
Sunday, April 2, 2023
Temperature: 86
Humidity: 67%
Precipitation: Nada

Sunday, April 2, 2023
Temperature: 86
Humidity: 67%
Precipitation: Nada
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

Local business leaders Thursday announced plans for an underwater amusement park off Blacktip Island’s sheltered west coast as a way to attract more scuba diving guests to the small Caribbean island.
“Guests keep complaining diving’s too much of a Type-B-personality activity,” de facto island mayor Jack Cobia said. “Problem is, they keep trying to make it more exciting by going too deep and getting hurt. That’s bad for business.
“Others have just stopped diving because they say it’s boring,” Cobia said. “Either way, our diver numbers are down the last few years. We had to do something to make scuba exciting again. That’s when we reached out to local engineers to install thrill rides on our reefs.”
Island ride designers jumped at the challenge.
“This is a great opportunity to do something that’s never been done before,” island handyman Alf Flagg said. “We’re working on underwater-specific prototypes now, and hope to begin construction by year’s end. We’ll start with a carousel, and whack-a-jawfish booths, then add a channel crab-themed Scrambler and an anemone-themed Tilt-A-Whirl.
“The capper will be a tubular steel coaster with loops and spirals,” Flagg said. “The rides’ll move slower underwater, sure, but we’ll be chumming with fish guts to attract sharks, so the adrenalin rush’ll still be there. We’ll have dive staff shooting spear guns at the rides, too, to add more excitement.”
Opponents focused on the plan’s potential environmental impact.
“Silt from drilling pylons for all these rides will kill coral,” marine parks spokesperson Val Schrader said. “Plus, the construction noise’ll scare away all the fish. Then there’s the issue of petroleum grease leaching from the rides and devastating the reefs. Short term, it may attract divers, but long term, it’ll utterly destroy the environment. And get divers hurt.
“They’re trying to turn the reefs into a playground,” Schrader said. “Despite what Jack says, people don’t come here for that. They come to Zen out underwater. And it’s no coincidence Alf is Jack’s cousin. And uncle.”
Cobia refuted those claims.
“Try to find someone on this little rock that’s not related to someone else. I’ll wait,” he said. “And as for safety, reef sharks aren’t really dangerous, and staff’ll be trained to shoot spears near—not at—divers. And all the divers will have signed waivers, so we’re covered there.
“If Val thinks folks come here to Zen out, she’s never met our divers,” Cobia said. “They’re competitive as hell. Our bariatric chamber stats prove it. We just need to harness that. This market tested of the charts.”
Island residents were cautiously optimistic about the project.
“For all the talk of excitement, I like that they’ll have a relaxing Nautilus submarine tour down the deep wall,” Chrissy Graysby said. “And a Captain Nemo’s mine train in the shallows for the kiddos. Me? I plan to kneel in the sand next to the rides and watch all the fish that come in every time a diver pukes through their regulator.”
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

Sunday, March 26, 2023
Temperature: 84
Humidity: 68%
Precipitation: Meh. Probly not
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

An unauthorized radio signal, transmitted underwater from an unknown source, angered scuba divers on Blacktip Island this week due to its use of unpopular pop music standards.
“It’s a constant stream of Bananarama, Justin Bieber and the Spice Girls,” visiting diver Chip Pompano said. “If there’s a jukebox in Hell, this is it. And it doesn’t stop, even on night dives. I’m to the point I’d rather not dive than be subjected to that crap.
“I’d rather just stay on Tiperon, even though the reefs are trashed there,” Pompano said. “The diving sucks, but at least it’s quiet.”
Island authorities are aggressively investigating the transmissions.
“Whoever’s broadcasting this music is doing so illegally without a broadcasting license,” Island Police Constable Rafe Marquette said. “Our immediate goal’s to locate the transmission source and shut it down. It’s proving difficult to trace, though, and we’re convinced the source is in motion offshore. We’ve got Marine Parks helping out, but they’re just as stymied as we are.
“We’re also investigating the motivation behind flooding the reefs with bad music,” Marquette said. “Who would benefit from that and why they would do it are significant questions.”
Local officials say stopping the transmissions is the top priority.
“It’s terrorism, pure and simple,” de facto island mayor Jack Cobia said. “We’ve tried jamming the signal, to no avail. This keeps up, it’ll chase all our diving guests away. For good. And when that happens, it’s good bye Blacktip.
“Best guess is it’s those rat bastards over on Tiperon,” Cobia said. “They’ve always been jealous of us and all the divers liking us better than them. We need to figure out where they’re transmitting from. If it was a boat, we’d see it, so it has to be a sub or some kind of underwater drone. We asked the Coast Guard for depth charges, but they wouldn’t go for it.”
The music also has local dive staff on edge.
“If I hear the Little Mermaid one more time, I’m gonna hurt somebody,” Eagle Ray Divers divemaster Alison Diesel said. “Same for that damn Pina Colada song and Margaritaville. This stuff makes your teeth hurt. You can’t hear it on shore, but underwater, there’s no escape. A bunch of us are ready to quit.”
Some visiting divers, however, claimed to enjoy the music.
“It’s cool in a morbid sort of way, like walking across the street to get a better view of a car wreck,” Marlin White said. “It’s like there’s a reciprocity of crap, where the song is so bad it hits bottom and starts to head up toward ‘good’ again. Just this morning I heard Richard Harris singing that ‘someone left the cake out in the rain’ song, and I almost spit my reg I was laughing so hard. It’s great, like watching ‘Love Boat’ reruns.”
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

Sunday, March 18, 2023
Temperature: 85
Humidity: 71%
Precipitation: Not anytime soon
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

A Second Century CE Roman coin, found by hikers exploring Blacktip Island’s southern bluff, has local historians contesting the small Caribbean island’s history. (photo courtesy of the Portable Antiquities Scheme)
Blacktip Island historians were divided this week over the significance of an ancient Roman coin, dated to the Second Century CE, found in a Blacktip Island cave Wednesday by amateur explorers.
“Jessie and me were poking around up on the bluff when we found this little metal disk,” Hugh Calloway said. “When I buffed it with my thumb, we could see it was a coin, with a guy’s head and one side and a seated woman on the other.
“We took it to the Heritage House, and they said it was a Roman something-or-other and took it away from us,” Calloway said. “If it’s so special, you’d think we’d get a ‘thank you,’ or a reward or something, but no way, José.”
Some island historians were excited by the find.
“This is a rough, worn, but unmistakable Roman sestertius, with the Emperor Hadrian on the face and Britannia on the obverse,” island historian Smithson Altschul said. “There’s always been speculation about Romans having settled here in antiquity, and now we have proof.
The only way for this coin to get on the bluff is if a Roman settler dropped it,” Altschul said. “People here don’t just carry things like that around. It also gives context to the odd rock formations in that area. They’re not natural—they’re the foundations of ancient Roman buildings.”
Other experts questioned the find.
“Is the piece a 2,000-year-old sestertius? Maybe,” Tiperon University-Blacktip history professor Rashie Bottoms said. “Is that proof ancient Romans lived here millennia ago? Absolutely not. It’s far more likely someone bought it at a tourist stall in Italy, then inadvertently dropped it there. Or that Hugh and Jessie planted it there as some sort of hoax. Frankly, it smacks of a Jerrod Ephesians practical joke. Or a Chamber of Commerce marketing ploy
“There is zero historical record of Roman settlements in the Caribbean,” Bottoms said. “They certainly didn’t settle on some tiny, random island. And those rock formations are just that—basalt lava dams that pushed through the softer limestone ages ago.”
Island residents, however, embraced the idea.
“It makes perfect sense,” Catalina Luxfer said. “The Ra Expedition proved ancient people could sail from the Med to the Americas. And if Romans came here, up on the bluff’s exactly where they’d build, to be safe from storms. Folks always said Blacktippers have a Roman look about us. And Italian food’s always been popular here.”
Island officials remained noncommittal on the coin’s authenticity and importance.
“All I know is it’s got people excited,” island mayor Jack Cobia said. “Folks are greeting each other with ‘ave’ instead of ‘hi.’ And all the dive staff are calling fish by their Latin genus-and-species names. Guests love it. Rashie needs to shut up and get on board with this.
“The souvenir business’s booming, too,” Cobia said. “Every resort’s got Latin phrases on t-shirts and caps and coffee mugs. The only negative is Eagle Ray Cove resort had to pull a bunch of hats off the shelf when someone realized the Latin embroidered on them actually said, ‘Spank me, Big Boy. They were selling great, though.”
Neither Jerrod Ephesians nor the island’s Chamber of Commerce would return phone calls.
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving

Sunday, March 12, 2023
Temperature: 86
Humidity: 69%
Precipitation: Incoming
Filed under best scuba diving novels, Caribbean, Scuba Diving