The New Image of Pacific Northwest Diving
Posted By Zachary Johnson on 1 June 2000
Diving is a challenge for the body, the mind and the spirit. The formidable task of exploring the underwater world lead divers to some of the most exotic locations throughout the waters of our planet, where encounters that inspire the imagination flourish with brilliant colors and limitless adventures. Delving under the waters of the Pacific Northwest in North America manifests that challenge and delights divers in ways that both personally reward individuals and add distinction to the community of diving.
It was not so long ago that diving in the cold waters of the Pacific Northwest conjured the image of 48-degree water finding it's way into tight fitting wetsuits, where it would trickle down the spine in agonizing discomfort. Heavy lead-cast weights would dig into hipbones, as divers thrashed along for a hundred-yard surface swim against a current. After a 35-minute dive of poor visibility, hands and feet would be so cold that one could barley drag oneself onto the sandy and muddy beach for an uncomfortable surface interval before doing it all over again.
Today, the Pacific Northwest offers some of the most enjoyable and spectacular diving in the world. Advances in gear technologies have addressed and overcome literally every difficulty in local diving. Drysuits live up to their name by keeping divers dry, thus virtually warm and definitely comfortable. New fin designs have been developed to help divers maneuver in currents with greater agility and strength. Buoyancy control devices have evolved with more durable materials to provide greater lift, and many BCDs employ integrated weight systems that use palpable lead shot weights to increase comfort for divers and safety for drysuit users. Regulators and diving computers have advanced to account for cold water and exertion of diving in currents. Underwater lights now possess more powerful beams to increase visibility. Even dive education has matured to offer focused training on local diving environments.
"I had never even considered diving in the Pacific Northwest until I discovered how much advances in equipment could protect me from the cold waters, strong currents and less than crystal clear visibility" realizes Jennifer Rose, a strictly tropical water diver, now considering the a dive trip to Puget Sound in Washington State, USA.
As gear technology has advanced, expectations for local diver responsibilities have also increased. Divers from the Pacific Northwest are active promoters of protecting the underwater environment, both for their own enjoyment and the enjoyment of future divers. Visually rewarding underwater parks are abundant with marine life, and a healthy diving community promotes the protection of the life below the surface through exceptionally effective training and environmental education.
Since the introduction of chartered boat dives, diving in the Pacific Northwest is no longer limited to hauling gear down and up muddy banks, long surface swims fighting currents, inaccessible dive sites, or cold surface intervals. Today, there are daily charter services, live-aboards and even bed-and-breakfast dive operators. Because divers of the Pacific Northwest are generally self-sufficient individuals, the buzzword for these charter services has evolved into "details." Comfort, safety and good diving details are essential for a successful dive charter service and the Pacific Northwest has developed some excellent operators. Dive boat charters offer the extra details and service that turn diving in the Pacific Northwest into a wonderful experience. Bowls of hot soup during surface intervals, and exceptionally attentive Divemasters help to create an atmosphere of enjoyment and good-humor.







