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From: "Thom Hadfield" <thom.hadfield@ho*.co*>
To: <techdiver@aquanaut.com>, "Richard" <rkelch@su*.eb*.ne*>
Subject: Re: On high current diving
Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2001 23:29:45 -0400
I usually cross the border once a week from sept. through May. I have more
trouble comming back into the states than I do leaving them. The canuks have
always been more than friendly to me. Well unless you are refering to the
quebeckers. But then again they want to be thier only country anyways but
they are to dependant on the canadian government to be able to do so. So say
Ya to our northern Neighbors eh!!!!! Well mostly northern I go to school in
the UP of michigan and I think I am farther north than most of the
population in Ontario but oh well



----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard" <rkelch@su*.eb*.ne*>
To: "Jim Cobb" <cobber@ci*.co*>; "Steve Schultz"
<se2schul@st*.ma*.uw*.ca*>; "Duane Liptak Jr."
<d.liptak.jr@wo*.at*.ne*>
Cc: <techdiver@aquanaut.com>; "Thom Hadfield" <thom.hadfield@ho*.co*>
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 11:27 PM
Subject: RE: On high current diving


> And with an attitude like this, you wonder why the term ignorant is so
often
> associated immediately with the word American up here. Your worldly
demeanor
> is mind-bending, it is a foreign country after all.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jim Cobb [mailto:cobber@ci*.co*]
> Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 1:34 PM
> To: Steve Schultz; Duane Liptak Jr.
> Cc: techdiver@aquanaut.com; Thom Hadfield
> Subject: Re: On high current diving
>
>
> For those of you who what to actually want to do this here are a couple of
> Canadian travel tips:
>
> 1. If you have anything on "the record" right down to a speeding ticket
> prepare to enter a nice, bare white room to get "debriefed" by the
friendly
> Canadian Customs officers. To ease this situation makes sure that you say
> that the reason for your visit is "to spend lots of American Dollars" then
> they will generally let you in anyway. When leaving the country prepare to
> have a repeat of this friendly "welcome wagon" performance except it may
> last 4 or 5 hours and your auto may get confiscated if they find anything
> even the slightest funny about it, say a recent paint job, expired county
> sticker, or anything else of that nature. To ease this situation make sure
> you mention that "Boy did I spend a large amount of American Dollars in
your
> beautiful country."
>
> 2. Once in the country make it clear to everybody you deal with that you
> have plenty of American dollars to spend and that you are specifically in
> Canada to spend this money. This way you won't get cursed at, spat upon or
> worse to by the locals.
>
> 3. Count your change when you get it back, scrutinise your bills for
various
> "unexpected" taxes or fees. But if you find an error and they actually
give
> you your money back, make sure your leave the place as soon as possible
and
> NEVER go back. As a matter of fact it's a good idea to always park around
> the corner so they don't see what kind of car you are driving. If they do
> you may find you will have problems getting back into the US of A, if you
> know what I mean.
>
> 4. Don't bother asking directions from anyone, not even a policeman. But
if
> you have to ask follow the direction exactly the opposite as they were
given
> if you want any hope at all of finding what you are looking for. It
> sometimes helps if you make it clear that you want to spend American
Dollars
> at the location you are looking for, but only if the person you are asking
> is related to or is owed money by the place you are trying to find.
>
> But most of all, have a great time and bring plenty of good American
> Dollars. And enjoy the smile and friendly nod you get as you are handing
> cash to a Canadian as it will be the only one you get.
>
>    Jim
>
>  -------------------------------------------------------------------
>  Learn About Trimix at http://www.cisatlantic.com/trimix/
>
> > From: Steve Schultz <se2schul@st*.ma*.uw*.ca*>
> > Date: Wed, 1 Aug 2001 22:38:39 -0400 (EDT)
> > To: "Duane Liptak Jr." <d.liptak.jr@wo*.at*.ne*>
> > Cc: techdiver@aquanaut.com, Jim Cobb <cobber@ci*.co*>, Thom
> Hadfield
> > <thom.hadfield@ho*.co*>
> > Subject: Re: On high current diving
> >
> >
> >
> > This is what you crazy Americans need to do :-)
> >
> > 1) Take out a map of North America
> > 2) Locate a country called Canada (it's the little country just North of
> > the USA ;-) )
> > 3) Look for about 5 big blue blobs and a long thick blue line on the
map.
> > They are right on the Canada-US border.
> >
> > You have now found the Great Lakes and St Lawrence Seaway.
> >
> > You have big, deep, cold lakes with tons of wrecks.  These lakes get
very
> > bad storms on them, hence the wrecks.  It is tough diving, but different
> > than ocean diving.  Not tougher.  Not easier.  Different.
> >
> > The St Lawrence is a monster river with wrecks 250' deep.  I've heard
that
> > it goes down to ~500', but I really don't know.
> >
> > I've also done the St Clair River when I had a GF that lived there.   I
> > didn't dive it during the *good* season.  I did my dives in March-Apr.
> > The vis was 4 ft, the dives were shallow, I couldn't see much of any of
> > the wrecks, none of the locals were diving, and there was a ripping
> > current.  It wasn't a 10 kn current (or whatever someone suggested).
I'd
> > really like to do the dives again with a little more vis.
> >
> > Steve (the occasional ocean diver)
> >
> >
> > On Wed, 1 Aug 2001, Duane Liptak Jr. wrote:
> >
> >> Thom & Cobber,
> >>
> >> While I acknowledge the sea-trials of boat diving, I'm having trouble
> >> feeling "manly appreciation" for ocean OR lake divers.  Try driving to
> the
> >> middle of nowhere on dirt roads, throwing a canoe in a mud choked
stream,
> >> and then proceeding to fill it with 104's, stages, and deco bottles.
> Hope
> >> rednecks don't strip truck.  Paddle and/or drag (mostly drag(through
> >> thigh-deep mud)) said canoe for 2 hours upstream to spring run.  Drag
> canoe
> >> up log-jammed spring run.  Arrive at spring basin (using the term
> loosely).
> >> Finally get to paddle (100 ft).  Watch very carefully for "floating
logs
> >> that move".  Don drysuits while being eaten alive by west nile carrying
> >> mosquitos and downing malaria medication.   Don condom cath in record
> time
> >> to avoid having a "skeeter on yer peter".   Don bottles and fins while
> >> standing in knee deep muck.  (Fins slide on easier though)  Grope
around
> in
> >> 4' vis for cave entrance.  Find colder water and 10' vis.  Yahoo.  Tie
> into
> >> main line laid circa 1975.  Swim for-frigging-ever.  Wonder why floor
is
> >> covered with thousands of square feet of orange marshmallow fluff
looking
> >> stuff. Swear to boost FHe for next dive to see if this is a
> hallucination.
> >> Contemplate updating tetanus booster as soon as dive is over.   Find
> going
> >> tunnel, dump reel.  Vis had increased to 40 ft on way in.  Vis is now
> zero
> >> on the way out due to ceiling perc because we are the first idiots to
> bother
> >> coming here since the dawn of time.  Survey by Braille.  Deco out in 4'
> vis
> >> basin.  Get bumped by 4' long catfish, have heart attack thinking it is
> an
> >> alligator.  Wait 1/2 hour for bubbles to dissipate.  Load canoe,
weakened
> by
> >> blood loss.  (Damn mosquitos were waiting for us)  Drag/paddle back.
> Fight
> >> off rednecks at truck who insist dive partner has "a real perrty
mouth".
> >> Begin preparations for dive 2 and hope Tally clears soon, as the banjo
> music
> >> fades in the distance.
> >> The above events are a true (mostly) account (exaggeration) of a
typical
> >> (as far as you know) dive in Xxxxxx county, XX (can't tell).  The names
> of
> >> the rednecks have been changed to protect the inbred.
> >>
> >> Keeping it light,
> >> Duane  ;-)
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> ...
> >>
> >> --
> >> Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'.
> >> Send subscribe/unsubscribe requests to
`techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
> --
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>

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