| WHY'D THEY DO THAT? Looking at Life's Ups & Downs By Robin Battley We all know life has its ups and downs. From a diver's perspective, that includes examining area tides and currents before jumping in over your head, so to speak. Oh sure, you regularly dive at sites where you believe neither tide nor current are a major factor, right? In your "x" years (fill in the appropriate number) of diving experience, you've neither checked a tide table nor considered prevailing weather conditions, and all your dives have all been greator mostly? Well, consider the following questions. Have you ever arrived at a dive site and discovered the visibility to be substantially reduced for no apparent reason? Have you ever jumped off the dive boat to discover a mysterious surface current you never encountered before? These situations can be predicted if you take a little time to study tides and currents.
Whether using government publications or Internet calculations, a number of other factors can cause significant changes in the water environment around you. Be observant of strong or prolonged winds in your area, abrupt changes in barometric pressure, or even prolonged periods or high or low pressure. Any one of thesemeteorological effects can cause fluctuations in water levels or the speed and direction of a current. Your continued practice of "reading the water" will alert you to the existence of any of the above factors that cannot be forecast.
And remember, the "same old place" is not always the same from day to day as a result of changing weather and water levels. Here's an example. Whytecliff Park, a local BC diver training site will experience an extreme range of almost 16 feet on July 2nd this year. It's a Sunday on the long weekend in the middle of the summer, and I would expect many divers in the area that day. How many of them will be prepared for the silty conditions and surface currents caused by an incoming tide of an extra 2.5 feet every hour all through the afternoon? Do I have a crystal ball? No, just a copy of the local Canadian Tide and Current Tables and a familiarity with the dive site. It's a wonderful dive site with lots of marine life to offer the new and the experienced diver alike but it is certainly not my choice on Sunday afternoon, July 2nd. Another time will suit much better. |