0:00
sometimes when you're trying to identify
0:02
shipwrecks you get two conflicting
0:04
pieces of evidence that make the whole
0:06
thing seem really confusing what's
0:08
absolutely brilliant though is when you
0:10
manage to put the jigsaw puzzle together
0:13
and you get something that all of a
0:15
sudden allows that to make sense that's
0:18
exactly what happened to us about 6
0:20
months after we dived a stunning wreck
0:22
in 80 m of water off the southwest coast
0:25
of Cornwall it was a banger of a dive
0:28
and a fantastic outcome so pin your ears
0:32
back and listen in for the story of the
0:35
SS Polyina i think you're going to love
0:37
it before I crack on though I know it's
0:40
a bit cheeky this early in the video but
0:42
if you could give us a like that would
0:44
be really appreciated this story starts
0:47
like many other ones with us going out
0:49
to dive an unknown Mark the only
0:51
information we have on this wreck comes
0:53
from the UK hydrographic office and as
0:56
you can see it's pretty sparse but it
0:58
looks really interesting which is why
1:00
we're out here this is a bit further
1:02
west than many of my dives we've left
1:05
Plymouth and taken the boat to Nuland
1:07
which is the most westerly port in
1:09
England and from here we've come out
1:11
about 13 miles to dive the wreck now the
1:15
great thing about diving in this part of
1:17
the world is that there are so many
1:19
undived wrecks or wrecks that have only
1:22
been dived once this area the western
1:24
approaches is an incredible diving
1:27
location i'm fortunate enough to have
1:29
done several trips down here and they've
1:31
all been awesome but this one as you can
1:34
see we've got this wreck that stands 10
1:36
m proud of the seabed which is really
1:39
unusual so we're uh we're on our way
1:41
down as you can see here actually close
1:44
to the bottom i don't know why but I
1:46
didn't start my uh my video before this
1:49
rick and myself are diving together as
1:51
normal second pair in although that's
1:53
not actually strictly two because
1:55
there's only three divers today so one
1:58
divers's down already rick and myself
2:00
because we've got scooters we're coming
2:01
in after him and here I am you can see
2:04
just getting my strobe on for some
2:06
reason I've only got one strobe on this
2:08
dive i guess the other one must have
2:09
been broken um and you can see this
2:12
one's not entirely playing ball either
2:14
so it's uh it's not a great day but
2:16
luckily there's other people on the
2:18
strobe other strobes on the line and I
2:20
know Rick will have his on and actually
2:22
as you can see the visibility is
2:24
incredible this is 80 m down um normally
2:28
video lights kind of do obscure the the
2:31
visibility bit but you can see here it's
2:33
absolutely wonderful you can also see
2:35
there's a really nasty bit of fishing
2:38
line in the water and this wreck was
2:40
absolutely covered in it as you'll see
2:41
later on one kind of slightly negative
2:44
bit as you can see here is I haven't got
2:45
the white balance settings correct on my
2:48
parallel lens so I'm getting this kind
2:50
of reddy orange glow which uh is really
2:52
irritating and I'll just get it out
2:54
there and say sorry for that right now
2:56
anyway so as always when you get onto a
2:59
wreck like this it's like trying to
3:01
figure out where where we are now I
3:04
happen to know this is the stern of the
3:05
wreck and so I'm going to put you out of
3:09
the misery on that one but at this point
3:10
in the dive I'm still trying to figure
3:12
out exactly where I am and you can see
3:14
there I'm kind of heading for the
3:16
highest bit and this bit of the wreck
3:18
here you can see there's a bit of hull
3:19
that's fallen over and it's actually on
3:22
the I'm on the port side there so I'm
3:24
going to I'm going to come over into the
3:25
middle of the wreck which is going to
3:27
put me probably closer to the starboard
3:29
side and then I'm going to start moving
3:31
forward so just off to my bottom right
3:32
there was probably the number four hold
3:35
there you can see is the is a cargo
3:38
winch so that would have been in between
3:40
the number three and the number four
3:41
hold and that's how they would have got
3:43
the cargo out up in front of me there
3:45
that's a number three hold that's
3:47
interesting because as we subsequently
3:50
discovered the torpedo hit on the
3:52
starboard side in the number three hold
3:55
so as I'm looking at it here it's just
3:57
on the right hand side that is where the
3:59
um the torpedo hit and you can see the
4:02
wreck actually has got a list over to
4:04
the starboard side we'll see more of
4:05
that later on i've just spotted a port
4:07
hole there and that's a pretty good sign
4:10
that this wreck hasn't been dived very
4:12
much wrecks that have been dived a lot
4:14
you don't tend to see these things you
4:16
probably just see there just that I'm
4:18
just put the torch on another port hole
4:19
and in fact as I move up this side of
4:21
the wreck I just there's a line of port
4:23
holes there's another one um so there is
4:26
a ton of port holes on on this wreck
4:29
which which and there in fact is another
4:30
one and another one so there I've lost
4:33
count of how many I've seen there five
4:35
or six already absolutely incredible so
4:37
this is kind of the accommodation area
4:39
aft of the bridge that I'm going along
4:42
now the engine bay is down to my left
4:44
hand side i'm on the starboard side
4:46
there's another port hole in fact a
4:47
whole load more port holes there's one
4:49
two three perhaps there in front of me
4:52
now they're all ironbacked so this kind
4:54
of port hole the bit that attaches to
4:56
the ship is made of iron the window that
4:59
would open that is made of brass and
5:01
obviously the the open and closes as
5:04
well so there's another one inside the
5:06
wreck and this bit here is probably this
5:09
is in and around the bridge area so what
5:11
I'm doing is I'm obviously looking for
5:13
any of the bridge gear but also you
5:16
sometimes get bells in this area as well
5:18
so got to remember this is a completely
5:20
unknown mark we know nothing about it
5:22
other than the length of it uh the
5:25
height it stands up on the seabed and
5:27
the the beam as well so this is the
5:28
information that we've got off the UK
5:30
hydrographic office website so we're now
5:32
down here at nearly 80 m we've got maybe
5:36
30 minutes on the wreck and in that time
5:38
we've got to try and get as much
5:41
information as we can about it as
5:43
possible and so that's that's what I'm
5:45
trying to do clearly what I want to do
5:47
is find something with some information
5:49
on it maybe a bell maybe as maker's
5:52
plate maybe a piece of crockery anything
5:55
like that that can help us um identify
5:58
it so um I'm going to put you a bit out
6:01
of your misery because I've already at
6:03
the beginning of this video showed you
6:05
that we brought up two pieces of
6:07
crockery and those combined with the
6:10
size of the wreck and some other
6:12
information such as um the fact it was a
6:14
steam ship the number of boilers etc the
6:17
length of it that is what has allowed us
6:20
to identify the wreck the thing that was
6:22
really confusing though was the fact
6:24
that we had crockery made by two
6:27
different companies not any of them made
6:29
by two different companies one of them
6:30
was from Germany and one of them was
6:32
from the UK the UK one was from uh
6:35
Kunard line really well-known shipping
6:37
line the German one was kind of used by
6:41
lots and lots of different shipping
6:42
lines so trying to figure out what had
6:45
gone on there was was really confusing
6:47
perhaps somebody had taken one from
6:50
another ship as some sort of souvenir
6:52
that was about the best we could come up
6:54
with until we had our Eureka moment well
6:56
I say we had our Eureka moments james
6:59
Belooza skipper of Seeker one of the In
7:01
Deep crew he was the man who had the
7:03
Eureka moment i'm going to come back to
7:05
that in a minute and the reason is
7:07
because this is where on the ship the
7:09
crockery came from you can see it there
7:11
just uh in the picture i'm just putting
7:13
my torch on it now you're going to see
7:15
me in a second i go over there i have a
7:17
look at it i take it out and I pretty
7:20
much dismiss it which I have to say was
7:23
a really foolish thing to do because I
7:26
didn't bring any of this crockery up but
7:28
I learned my lesson and anybody who's
7:30
seen my video about the discovery of
7:32
another Kunard line ship the Na will see
7:35
that I I did bring crockery up on that a
7:37
broken plate and that's what allowed us
7:39
to to identify it in this particular
7:41
case I just have a quick look at those
7:43
things can't see a shipping line logo on
7:45
it and sack it and move off um one of
7:48
the other divers who was you know
7:50
clearly much more sensible than me they
7:52
went and they brought up a couple of
7:54
those plates and those are the ones that
7:56
you've seen already and those are the
7:57
ones that solved the mystery so massive
7:59
kudos to him it didn't solve it
8:02
immediately though because we still had
8:03
this dilemma about a German plate and a
8:06
British plate and how did that all work
8:10
together so James was on his boat about
8:13
six months later we'd all looked into it
8:15
we'd all try and find found out
8:16
different things james was on the boat
8:18
and he's chatting with one of his
8:20
customers and he said you know there's
8:23
no we haven't been able to find records
8:24
of any Kunard ship sunk in this area and
8:27
the customer was like oh my dad wrote
8:29
the definitive book on Kunard shipwrecks
8:33
and so I'm going to put you in touch
8:35
with him so that's exactly what happened
8:38
we we got in touch with the gentleman
8:39
who wrote the the book that you've seen
8:41
earlier on and he explained exactly what
8:45
had happened and it's it's a really
8:48
interesting story and another one of
8:51
these things that has been completely
8:53
forgotten over time so I'm going to come
8:55
to that in a minute and the reason I'm
8:57
going to come to it in a minute because
8:58
on the dive I am just getting to the bow
9:02
and the bow is the the loveliest part of
9:04
this wreck it's the bit that stands up
9:07
10 meters tall which is absolutely
9:09
incredible the ship is sitting on a a
9:12
pretty solid seabed so so it's upright
9:14
but the fact is it's survived intact
9:17
upright for well over a hundred years
9:19
since it was sunk on the 15th of May
9:22
1917 and when you consider the weather
9:25
that we get in in this part of the
9:27
country and the tides and the corrosion
9:30
and all that kind of stuff the fact it
9:31
is so upright is absolutely incredible
9:33
having said that though it is only the
9:35
bow that is upright and you can see me
9:37
there i'm looking up at the bow from the
9:40
um inside the ship so most of the ship
9:43
has collapsed apart from the bow that is
9:46
that is still upright there and you can
9:47
see the deck is kind of sloping down you
9:50
can see it's bent you can see that the
9:52
force that's that's exerted on all those
9:55
uh beams and everything so it's not
9:56
going to be like this for too much
9:58
longer we reminded all of us of the
10:01
wreck of the justicia which is in Malin
10:04
Head and it has a very similar sort of
10:07
thing so a massive bow that sits upright
10:10
um you can see also that the the bow is
10:12
covered in fishing line you can also see
10:14
there Rick um who's with me he's also on
10:17
his scooter he's uh he's seen the the
10:20
opportunities that this wreck presents
10:22
for photography and I've seen that the
10:24
opportunity that this particular part of
10:26
the wreck presents for being
10:27
photographed so what I've done is I've
10:29
gone into uh model mode and I'm sat
10:32
there i'm shining my torches on the on
10:34
the wreck i'm trying to give Rick as
10:36
much light as possible so that he can
10:38
get some decent photos of me and you
10:40
will have seen the results of that right
10:42
at the beginning of this video when I uh
10:44
when I show them and it's it's one of
10:47
the things I can't highlight enough if
10:49
you're diving with a you know somebody
10:51
who is as good as as Rick and has got
10:53
the eye for the photo then just take the
10:56
time you know pose for him and he will
10:58
capture you and you'll have those photos
11:00
forever and it's absolutely brilliant so
11:03
that's uh you can see I'm I'm looking
11:05
down onto the seabed there you can see
11:07
how good the visibility is i'm looking
11:08
back down the wreck there so that's the
11:10
port side i've just had a quick look at
11:12
my computer there just making sure where
11:14
I am now obviously the other thing I'm
11:16
really keen to do is clearly I want some
11:18
great photos of me but also what I want
11:20
to do is try and find the bell because
11:23
surely the bell must be in the bow it
11:25
must be somewhere around here so um
11:28
you've already seen me have a bit of a
11:30
look for it as as I went up to the the
11:32
bow but I'm coming back in for another
11:34
look all I've seen so far is a bit of a
11:36
a lamp there was a broken kind of copper
11:40
um kerosene lamp or whatever on the sea
11:42
on the seabed now clearly I'm that's of
11:45
no interest to me at all that's not
11:46
going to help identify it and it's it's
11:48
smashed to bits as well so um it's the
11:51
bell that that I really really want it's
11:53
got to be down here somewhere actually
11:55
we've done two dives on this wreck we
11:57
came back about a year later cuz it was
11:59
so good and we still felt the bell must
12:01
be down here somewhere so we came back
12:03
for another look at it and and
12:04
conditions weren't quite as good as this
12:06
but we uh we didn't didn't find a bell
12:08
on that dive either so um you know
12:11
pretty disappointing um what I did do
12:14
though is I found a very small hand bell
12:17
um the kind of thing that maybe they
12:18
would have used for ringing out watches
12:20
or maybe as an alarm bell or something
12:23
like that now I've promised you several
12:26
times that I'm going to tell you the
12:27
story of the ship and it is it's an
12:30
incredible one and I guess just typical
12:33
of what happened in those days so the
12:36
Pimnia was not built as a Pimnia it was
12:39
not built for the Kunard lines it was
12:41
actually built by the Germans in Hamburg
12:44
as the Henrietta Warman or Vman perhaps
12:49
it was um built for a German German
12:52
shipping line and it was used to move
12:54
stuff to and from uh the African
12:57
colonies or the German African colonies
12:59
and at the beginning of the first world
13:01
war that's where it was and we captured
13:04
it in Came what is now Cameroon and
13:07
handed it over to the Kunard line who
13:09
managed it through the first world war
13:12
and once you know that all of a sudden
13:14
all the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle come
13:16
together and it's really obvious that
13:20
you know probably no other ship could
13:22
fit the bill for this one it's the right
13:24
length it's the right size it's got
13:26
crockery from Germany it's got Kunard
13:28
line crockery this is very close to the
13:30
reported sinking position of the Pima as
13:33
well so bingo that is it another mystery
13:36
has been solved and over here you can
13:39
see this is me back where that um
13:42
crockery was found earlier on and you
13:44
can see there there is a diver with a
13:46
couple of plates uh in his hand and he's
13:49
bringing them over to me to show them um
13:52
to say look that one's got Kunard line
13:54
on it which you can see we've already
13:56
seen that and the other one has got the
13:59
uh outvas crest on it um and the outvas
14:03
writing and that's the German stuff so
14:05
so that is how we solved the mystery of
14:09
the preliminaria and it's a brilliant
14:11
brilliant outcome and it just uh shows
14:14
the importance of not neglecting
14:16
evidence in my opinion and I took a
14:19
really good lesson away from this and as
14:20
I say that's what helped me identify the
14:23
na um you know probably 18 months after
14:25
this so uh yeah it's a it's a it's a
14:28
great story and a really really good
14:32
result and shows you know shows what a
14:35
what a good bit of detective work and
14:37
and also sometimes knowing the right
14:39
people as well so you know that's if
14:42
you're ever looking at a shipwreck and
14:44
you ever trying to identify every piece
14:47
of evidence is valuable that's all I
14:50
would say on this one so I guess it's
14:52
also now that we know the name we can
14:54
say the story of the Pimnia as well so
14:56
So what happened to the Pimnia well it
14:59
was we captured it in 1914 we used it
15:02
and then in May 1917 it was coming back
15:06
actually from Africa with a cargo of
15:08
iron ore and fruit and at 6:30 in the
15:13
morning presumably it was relatively
15:15
quiet all of a sudden there was a
15:17
massive explosion on the starboard side
15:19
of as I've already said behind the
15:21
engine in the number three hold and very
15:24
quickly the the ship started to sink
15:27
they had as often they did they had the
15:29
lifeboats out so most of the crew got on
15:31
board the lifeboats and unfortunately
15:34
very very sadly eight men lost their
15:37
lives uh when this went down there's 27
15:39
guys on board 25 Brits an American and a
15:42
Norwegian and eight of them died and are
15:45
commemorated on the Merchant Marine
15:48
Memorial in Tower Hill which if you've
15:50
never been there is is a fantastic place
15:53
um and and shows you know how many guys
15:57
and how many ships were sunk in both
15:59
world wars it's somewhere that I always
16:01
try and go to when I'm in London and you
16:04
can see the on the the brass plaques you
16:06
can see the the names of the guys who
16:08
lost their lives on the Pyimnia so uh
16:11
the rest of the crew were in the
16:12
lifeboats and actually had no idea what
16:15
what happened they hadn't seen the
16:16
submarine that had sunk them and then
16:18
the submarine came to the surface as I
16:21
think they often did and because the
16:23
skipper wants to know what ship he's
16:25
just sunk and any information he can get
16:30
UC75 commanded by a famous skipper
16:32
called Johans Lo um who went on to sink
16:37
77 ships with over 165,000 tons he won
16:41
Paulite which is the most um prestigious
16:45
German medal of the first world war so
16:47
he was a he was a really serious guy he
16:50
he died in 1918 not on board the UC75 he
16:53
died on another submarine the UB57 the
16:57
UC75 didn't make it either and I assume
17:00
therefore a lot of the guys who sunk the
17:01
Pimnia must have been on the UC75 when
17:04
it was sunk um towards the end of 1918
17:07
but it was a very successful submarine
17:09
and so did a lot of damage and I can't
17:12
imagine there was much sadness in this
17:14
country when it went down so the wreck
17:16
of the UC75 lies off the east coast of
17:19
England up near Scarra and uh has been
17:23
has been identified so anybody who's
17:25
interested in diving it I think it's in
17:27
a kind of recreational depths as well
17:29
not 100% certain what I'm doing here but
17:32
I'm in and around the engine room so
17:34
perhaps I felt that might have been an
17:35
engine room telegraph or something like
17:37
that just I guess trying to find
17:40
something that might help us identify
17:43
identify the wreck this is on the on the
17:44
port side and it's quite um broken down
17:47
here as you can see there's the hull has
17:49
kind of fallen outwards onto the seabed
17:51
and as I come in here I think in a
17:53
moment we're just going to get a a
17:55
glimpse of the the legs for the engine
17:57
room rick is on the other side and
17:59
actually took one of the photos that
18:01
you've seen earlier on the really nice
18:02
photos is of of me in this part of the
18:05
wreck so as you can see here I'm taking
18:08
my time having a good look around there
18:10
was something else on the left hand side
18:12
there no idea what it was it looked big
18:15
um but also didn't look as though it
18:17
would offer any clues clearly in the in
18:20
fact there you go that's the engine you
18:22
can see it standing up on its leg bog
18:24
standard three-cylinder you know
18:26
compound engine clearly somebody else
18:28
has been in around here so there's been
18:29
a bit of rumaging so there's a bit of
18:31
bit of poor viz and you never know what
18:33
you're going to find in these kind of
18:35
places people who've seen my other
18:36
videos will know that I've had a or I
18:38
had a particularly good year in 2024 for
18:42
makers plates this uh dive was from 2023
18:45
no makers plates on this dive no makers
18:48
plates in this year very unfortunately
18:50
but hey there we go there's always
18:52
always another year so I've had a good
18:54
look around i'm now heading sternwoods
18:56
on the on the port side and you can see
18:57
there that the hull is has kind of
19:01
so and I'm just coming up on top of the
19:03
wreck there just to uh to have a good
19:06
look around you can see how much netting
19:07
and rope and stuff there is on this
19:10
it's not very far away from Newand new
19:13
is a is a big fishing port one of the
19:15
busiest in the country so I guess it's
19:17
not really surprising that there is so
19:20
much netting and stuff on it and this is
19:22
me coming up here you can see this is
19:23
the uh top of the engine here so I'm
19:25
just coming up to have a look at the
19:26
engine you never know might be something
19:28
interesting on that as well but it's uh
19:31
it's a three-cylinder compound engine
19:33
and there are any number of ships of
19:36
this period which have similar engines
19:38
and are missing and all those kind of
19:40
things so we're not learning an awful
19:41
lot from the engine although it's always
19:44
interesting to see the other thing about
19:45
the ship that I've already mentioned is
19:47
that it isn't a particularly expensive
19:49
ship steamer may be a little harsh
19:52
on it but certainly once you get iron
19:54
back port holes it's uh a good sign that
19:57
the ship nobody spent loads of money on
19:59
it in fact you can just see the two
20:00
boilers going underneath me there so
20:02
those are or one of the two boilers
20:04
rather that's uh that's just forward of
20:05
the engine but they are kind of buried
20:07
with with bits of hull here and this is
20:09
me back over on the the starboard side
20:11
of the wreck now and heading back
20:13
towards the shot line my my dive is kind
20:16
of coming to an end and I'm just
20:19
spending a few moments having a quick
20:21
look around so no idea what that what
20:25
that thing is there looks a bit odd um
20:28
don't know it's not particularly uh
20:30
interesting i think I'm just going to
20:32
give it a bit of a a tug realize it's
20:33
really heavy and uh you know probably
20:36
made of concrete or something like that
20:38
so I kind of make the decision that it's
20:40
going to uh not going to shift any
20:42
further not going to help with
20:43
identification so the one thing that I'm
20:45
really uh kicking myself about this dive
20:48
is that I never really had a look at the
20:50
stern properly i don't know why I didn't
20:52
because it is something that I try and
20:54
do on most of my dives and in fact I've
20:57
had a look at the stern properly one of
20:59
the things I'd have spotted is the gun
21:01
there and it was supposedly right next
21:03
to the shot line only a small gun a a
21:06
three pounder but the Pimnia was
21:10
defensively armed as were I guess most
21:12
ships by the time they got to this uh
21:14
part of the First World War just as an
21:16
attempt to deter submarines so it was
21:19
defensively armed the gun was there i
21:22
didn't see it which is a pity because
21:23
that would have um it is one of the
21:25
things that they helped us to identify
21:27
only one diver saw the gun and they were
21:30
um they weren't 100% certain that they'd
21:32
seen it or not or they said they'd seen
21:34
it and we were like no we didn't see the
21:36
gun you know and normally were pretty
21:37
good at spotting that thing so that then
21:39
put a bit of doubt into their mind and
21:42
um yeah so so when we came up we had a
21:44
big discussion about whether there was
21:45
actually a gun or not we didn't have any
21:47
footage of it rick hadn't taken any
21:49
photos of it i hadn't got it on video so
21:51
we couldn't say for certain whether
21:53
there was a a gun or not so that's um
21:56
something we rectified on the second
21:58
dive came down and yeah definitely there
22:00
is a gun on it it's definitely a three
22:02
pounder and uh so you know once again
22:05
another piece of evidence that fits the
22:07
Pimnia jigsaw so this is back this is
22:10
actually the stern here um but I don't
22:12
spend the time I should because the gun
22:15
is actually just to the right hand side
22:17
as I looked at it there and uh if I'd
22:20
have if I if I'd have spent a bit more
22:22
time looking around I would have seen it
22:24
but um hey that's the way it goes you
22:26
know sometimes you you get things and
22:28
sometimes you don't get things but now
22:31
this looks suspiciously like a prop
22:32
shaft in front of me i'm not 100%
22:34
certain whether it is or not and as you
22:37
can see I don't really spend the time to
22:38
to have a good look at it you'd imagine
22:40
if it was a prop shaft there'd be a prop
22:42
on the end of it it doesn't seem to be
22:44
so maybe it got trolled off maybe it
22:46
isn't the prop shaft not 100% certain
22:48
what you can say though is that there is
22:50
a what looks suspiciously like a big
22:51
anchor just down there so that I guess
22:54
ties in nicely with what you'd expect at
22:56
the stern once again I'm not really
22:58
taking the time to have a good look at
22:59
it because this is this is the end of my
23:04
um I need to get up to the surface so
23:07
this is me coming back to the shop which
23:09
as you recall was in the number four
23:11
hold right at the stern of the ship so
23:14
the good thing is I've been all along
23:16
the ship i now have a really good feel
23:18
for it i know what I would do if I was
23:21
going to come back and indeed I do come
23:22
back and and I know where where I'm
23:24
going to prioritize and there in fact
23:25
that's that's Rick so um you know we've
23:28
stuck together we're both um you know
23:31
thinking along the same lines and we're
23:33
both uh we've both done our dives and
23:35
we're both going to going to head up so
23:37
it's actually been a brilliant dive we
23:40
don't know how brilliant it is yet
23:42
because we haven't we've got to wait six
23:44
months until we identify it but it's
23:47
just we came out this dive absolutely
23:50
buzzing because the the conditions were
23:52
so good the fact there was so much down
23:55
here to see and and you've kind of seen
23:56
that already and I mean you can see just
23:58
looking down here you can see the decks
24:00
are intact which is which once again is
24:02
really unusual oh there's that that
24:03
nasty net that I uh we saw on the way
24:06
down i've been carrying that um uh bag
24:09
with me the whole way down the whole way
24:10
along i don't know why must have must
24:12
have fallen off at some point or
24:14
something like that or um anyway I've
24:16
got it with me i think I'm probably
24:17
going to clip it away at some point so
24:20
there's me recovering my strobe clipping
24:22
it back on and me heading back up the
24:25
shot line you can see above me there you
24:27
just see how lovely and blue and light
24:28
it is so that's always really nice when
24:30
you're going up it does however as you
24:32
can see there muck around with the white
24:33
balance on the power lens um which is
24:36
which irritated me at the beginning of
24:38
the dive and is still irritating me now
24:40
but um heyi ho there you go nothing I
24:42
can do about it now just one of those
24:46
future make sure you've got the parallel
24:48
lens white balance settings done
24:51
correctly otherwise you end up with uh
24:53
orange uh you know stuff everywhere
24:55
which is just looks rubbish so you've
24:59
seen me there i am changing my set point
25:02
that's me doing my set point on my uh
25:04
CCR controller i'm putting up to 1.5
25:07
it's a bit ahead of where I sometimes do
25:08
it so I must be needing to get out the
25:13
water a little bit quicker than perhaps
25:15
um I sometimes do and there you go
25:17
there's there's my other one uh and you
25:19
can see me changing the set point on
25:21
that one you can see I've got about 114
25:23
minutes TTS so just under two hours
25:29
dec so this doesn't often get captured
25:33
by my uh paral lens but you can see
25:36
there really clearly me changing the uh
25:38
the high set point on the uh sheer water
25:41
to reflect what I've just done on my uh
25:44
on my inspiration controller so it's
25:46
reflecting what I'm absolute actually
25:48
breathing i'm doing this as I'm
25:49
ascending as you as you can see there
25:51
rick is somewhere around me but but I'm
25:53
not particularly looking at him and the
25:56
next item on the agenda is going to be
25:58
the lazy shot which is coming along very
26:02
soon I'm sure and as soon as I'm past
26:04
that I'm going to show you my
26:06
decompression profile and I'm going to
26:08
talk a little bit about the gases and
26:10
stuff that I use you can see Rick he's
26:11
he's just below me there um basking in a
26:14
glow of an orange laser beam and in fact
26:17
right on Q there is the lazy shot two
26:19
tags on it one of them's mine one of
26:21
them is Rick's and that's a weight for
26:24
keeping the lazy shot down i'm going to
26:26
turn my torch off eventually get rid of
26:27
the orange light so the only one you can
26:29
see now are the ones that are attached
26:31
to my scooter um and I'll I'm going to
26:35
I've had enough of them so I'm going to
26:37
uh switch now to my deco profile so
26:40
people always like me to talk about
26:41
gases and depths and dive plans and all
26:44
those kind of things so this is the dive
26:46
profile for the dive that I've just done
26:49
you can see the big spike there that I'm
26:50
just on that's the top of the bow and I
26:53
think shows how much the wreck stands
26:55
above the seabed that one there I think
26:57
is on top of the engine and then
26:59
obviously you can see me kind of coming
27:00
back up you can see all the normal deco
27:02
uh stops that's probably the lazy shot
27:04
there and then you can see the rest of
27:06
the uh the dive profile i did this dive
27:09
on 1265 helium as as a dilluent which is
27:14
I think a pretty good gas for this kind
27:16
of depth that gives you equivalent
27:17
narcotic depth of about 24 m which means
27:20
you got a relatively clear head and the
27:22
gas density at 82 m which I don't think
27:27
5.545 rather grams per liter which is
27:31
within um you know the the kind of
27:34
recommended limits of uh 5.2 is best and
27:38
6.3 or whatever it is is the one that
27:41
they recommend you don't exceed so you
27:43
know overall pretty good gases and you
27:45
can see their total run time of uh just
27:48
over 2 and 1/2 hours so and and I think
27:51
it even did a couple of extra minutes at
27:52
the end there for um for the wife and
27:54
kids so overall I think it was 1265 is
27:59
quite a nice gas and it works well for
28:01
this kind of depth of diving and you can
28:03
see there it's uh you know quite a
28:05
reasonable profile as with always with
28:08
any sea diving profile there's always
28:09
going to be a few ups and downs and bits
28:11
and pieces but overall nice dive profile
28:14
nice dive and always very pleased to
28:17
find our chariot when we arrive on the
28:19
surface this was diving off Seeker
28:21
within deep today's skipper was Hugo who
28:24
you can see on there he came down with
28:26
us to New and we're also really
28:28
fortunate to have Honey as our crew on
28:30
board the boat so I hope you've enjoyed
28:33
my dive i hope you've enjoyed the
28:36
fascinating story about the Pyia as
28:38
always please uh feel free to hit the
28:41
like button feel free to subscribe and
28:44
turn on your notifications and I love
28:46
your comments so please leave me
28:49
something to read okay thank you very