the end of the dive I look for another volunteer to help drag the
outfit back up onto the pail so I can deflate and unstrap the float.
The beach club has a fresh water tub for rinsing the saltwater off the
rest of the gear and an outdoor cold water shower for oneself. As the
gear dries off, I like to lay in the sun, and read or chat.
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Later on in the afternoon I start lugging everything back up to the
trailer and paddle home.