0:00
unfortunately it's not always possible to identify shipwrecks and this dive is
0:05
another one where we went a long way offshore with really high hopes and ended up with basically nothing on the
0:13
plus side conditions were fabulous and Rick took some stunning photos that I'll be showing through this video you'll
0:20
also see I've got this cool little overlay in the bottom leftand corner of my screen which shows the data from my
0:25
dive computer i know loads of you are going to love that and I particularly want to thank Eric Sto who has done all
0:32
the work to make that happen it's a brilliant piece of functionality thank you very much this was another wreck
0:38
that we dived out of NewI in North Cornwall it was on one of the Tampa weekends although I think we were all a
0:44
bit cheesed off at that time so we decided to dive something that clearly couldn't be the Tampa at 100 odd meters
0:50
long this wreck was far far too big still really exciting though because
0:55
this is an unknown wreck nobody's ever dived this before chances are nobody ever will dive it because the
1:02
information that we've got about it we've posted online onto wreck site and so anybody would do their research would
1:09
look at it realize it's upside down and therefore probably go to one of the many
1:14
other wrecks in the local area that are much more exciting so could well be that
1:19
we're the only people ever to dive this now you can see we're back on Atlantic Diver that's Chris Loe's boat out of
1:26
Newi um I've decided rather than going off the stern I'm going out the side which is if you're sitting on the
1:32
forward facing seats is always a good idea you can see there I've got my scooter just coming up alongside the
1:38
lazy shot and the shot chris puts those two in together rather than getting one of the divers to do it so it's it's a
1:44
bit of a kind of just way that sometimes skippers do things a bit differently looking in there you can see uh that the
1:50
viz looks really good you can see something yellow on the shot line already so uh so that's great and there
1:56
you go i'm in the water and the fact that you can see things that clearly underwater in fact you can see it's the
2:03
boy there that is just a really good sign for the dive you know if you know
2:08
you're going to get in and you know the viz is going to be good that just just kind of makes it so much better right at
2:14
the beginning once you're in the water first thing you want to do of course is get yourself on the shot line and you
2:20
can see there I've managed to wrap the rope of my scooter around the trigger
2:25
which is uh which is not ideal but sorted it all out there and you can see I'm going to start my descent you might
2:32
have noticed that my the bag flapping around to my left hand side that is my Kindle this dive is from May 2024 and at
2:40
this point I was still using my Kindle for uh keep myself amused on deco stops
2:46
one of the things with Chris is that he doesn't like the Kindles being put in with the lazy shot so you've got to take
2:51
them down and attach them on yourself so that is exactly what you're going to see me doing in a little bit in front of me
2:59
there that is Rick i'm sure everyone will recognize his uh his yellow box
3:05
unlike most of us he doesn't dive an inspiration he dives uh an Evo Plus
3:10
which is the same size scrubber as an inspiration but it's only got the 2 liter cylinders on for oxygen and
3:17
dilluent just kind of reduces the weight and there you go that uh loop in the lazy shot that is where my Kindle has
3:24
just gone on and hopefully you're all starting to see the dive computer display on the left hand side you're
3:31
also seeing the fact that you can see the depth profile in the middle as well is just a fantastic addition and
3:37
hopefully you're going to see more of these in my videos one of the problems that you realize with this one is that
3:42
the sample rate on this dive isn't particularly great so that's why there's occasional mismatches between the depth
3:50
on the dive computer and the depth on the power lens what I do nowadays is
3:55
I've changed the the sample rate so this won't be a problem for future dives but for ones like this where I'm going back
4:01
and using old data then there is going to be this mismatch now as I'm descending here you can see that I'm
4:07
turning on my GoPro now for whatever reason I don't have the GoPro footage from this dive i I don't know what
4:13
happened to it either got lost in my filing system or it didn't record or something like that this is one of the
4:18
reasons that I carry loads of cameras now because I've ended up losing so much dive footage over the years or getting
4:23
bits missed or whatever anyway as you can see here we've got a thick green
4:29
layer on this dive so this is May so that's in and around the time of the plankton bloom so in this particular
4:35
dive the plankton was you probably saw there between about 12 and 30 m you know
4:40
15 and 30 m but I've now popped through it and you can see that the visibility is cleared up again you get this quite a
4:47
lot this kind of layer layering with the plankton bloom but often as you can see here once you get below it you get
4:53
really clear water and really good visibility now Rick is in front of me there he hasn't messed around he'll be
4:58
on his scooter as well and both of us do exactly the same thing which is that we scooter down which gets us down as as
5:05
quickly as we possibly can and means that we we're not wasting you know time
5:10
at the bottom or wasting time on the descent incurring additional decompression you don't really want to
5:16
be hanging around so we're not and once again as we get deeper you can see the
5:21
watercolor is changing it's gone this really deep dark blue so there isn't
5:26
necessarily particularly much light down here but the visibility is great and if you look in front of me there you can
5:31
start to see uh see the first strobe so we're not the first divers in fact I think we may even be the last divers in
5:37
the water but in front of us there is obviously a line of strobes and we're
5:43
going to add ours uh to the mix in a bit for the hopefully lots of you seeing my dive computer now you can see that uh
5:50
I've gone past 70 m or just past 70 m uh 3 minutes into the dive already i'm in
5:56
mandatory decompression my TTS uh time to surface is up to 9 minutes my first
6:03
stop uh is required as you can see there is meant to be at seven eight it that's
6:09
not actually correct it would be uh it would be nine meters this is a bit of a glitch I think in the way that the data
6:15
is exported from the sheer water but anyway there we go i've caught up with
6:21
Rick i've got my strobe on the line and somewhere in front of us there is going
6:27
to be a wreck there you go there's there's the wreck and it's at this point I realize that I've come down onto onto
6:35
hull and that's never a great sign because if you're on hull chances are
6:40
the wreck is either on its side or upside down and really clearly really soon we're going to realize that this
6:46
wreck is is mainly upside down which is is is not great because frankly nobody
6:52
wants to do a dive where you spend the whole time looking at hull you want to do a dive where you are looking at
6:59
interesting things now that thing off to my left hand side the rounded thing that's a boiler probably the bottom of a
7:04
boiler that's just poked up through the hole so in places on this dive you're going to see that the the hole breaks
7:10
open and you can see into it but the important bit the interesting bit of
7:15
this wreck majority of it is buried under things and that's going to be really clear later on and it's really
7:21
it's really disappointing because we've come out you know 30 odd miles 20 m down
7:27
we're going to incur a lot of decompression for whatever we do down here and it would be nice to know that
7:34
you're there's a good chance of finding something interesting but already on this dive you know we're into kind of
7:39
wishful thinking here so we're kind of hoping that a bit of the wreck might not be upside down we're hoping maybe some
7:45
stuff has fallen off the side you know that's the kind of game that you game that you're in here but hey it is what
7:52
it is uh that's in front of me there that's uh that's Steve Mortimer who is
7:57
kind of the leader of the Gasperados this is uh all the Tampa stuff is done by the Gasperados
8:05
steve's probably being the first person down in fact he would be the first person down so he's swimming around and
8:10
in fact he's probably getting towards the end of this his dive so he's probably heading back towards the shot
8:16
line me I am just trying to figure out what is going on down here i'm trying to
8:22
figure out where I am just get some sort of bearing so I've obviously seen the boilers back there i guess you know what
8:28
I might be doing is looking for an engine or maybe some sort of indication that there might be a bridge or possibly
8:35
you know looking for a bow or something like this now we know the wreck is 110 m long so that's going to be a big wreck
8:42
you can see there I spotted a port hole and I've just motioned to that diver there to say there's a port hole there
8:47
now that's great because that is obviously part of the superructure so that's above the water and
8:55
therefore you know is a sign that possibly in this area there's going to be other things maybe part of uh the
9:01
bridge maybe some bridge gear you know in an ideal world there'll be a bell what there is is something down there
9:07
you can see I've just spotted something non-ferris it's kind of a box there's some sort of gears or something inside
9:12
it maybe i I don't know um you can see there i'm just trying to get this out to have a look at it see if maybe you know
9:20
something interesting on it um obviously all these wrecks are the
9:25
same the instant you touch anything you just kick up the silt and there you go i found some sort of brass box and
9:32
generated a whole load of silt um I don't know why I don't spend a bit more time looking at it maybe I think I'm
9:38
going to go away and come back to it and I think that's actually what I what I do on this dive but I guess at this point
9:44
it's quite early in the dive i'm still kind of hopeful that maybe somewhere around here is something a bit more a
9:50
bit more obviously better than a brass box but um as you're going to see in a
9:55
bit there isn't really anything now the the one thing I do really kick myself about with this dive is that I didn't go
10:02
to the stern i don't know why I didn't go to the stern but Rick did and he took
10:08
some absolutely belting photos of the uh of the prop now you've seen one of those
10:13
at the beginning of this video but this is another one here and it just looks
10:18
really good and you know I think also shows that the wreck is completely inverted at that point so not much you
10:25
can do about that though all you can do is hope that there's something off to the side or there's a as I say there's a
10:32
crack in the wreck or whatever and this is what I'm doing here now what I don't know at this moment in time is that I'm actually heading forward i guess I
10:39
should have known that because I landed on the boilers i've then went to that area where the port hole and that brass
10:45
block box was and that is um you know the kind of stuff you'd associate with superructure such as in and around the
10:52
accommodation in the bridge area for a kind of classic um three castle four hold or five hold
11:00
steamship anyway this is me moving forward don't know what all this sort of
11:05
stuff is here perhaps part of a mast i don't know that thing maybe to the right hand side maybe maybe a bit of the mast
11:13
had certainly has that feel about it obviously if that's forward and that's a forward mast forward mast is a potential
11:20
area for a bell uh but as you can also see uh if there is a bell I don't find
11:26
it and there will be a bell somewhere on the ship uh but almost certainly it's
11:31
underneath everything and that's a pity because we're never going to identify it
11:37
unless Unless we find something like that so many ships of this kind of size and
11:43
era and design were lost in in this part of the world that without those it's
11:50
impossible without something like that it's impossible to to say the identity now what you can see here is hopefully
11:55
you starting to see all that chain the chain is to do with the anchor so this is this is the bow really there's not
12:03
much else to tell it apart from apart from the anchor chain and uh probably some anchors around somewhere although
12:09
uh I haven't seen any any yet obviously the other thing you get at the bow is
12:14
the bell and where you'd normally get the bell and sometimes you get things like locker rooms uh sorry lamp rooms
12:21
with uh lamps and stuff in so unfortunately all this is probably just
12:26
buried underneath all the remains of the plate and the hull and all that kind of stuff so this is really frustrating this
12:34
kind of experience you've come out all this way you've come down and basically you we know almost certainly
12:41
we're not going to get anything for our troubles so u but you know what part of
12:46
this is what happens when you have a dive like this oh there there's the anchor again you can see the anchor
12:51
there going into the horse pipe there and then somewhere underneath all of there is is going to be the anchor and
12:58
the capston and and all that kind of stuff in fact there's a pair of what could be moing bolards there yeah I
13:03
think that's probably what those are there so they've somehow managed to appear you know bits of the wreck have
13:09
broken down and those have those have kind of appeared so you know wrecks degrade in in all sorts of different
13:14
ways and it's you it's not easy to understand how that happens you can all you can do is just sometimes see the
13:20
results like like I've done there so here I am just having a look around sometimes bells up end up on seabeds so
13:26
that's what I'm kind of looking around for there if you haven't seen my bell um sorry my bell my video of the stock
13:32
force then that's exactly what happened with the stock force stock force was inverted and the bell somehow ended up
13:40
about five or 10 meters away from the wreck just lying on the seabed by itself nothing else there and that's why nobody
13:48
found it for years and years until Fran Fran had that great piece of fortune so if you've not watched my stop force
13:53
video go and go and have a look at it and it shows a triumph really of
13:58
sometimes you know just going back and having another look or spending the time to look in places that you might not
14:04
think so that bit off the side of the wreck i always try and do that and you'll probably see that in quite a lot of my videos i often swim down the side
14:10
of holes i swim sometimes just off bits of wreckage just trying to find interesting things there i think maybe
14:16
it comes from the time when I was doing a lot of recreational diving so near us
14:22
in Plymouth there are a couple of really popular wrecks the James Eaggan Lane Liberty ships sitting upright in about
14:28
20 mters the Silla purpose sunk it was a Leander class frigot decommissioned in
14:34
the late sorry in the yeah the late 80s and sunkers in 2002 2003 as for divers
14:41
now you swim off the side of both of those wrecks on a Monday or Tuesday and you'll find all the stuff that people
14:47
have dropped when they were when they were diving them over the weekend so I
14:52
guess maybe that's part of the reason that I still go off the side of wrecks looking for stuff but anyway there you
14:58
go about the best I can do there that that's a bit of a fish doing a run in fact there's not that many fish on this
15:03
wreck i don't know why um a bit odd you know but but there isn't you know
15:08
compared to to what we often get maybe it's the time of year maybe it's where it is who knows but um definitely not
15:15
much so this is me swimming along what would have been the port side of the wreck the starboard side of the wreck
15:21
was where I started and that was where uh we saw some of the stuff like that brass box for instance i've clearly just
15:27
decided that the the starboard side of the wreck is the place to be the port side of the if anything it's kind of
15:33
slightly lying on its starboard side so um I'm going over there and as I come over the top of the wreck here you can
15:40
see that the wreck has started to crack open this is quite a a common thing you
15:45
once wrecks degrade enough the hulls do tend to split and they you know they break open and if you have a look at my
15:51
Armond Branch video so the the wreck I bought off Facebook Marketplace that is a good example of a wreck where the the
15:57
hull has just completely cracked open and you know stuff has been moved away
16:03
really by the weather so you can see a lot of the cargo in the stern area where the where the hull has gone
16:09
so this is me back over on the other side now and you can see here there's that mast i think we saw that earlier on
16:15
you saw me having a little bit of a look at it and you know once again I'm coming back you know maybe looking for the
16:20
other bit of the mast i can't see it there so you can see where it's broken off so there would be a bit of the mast
16:26
somewhere else it might be underneath it it might have been pulled off by a troller it might just be somewhere off to my left hand side and this is me you
16:32
know once again having a look in and around here i don't know what these are cleats maybe or you know mounts for
16:39
lights or something like that but maybe I'm kind of hoping that the bell might be might be there but it isn't as you
16:45
can uh as you can see so but always worth a look one day I will do this and
16:51
I will see uh I will see a bell but not today unfortunately so as I say back over on
16:59
the starboard side of the wreck and I'm I'm now kind of starting to head back towards the stern which is where the
17:04
shot is and if you think about the shot it was in and around the boilers so I guess the highest point of the wreck is
17:10
probably where the boilers and the engine are cuz those things will both hold the wreck up unless there's there's
17:16
big cargo the rest of the wreck will just slowly kind of crush down the other bit of the wreck that's quite high
17:21
actually is the uh is the prop and the uh and the rudder and
17:28
although I don't actually go there on this video you've seen all of that on Rick's uh on Rick's brilliant photos so
17:35
here I am i'm uh heading back again and obviously you know after the mast there
17:41
will be a a cargo hold and then after that cargo hold almost certainly is
17:46
going to be the bridge area again so that's probably what I'm what I'm coming back to here and you probably just seen
17:52
there's another diver there oh that looks like a port hole there um in a bit of plate and you can see it's actually a
17:59
bit of glass is in it but the the glass is smashed so there's you know somehow during either the sinking process or the
18:07
uh the collapsing process the the glass has broken perhaps even during whatever sunk the ship and I think what I'm
18:14
starting to get a feel for at the po this point is there is no wires on this ship i haven't seen any at all or maybe
18:20
those might look like wires but I think they're ropes or if there is any wires there's a very very limited number of
18:26
them so for me this is a First World War era ship there's another port hole there um and there's my brass box now I'm
18:34
really kind of frustrated myself i should have spent more time looking at this brass box i should have had a look and seen what was inside it because
18:41
there was that kind of gearing mechanism which is quite interesting i don't think I've seen a box like that before instead
18:46
I come over here and have a bit of a wiggle of that port hole but that port hole is is not moving it is in there
18:52
pretty solidly so uh yeah brass box port hole and there was that other port hole I think just over to the left hand side
18:58
but once again uh I saw that at the beginning of the dive and that's completely in play so isn't shifting and
19:04
you know here I am looking away from the wreck once again hoping that something may have ended up over there there may
19:11
be bridge gear for instance you know potentially there could be a bridge bell could be a maker's plate could be all
19:17
sorts of stuff out here on the seabed what there is in fact is a whole load of nothing although that's a bit of coal I
19:23
guess there is a bit of coal but there's nothing out here that looks um looks particularly interesting which is
19:30
disappointing so all about trying to identify the wreck you know maybe a bit of crockery would be nice who knows
19:37
something just with uh a bit of a you know some writing on something where we
19:42
can identify this wreck but we're getting a whole load of nothing now for those of you who are paying attention to my uh dive computer and the dive profile
19:49
in the bottom and on the left hand side you can see there that my TTS is getting towards 80 minutes my uh ceiling is is
19:56
36 m so that's where my first stop is going to be um so I'm 90 m down you can
20:05
see along the bottom there you can see the dive profile you can see that little yellow dot showing where I am in in the
20:10
dive and you know already I'm I'm into fairly serious amounts of decompression
20:15
for not particularly much bottom time and crucially nothing really to show for my bottom time you know I I haven't I
20:22
haven't found anything that there's no kind of Eureka moments now that happens sometimes bit more coal there you
20:28
probably saw it so I guess one thing we can say is that there's sufficient amount of coal on this that the
20:35
um um that it was almost certainly a coal powered ship not really a surprise first
20:42
world war you're not getting very very unusual to get anything that's oil oil
20:47
fired so you know all kind of fairly consistent with with with the impression I'm getting so let's you know loads of
20:56
ribs and and stuff broken apart here somewhere in around here there would be a galley somewhere in around here there
21:02
is going to be all the other facilities you need for a crew that looks like a little um combing there for a hatch
21:09
anyway I thought this might be a useful opportunity to show another one of Rick's great photos you can see the part
21:16
of the hull that's starting to split open and one of the other divers going in to have a look around i think it
21:22
really captures how great the visibility was on this dive but also how the wreck
21:28
in parts is starting to degrade that photo was a bit closer to the stern i
21:33
not entirely sure I got I got in there i don't think I saw that gap but this is
21:38
me uh still looking around in and around the bridge area you can see there that's uh that's clearly a boiler and that has
21:45
you know poked out of the wreck and bits of the hull have collapsed or maybe it's rolled out of
21:51
the wreck boilers weren't actually screwed in they were just kind of they rested on normally on kind of curved
21:58
mounts and that obviously has uh has poked off that there we go bit more um
22:03
bit more super structure or in fact there you go that's a a paw hole there I think
22:08
um that's appears to have popped out of the wreck so it's nice it's got all the
22:14
intact glass and everything I think I'm just going to go down have a look at it turn it over see what sort of port hole
22:19
it is I think this is probably one from accommodation so it wouldn't have been
22:24
in the hull that's how come it's uh it's come out hull ones tend to be in really securely there you go that's probably
22:31
been under water 100 years and it's pretty much the most interesting thing I've seen on the wreck so far um but
22:38
yeah good opportunity to have another look at one of Rick's photos and there you know that's taken underneath the
22:43
hull and I think you know shows once again how the hull is splitting open and
22:49
you know at some point it will open up the whole wreck and you'll be able to see more things unfortunately all the really interesting stuff I'm pretty
22:55
certain will still be underneath everything so uh not really an opportunity to see see anything as for
23:02
me on the dive you can see my TTS there is getting up towards it's it's getting close to 2 hours uh my first stop 42 m
23:11
down so you know that's probably deeper than most recreational divers go i've
23:17
done 22 minutes 90 m and I'm obviously starting to think
23:23
about the end of my dive oh there you go i don't know if you saw there i managed to get the the rope on from my from my
23:29
scooter slightly wrapped around the the cylinder valve on one of my cylinders but once again just taken it off there
23:36
and easy enough i think if I'd have thought about it what I should have done
23:41
at this point is actually gone to the stern and gone and had a look at that epic prop obviously I didn't know there
23:46
was an epic prop but it is a kind of sensible thing especially when you got a scooter to to get around the whole wreck
23:53
and have a a good look at everything because if you don't do that then you end up missing out on something like I
23:59
have absolutely done on this dive and it wasn't until uh later on on the way back Rick downloaded his photos from his
24:06
camera to his phone and was showing us all of those and I was like "Wow those are properly uh properly stunning." and
24:12
slightly uh disappointed that it was James uh who who appeared in that that particularly epic photo because
24:19
obviously normally it's my role to uh to light things up for Rick so James kind of snuck in there and uh and got the
24:25
glory ahead of me and perhaps this is the reason why I didn't do it because where I am here at the moment you can
24:31
see that the we can see there's Rick and you can see there's uh there's the ke
24:37
and I think that's Rick just telling me that he's uh he's heading off and it's me starting to think about what I do
24:44
with my dive and I think maybe because Rick is is is is going and because I know I've got pretty much two hours of
24:52
decode to do I think I probably decide that I'm not going to go much further away than the shot line which is a pity
24:59
because the the stern is not far away from where I am now but hey uh there
25:05
there we go it it is what it is and you kind of I think the thing with all these kind of things is to evaluate your dive
25:12
when you're on the surface think about what you would do differently next time and try and build those lessons into
25:19
your next dive probably for me the the biggest lesson that I've learned in recent years is if you've got a bit of
25:25
crockery and you think there's something written on it always bring it up and then you can evaluate it on the surface
25:31
it often you can't see things underwater there isn't enough light also I need
25:36
reading specs so it can be difficult for me to see things so that's a good lesson
25:41
and anybody who's watched my na video will have seen that the benefits from doing that and the fact that we just
25:48
identified a wreck with a bit of broken crockery which was absolutely fantastic but this dive as you can see from the uh
25:55
the depth profile on the bottom this is really really close to being finished i
26:01
am pretty close to the shot line and I'm going to I think probably
26:07
look up in a minute and see it and head back up so this is just one of those cracks underneath there probably is the
26:14
is the engine somewhere if you were able to get in there and swim around you would you would almost certainly see the
26:19
engine cuz that's the reason it's being held up is by the the bulk and structure of the engine keeping it up that might
26:25
be a drive shaft there that I've just seen so this crack might be going transverse it might be going across the
26:31
wreck so um potentially you know you could get in there clearly I'm at the
26:37
end of my time i've got 130 minutes TTS h you can see the uh the strobes
26:42
flashing away there so for me the dive is over and I'm returning to the shot line i'm going to pick up my strobe and
26:49
then I'm going to get back to the surface but once again you can see the benefits of having great strobes
26:55
you can also see how fabulous the conditions on this dive are there's another diver up there who's also
27:01
heading back there's my lovely double strobes that you've seen on so many of my dives
27:06
working really well guiding guiding me home and I think I'm probably the last diver left on this wreck rick as you've
27:13
already seen is he he left a bit earlier than me so once again it's it's the
27:19
important thing about having something to guide you back now both those strobes are working the visibility was actually
27:25
really good but there are circumstances in which that might not be the case so having the the double strobe is good in
27:31
fact sorry there is one other diver left i think that's my friend Michael in fact he has just come down so I know I
27:37
remember exactly what happened on this dive he had problems took him a while to get in he came down and got on got on
27:44
the wreck and basically there was nobody else on the wreck but him you probably saw there i had a fast ascent alarm on
27:49
my computer in fact there you go again and this is just a technique that I use
27:54
i get off the bottom really quickly the pressure change proportionally at this depth is not that great so I do I use a
28:02
scooter to get myself up relatively quickly to about half the distance between the bottom on my first deco stop
28:08
then I slow things down and I take it a bit more steadily from there so I'm just telling the computer that I know there's
28:14
a uh there was a fast descent there so that is my uh that's my dive pretty much
28:20
complete i know you guys all like looking at my uh deco profile so this is the uh the deco profile here you've seen
28:27
a lot of it through the video but I just highlight two points on the ascent really so you see me there leaving
28:34
bottom with about 130 minutes TTS get up on the ascent uh by the time I get to
28:39
first stop that's down to about 120ish and then what I do is around about here you can see me shifting from
28:46
1.3 to 1.5 P2 which chops some time off and then the other thing I do which
28:51
which I I don't know why I did this i don't do this very often but I I then switch from try mix to air in my
28:58
dilluent and obviously I do some dill flushes and all those kind of things and that obviously chopped another about 15
29:03
minutes of deco off and then what I do is at the end here you can see my deco is cleared but I I actually stay down
29:11
for quite a bit longer and I think that's probably because I was feeling a bit embarrassed about the the air switch
29:18
so don't do that anymore not really certain why I did it on this dive anyway enough of my diving sins this is what it
29:26
looks like uh during the decompression you can see there's a lazy shot there with the uh the red boy and all the
29:31
DSMBBS around it there's a three DSMBBS I think that are off to the the side and
29:37
that kind of separation is always an issue when you have people decompressing under DSMBBS fortunately the separation wasn't
29:44
very much and everybody gets back on the boat okay this is me you can see swimming in there's the back of the boat
29:50
there's Chris operating the lift you can see what a fabulous day it is especially when you consider how far offshore we
29:56
are so it was also a late day this is us heading back in into the glorious sunset
30:03
there as you can see and although not the result we hoped hey you know what still a great day out we all enjoyed
30:11
ourselves and yeah I hope you have too and I hope you will join me for another
30:16
one of my videos thank you