>The fact is that there are many wrecks out there which have over the >years completely disintegrated and are now buried under tons of sand. The voice of sanity in an insane world ( um . . list ). I love to dive wrecks, and do so about once a week. I dive the Dominator off Palos Verdes, CA on a regular basis. Ran hard aground in the 1960's, she is a big Victory class freighter, one of thousands rotting away all over the world. Hardcore dive in heavy surf, very shallow dive, 25 feet or less, it looks kinda like a junkyard filled with sharp metal, and the surge is insane. Very few wreck divers would ever want to dive this wreck, recreational divers never would try it. I dig up and recover a four inch brass valve, take it home, clean it and it's now a beautiful lamp. It is a prized posession and a memory of one of my favorite dive sites. Educate me please, where is the harm in this ? I dive many small wrecks, sailboats and powerboats that have sunk over the last twenty years in the Southern California area. These Macgregors and Baylinders and Searays litter the ocean flor all over the world. Cheap production line fiberglass boats. These are wrecks that no one dives because I and my dive buds are the ones that found them. I find and recover everything from winches, masts and anchors, which I sell, to things like cylinders, dive lights and Trader Joes' Mango Chutney Salsa and Calloway Chardonnay. These thing I keep for myself. I make a little money, and now have more dive lights that the Pelican factory. I have more craftsman tools recovered from these wreck that all the mechanics at the Indy 500. I love this stuff. Educate me please, where is the harm in this ? I dive the wreck of the Diosa Del Mar off Shiprock, Catalina Island. Way down deep I recover the 180 pound rudder and rudder shaft. Deeper than most divers care to dive. After five dives I extract it from the reef's nook and cranny that it was wedged in and lift it. I restored it and it's now a booth display when I do the trade shows, like SCUBA '98. I am so proud of that piece, and what a great way to show divers and non-divers how precious our maritime history is, even with just this piece of junk. Educate me please, where is the harm in this ? Big 18th century anchor, found in the middle of no where in a bay of sand, now my mailbox. Big welding cylinder from the Valiant, found inside the engine room, now an umbrella stand. Four feet of 2" brass steam pipe from the destroyer escort Butler, from deep inside her, now a beautiful coat rack. I could go on, and on. But you all get the picture. These are all wrecks of ZERO archeological value, all that very few people dive ( except for the Valiant ), and all the items I recover I have put to my own use, HOWEVER I SEE FIT. And everything recovered would never have been found, or was in the process of rotting away in the acidic bath of the oceans that we love to dive in. PS to Clay B. and Steve H. and Steve V., got a fix on an old fishing boat turned into a barge off Redondo Beach - blend this Saturday and RAPE this Sunday ?? Educate me please, where is the harm in this ? Kevin "Don't forget your history, Know your destiny, In the abundance of water, The fool is thirsty." Robert Nesta Marley [\] | | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ o o o o o o _____ o o (_/\_) o o o =( )= oo Kevin Rottner Southern California SCUBA -- Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'. Send subscribe/unsubscribe requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.
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