Actually, around this time of year 16 hours of light at night is nearly as long as it is dark, about 15 hours by the end of the month.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13899509#post13899509 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by WaterKeeper
Alan,
It is very nice for a fuge and should do the job admirably.
Question Bill--Do you need to know how to swim to go SCUBA diving?![]()
I've dived the same site a dozen or so times over the period of a month and the same characters are there. It's like every quarter acre in the sea has its own community and population
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13900429#post13900429 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Paul B
Bill, you mean there people here who don't dive? Why not?
As for the same animals haunting the same place, I am basically a lobster and wreck diver. We have over 200 wrecks aroung Long Island and I have been diving them since the seventees.
There is a place with this lobster which is too large to get caught in a trap and I never took her because she must produce 5,000,000 eggs. Anyway I always used to visit her whenever I dove there and I would spear a flounder for her dinner when ever I could.
That lobster is just off the home owned by Arizona Ice Tea founder and is one of the largest homes on the Sound.
I know I can't explain the behavior of captive animals to non divers but there are many people who dive and I wanted to point out that no matter how healthy our animals are, they are no where like free ocean animals.
Waterkeeper, you don't have to know how to swim to dive, but you do have to know how to sink![]()
I have a boat and all the equipment for at least two divers, whenever you want to go I will show you how to sink.
Yeah, I saw that. It was Paul's boat that was featured.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13900771#post13900771 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Paul B
It may have been, I do get to the Hudson occasionally.
Some trips to the Statue Of Liberty I go across the Harlem River to the Hudson :lol:
I took this this year on the East River which is not really a river and I don't know why we call it that.
The East River as you know is an estuary.
It is salt water that just connects the Long Island Sound to New York Harbor.
All rivers are fresh water.
If we continue to the left on this picture we come to the Statue Of Liberty and on the other side of that is the Hudson. If you go up the Hudson a few miles to the Bronx you can make a right and go up the Harlem River which is just an extension of the East "River" and it empties into the Hudson so that would not be a river either.
I am such a geography guru.
This is the South Street Seaport. To the extreme rleft you can see a sailing ship. When I was young (yes I was young) where you see that sailing ship was the Fulton Fish Market and the fishing boats used to dump the fresh caught fish there on the sidewalk. I used to climb of the up side down live sea turtles and play with the fish.
Then when I got a little older and they kind of moved out the Mob, I helped build the South Street Sea port
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it might of been the east river then because star fish were eating out the eyes of the dead divers who were killed with an arsenic hypodermic.
Isn't the water nearly toxic??
And Paul I'm sorry but I don't dive (except in dumpsters )