adventures


18
Mar 22

Friday dives

And, now, the saddest photo a diver can have.

That’s the last one on my new-to-me SeaLife camera, which has performed well this week. There’s tons of video, most of the good stuff you’ve seen, and many photos to share. Not bad for a used and older digital camera, though I suspect I need to upgrade the battery. My lovely bride, meanwhile, was shooting on our GoPro this week, and she has been putting up some of her highlights on social media. Be sure to check those out.

One gentlemen we dove with had a special SeaLife iPhone case, and the top-of-the-line phone inside. The rig itself cost about $600. So he’s just floating around with two grand in his hands, and that’s too much risk for me. Of course, at one point he swam alongside a ray and his camera was showing the individual muscles on the fish. It was amazing, but I could never forgive myself for spending that much money on a hobby accessory, or for messing it all up. It was impressive, though. But you’ll just have to content yourself here with my 2014-quality imagery.

That’d be a strange thing to feel inferior about, no? Here are the 1080p videos and 13 GB photos I’m taking at 85 feet.

Because you can’t safely dive and then fly in a 24-hour period — more of that chemistry stuff — we had our last two dives of this trip today. (We fly back tomorrow afternoon.) You can see some footage here.

We were supposed to have 20 dives on this vacation. We got in 13, including that excellent add-on night dive.

I ran into a wall in our condo and managed to sprain my wrist. I’m allergic to something in the flower beds or the forest nearby. As we sail away from the shore I get better. When we get back to the beach I start closing up again. My descents and ascents were slow and slightly painful because of all of that. We spent two days in Dallas. But the local food has been good. The diving has been great!

If you go to Cozumel, stay at Residencias Reef. Dive with Scuba Tony. Every diver we met on their boats was a repeat customer, and it’s easy to see why. That repeat customer word-of-mouth means a great deal when you’re talking about something as important as your safety. If we ever go back to Cozumel, we will definitely dive with Scuba Tony again.

But now, sadly, we must return to the regular world. Sort of.

(And I’ll get around to posting photos after the next little adventure, which takes place next week.)


17
Mar 22

Thursday dives

We had four more dives today, our last full day of diving of this abbreviated trip. Cozumel is famous for its drift diving … the currents just take you away, and you don’t even have to do much swimming. In all, the diving has been a wonderful experience.

Now if only my sinuses and ears would cooperate. Maybe they’ll be better tomorrow, when we will, sadly, have our last two dives.


16
Mar 22

Wednesday dives

We got in five dives today — two this morning, two this afternoon and one night dive — equaling my personal best.

Without getting into all the details, the pressure underwater does a few things to the chemistry of the oxygen in your bloodstream. None of it is bad when monitored correctly, and it only presents a short-term cumulative effect, about 24 hours or so. There are tables and computers to monitor all of this, for safety reasons, and you spend a lot of time learning the safety measures before you get your certification. You keep this stuff in mind. Most dive days feature three or four tanks because of that accumulating bottom-time. We added the fifth dive this evening just to make up for part of what we missed. We took all of this into consideration for our dive profiles as we are experienced safety-first divers.

Here are a few of the highlights of our four day-dives.

I didn’t carry the camera on the night dive. Night dives are different experiences. You can only see what’s directly in your flashlight beam, and I didn’t want to juggle that much in the dark. But that was the best night dive I’ve ever experienced. Turtles, octopi, crabs and lobster at every turn.

Four more dives tomorrow!


15
Mar 22

Tuesday dives

We finally had our first dives today. Of course we could not go out this morning, because the universe is fundamentally against the trip in some cosmic way I can’t comprehend.

But this afternoon we got in two dives, two years and three days late, and I finally got to try my new-to-me camera. It’s a little SeaLife I got on ebay. It’s the third most expensive thing I’ve bought there, and you take it under water on purpose. I think I’ll find it captures better video than photos. And we’ll get to the pictures, but how about this video?

Tomorrow we’re getting in five whole dives, which is a full and ambitious day of bottom time.


14
Mar 22

American Airlines is the worst thing in the American airspace

Subtitled: Finally, now finally, on our Spring Break 2020 (And this time we mean it) trip

We are in Mexico today. We are finally in Mexico. Just as of today. Should have been here on Saturday. But the journey to our sojourn was negatively impacted by forces beyond our control. In other words …

TL;DR — American Airlines is a terrible way to travel.

It starts like this. We booked this in 2019. Then Covid. We rescheduled twice, because Covid. We were supposed to fly Delta, as we often do, but they canceled this route because of Covid. So American Airlines became our only option to Cozumel. Months ago, American Airlines rescheduled the first flight out of Indy, to make it even earlier in the morning.

So we woke up at 4 a.m. to arrive at the airport to do airport things and got on our plane which couldn’t leave on time. There was a fuel door that wouldn’t close, you see. The captain pilot must leave the plane, study the problem, Google the panel code, call his mom’s neighbor’s uncle about it, and then request a repair team to come and bolt the panel shut.

Then, and this part is very true, the pilot comes over his comm system and says “Well, that’s done, but this plane has an awful lot of computers, so it’ll take a little time for us to get started and in the air.”

Gentle reader, dear friend, if an airplane pilot ever complains, or speaks aloud in wonder about the amount of electronics on his flying sky tube, disembark the vehicle immediately. This is simply good life advice.

Only, you see, there’s a script the pilot is using now. Sure you can get off the flying sky tube. Reschedule a flight. Who knows how that will go. And if you leave this flying sky tube you’re not getting back on this flying sky tube. Tricky door panels and all that.

So we stay on. We depart (very) late. We arrive in Dallas very late for our connection. And this is where the troubles began.

We landed, and waited and waited and waited for the plane to connect to the airport, because of personnel problems. Meantime, our connecting flight just … left. Left five minutes early, even.

What airline does that?

(Later — Note how that flight departed early and was still delayed in arriving? Should have been a red flag for everyone.)

So now we’re stuck in Dallas with nothing but our luggage and dreams. There are no more flights to Cozumel, on the Saturday of the first week of Spring Break for most of the US. There are flights to Cancun and, after standing in a line for many hours, we are on standby for each of them.

Abandon hope, all ye who enter the purgatory of ineptitude that is American Airlines, and the studied indifference and downright rudeness of their employees at Dallas-Fort Worth.

Also, that sign in the foreground? May as well be hieroglyphics out here in the real world. You wonder how long before some bored maintenance crew takes them all down at this point, and where the last tattered one will be.

We also spent hours on the phone, to no avail..

We finally arrived at a place euphemistically called Customer Service. We went here three times on Saturday, standing in exceedingly longer lines each time, to be told different stories, tall tales, excuses and downright lies. Six hours or more in this line alone, for lies.

It was well-staffed. If you like irony and travelers’ distress. I painted over the very young person standing here just in front of us to demonstrate the time when the eight-station desk, the one featuring hours-long waits with a line stretching beyond eyesight into the distance haze of the airport. It was staffed by exactly one American Airlines “professional.” At max capacity, there were three people working at that desk.

And dear and gentle reader, at this point I have written 651 words on this shambolic experience, giving you only the highest points. The details will be spelled out to the executives at American. (I found a helpful mailing list.) Suffice to say, to you, that you likely haven’t had the displeasure of dealing with customer service of this sort in a long, long time. The business model, on the phone and in the airport, and at every level, seems to be “Get these people out of my line and into someone else’s.” We spent an entire day and night at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport dealing with these miserable people. And they are miserable. They are angry, and they are angry at you. Do not dare inconvenience them with your inconvenience, no matter how polite or flustered. Also, they’re the ones getting paid to be at the airport today.

Finally we got a voucher for a hotel. We had to re-coordinate with our condo people, who have been amazing. We had to cancel dives. (This is a dive trip. You go to dive and do little else. Because of this airline we have lost 45 percent of our dives.)

We spent Sunday doing nothing in exotic Dallas. Spring Break! We did nothing because The Yankee had to go back to the DFW airport on a luggage journey, another quixotic four-hour tale. One of our bags got to Cozumel yesterday.

American Airlines: Where incompetence meets apathy, in the sky!

Hertz canceled our car reservation, another American Airline knock-on effects, so we also spent about four hours on the phone with American Express and Hertz trying to make this right.

Which brings us today, and the Cozumel airport, after we finally arrived two years, and then two-days, late.

The Yankee retrieved the piece of luggage that arrived yesterday without us (I’m impressed we got anything back from these yahoos) while I stood in the Hertz line, because, we were told, time was critical. The people in front of us at the little Hertz desk, no dice. This bodes well. That poor family was irate, but no carros means no cars.

Meant the same for us. The guy starts to explain it to me. I said, “Please stop, and thank you. But you’re going to have to explain it to her,” and about that time my lovely bride came back with our lost luggage and I stood well, well away, over at the Avis desk, where I got one of the last cars they had available. We previously had a week-long Hertz reservation for less than the daily rate of this Avis car, and American Airlines will get that bill, too. (And the two-night Dallas stay, and the three extra Uber rides. And another for missed dives. It’s going to be fun.)

To sum up: American Airlines is terrible, and by 4 p.m. Saturday afternoon Smith’s First Rule of Economics, “Don’t make it hard for me to spend my money with you,” was invoked.

If American Airlines is the only way to get to somewhere I need to be, I’ll go anywhere else but there.

But enough about that, for now.

We’re staying at a place called Residencias Reef. Let us sing their praises.

It is a nice oceanfront place. We rented a one-bedroom condo. The furnishings are fine and it is well appointed. There’s a note on the printer that says you can’t get these cartridges in Mexico, but some are due in from Estados Unidos this month. Had I known, I would have picked some up for them. It seemed necessary after seeing all of the things there. Need Gorilla Glue? Got it. Forget your beach reading? Two shelves worth. Fresh fruit? At the ready. Sun block? Bug spray? Right over here. Bikes? Paddles for the paddle boards? Of course. Dry bags? You bet.

They’ve been beyond patient and kind to us. As we’ve noted, this is our Spring Break 2020 trip. We postponed it at the 11th hour that because of the rapidly deteriorating Covid situation, wondering “Will they even let us back in the country at the end of the week?” (The next week the mercurial federal government supposedly shut the door to Europe and Canada, after all. And there was something about a wall?) The condo owners were very understanding in 2020. We were ready to make this trip last year, but then a Covid spike hit. They kindly let us postpone once more. But this, they said, was the last time.

It was more than you could ask for, really.

And then we had to write them Saturday and say “We’ll be there Monday, because American Airlines is terrible at their job.”

Residencias Reef has been great. If we come to Cozumel in the future, or steer anyone else here, it will always be with them in mind.

Also, they have two heated pools.

And we waded into the ocean, which was chilly.

Tomorrow, we dive!