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Welcome to Mid Herts Divers!

Here you'll find information about the club, what we do and where we meet. You'll also find a repository of interesting and useful scuba-diving information.

We welcome both experienced divers from any affiliation as well as anyone interested in learning.

Training is performed by Nationally Qualified Instructors in a safe and structured manner. Theory lessons are conducted in a classroom environment, followed by pool sessions in our indoor swimming pool. Open water lessons are conducted at both inland lakes, and coastal locations.

Membership of the branch includes both use of branch-owned scuba kit during training and the indoor swimming pool.

We meet every Wednesday evening at Monks Walk School, Knightsfield, Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire. AL8 7NL between 7.30pm-9.30pm.

Mid Herts divers (also known as Mid Herts Sub-Aqua Club) are branch #1784 of the British Sub Aqua Club (BSAC), the world's biggest diving club
 
Latest events

 Latest articles

 
Equipment Servicing at SDS Watersports
Submitted on 20-Nov-2008 10:12:23 by Paul Rosendale. Updated on 20-Nov-2008 10:13:57

To those that are not aware..............

Mid Herts club members qualify for 10% discount at SDS Watersports on the following:

- Regulator servicing, repairs and upgrades

- BCD servicing and repairs

- Cylinder inspections, repairs and O2 cleaning

NOW is an ideal time to submit your equipment for servicing, either ready for the forthcoming winter season or to beat the spring time rush of divers getting back into the water.

SDS Watersports in Sheffield have been awarded the prestigious “Dive Retailer of the Year” an incredible 7 times by readers of “Diver” magazine.

Please see Paul R if you wish to take advantage of this offer or for further details.


 
Mid Herts Divers deliver Bert to his new home
Submitted on 17-Nov-2008 10:22:50 by Adrian Colegate. Updated on 18-Nov-2008 10:31:11

On Sunday 16th November, a crack team of hardened British divers took Bert, the Mid Herts Divers gnome to his new home at the National Diving and Activity Centre, Chepstow.

Although the weather and diving conditions seemed set to suspend operations, following a sustaining lunch of chips and curry, the hardy team led by Pete "Pistol" Hodkins successfully deployed Bert to his new watery home.

During the operation, two of the hardened divers carried out a reconsissance mission to an unexplored and classified area of the site whilst the other two provided sniper cover from the 27m shelf. Mission failure however, was narrowly averted when one of the snipers lost composure and was compelled to ride a discarded motorcycle.


The team: Left to right: Adrian "Evil Knievel" Colegate,
Pete "Pistol" Hodkin with Bert the gnome,
"Deco" Dawn, and Paul "Debrief" Rosendale ;-)

The National Diving and Activity Centre is the UK's deepest inland dive site with a maximum depth of 75 metres. It has numerous attractions including aeroplanes, helicopters, cars, lots of swim-throughs, training platforms and a gnome garden.

Onsite is a dive shop, a food wagon (with a surprising variety of hot food) and a high-capacity filling station. The site also provides trolleys, raised kitting-up areas, mask-washing buckets and transport to and from the quarry’s floating pontoons.

A great day was had by all and a return weekend trip is pencilled in for the 28th/29th march 2009.

Thanks must go to Pete for driving and Tony for the loan of the vehicle.


 
**2009 Club Holiday to Malta & Gozo**
Submitted on 07-Nov-2008 18:21:03 by Paul Rosendale. Updated on 18-Nov-2008 10:30:48 by Adrian Colegate

HOT NEWS - It is planned to organise the 2009 club holiday to Malta and Gozo!!

When? - Wednesday 16th - Wed 23rd September 

Where? - Staying in the St Paul's Bay area, with easy access to sites in Malta, Gozo and Comino

Who? - Open to all club members and families (see minimum diving qualification below)

Diving? - 6 full days independent diving at the best shore diving sites in Malta and Gozo. Sites will include wrecks, reefs, walls, caverns, caves and "Blue Holes"........ 

Qualification? - Minimum of BSAC Sports Diver / PADI Advanced Open Water (regulated by Maltese law)

How Much (per person)? - Flights £115, B&B Hotel £120 or Half Board Hotel £150, Car Hire £60, Cylinder Hire with unlimited fills £60, plus holiday spending money.

Interested? - See Paul for further details

Dive sites will include:

Cirkewwa Reef, P29 wreck, Rozi wreck, Anchor Bay, Blue Grotto, Um El Faroud wreck, HMS Maori wreck, Blue hole, Inland sea, Cominoland wreck, Karwela wreck, Ghar Lapsi caves...........

 


 
New Series on BBC2 - "Oceans"
Submitted on 09-Nov-2008 13:26:32 by Paul Rosendale. Updated on 18-Nov-2008 13:03:55 by Adrian Colegate

Philippe Cousteau free diving with sperm whales by BBC & Ian KellettA new 8 part series called "Oceans" starts on Wednesday 13th November. A Series revealing the hidden stories of the deep as a team of four marine experts voyage across the globe to explore our planet's last true wilderness - its oceans.

Over a year, Paul Rose, Philippe Cousteau Jr, Dr Lucy Blue and Tooni Mahto explore how a unique ocean paradise, home to the greatest variety of whales and dolphins in the world, is under threat. They dive stormy seas to investigate how a giant predator, the cannibalistic Humboldt squid, is invading this sea, and search for the threatened hammerhead shark.

In an extraordinary encounter, the team carry out pioneering science on one of the largest carnivores on earth: the 20-metre-long sperm whale. They explore a sunken ship with a tragic human story, and search for evidence that the Sea of Cortez is still growing, they dive along part of the San Andreas fault line. The dive is above waters heated to near-boiling point by the furnace of the inner Earth.

The series can be seen on Wednesdays on BBC2 at 8pm and on Saturdays on BBC-HD at 5pm.

Set your Sky Plus/Sky HD/DVD recorder NOW!!

More information can be found here http://www.bbc.co.uk/oceans
 
Digital Photography Tutorial 1 - Colour correcting underwater images
Submitted on 14-Nov-2008 15:35:30 by Adrian Colegate. Updated on 14-Nov-2008 18:08:32

Everyone who takes digital photos without a powerful strobe or a red filter will have taken shots that look like the 1st image on the right. 

This is the effect of light travelling through water. In fresh water, light generally loses most of it’s red and some blue leaving images greenish. In salt water, light loses most of it’s red and some green, resulting in images that look very blue.

 

Most computer users familiar with image processing software will immediately reach for the “levels” feature in their favourite application (this article refers to Adobe Photoshop). However, when you attempt to pull the level sliders, something strange happens - you get an image that looks like the 2nd image. This is because the original image contains little or no “red” data and what's there has had it’s levels increased to cover the image’s whole dynamic range.

 

Even if you manually adjust the level sliders yourself, you can at best only achieve results like the 3rd image. There’s just not enough “information” in the picture to create a properly colour-balanced image.

 

So what do you do? Well you can manufacture the missing “red” data from the luminosity (brightness) data of the other 2 channels (green and blue). This will result in an simage similar to the last one on the right.

 

The process is as follows:

  1. Load your image into any version of Adobe Photoshop.

  2. Create 3 duplicate layers of the original photo (Layer > Duplicate Layer > OK)

  3. Make the middle duplicate layer active (second one down in the ‘Layers’ palette) by single clicking on it in the ‘Layers’ palette (palette with Layers-Channels- Paths)

  4. Fill that layer with 50% grey (Edit > Fill > 50% Gray, 100% opacity, normal)

  5. Make the top duplicate layer active by single clicking on it in the ‘Layers’ palette. Change that layers blending mode to ‘Luminosity’ (Layer > Layer Style > Blending Options > Blend Mode > Luminosity) Merge that layer down into the middle grey layer. (Layer > Merge Down). You now have a B&W image of your original photo in this layer.

  6. Create a new fill layer above this B&W image (Layer > New Fill Layer > Solid Colour). make sure ‘Group with Previous Layer’ is ticked. Fill this layer with red (R: 255, G: 0, B: 0). Change this layer’s blending mode to ‘Multiply’ (Layer > Layer Style > Blending Options > Blend Mode > Multiply) and merge it down into the previous layer (the B&W image) (Layer > Merge Down). You’ve now have a red photo.

  7. Change the blending mode of the red photo to ‘Screen’ (Layer > Layer Style > Blending Options > Blend Mode > Screen) and merge it down into the first duplicate layer (Layer > Merge Down). You’ve now got your original image with a set of artificially created red data.

  8. Run Auto-Levels (Image > Adjustments > Auto Levels). See how you like the results. If not, undo them (Edit > Undo Auto Levels) and adjust the ‘Levels’, ‘Contrast’ and ‘Brightness’ manually.

  9. Make adjustments with the Hue/Saturation (Image > Adjust > Hue/Saturation) and Colour Balance (Image > Adjust > Colour Balance) until you get the desired effect.

  10. Adjust the sharpness (Filter > Sharpen > Unsharp Mask). A window will open with an automatic percentage adjustment shown. Increase or decrease the adjustment if you’re not satisfied with the results.

  11. When you’re finished, flatten the layers (Layer > Flatten Image), re-size the image to your requirements and save the photo as a new file. Never overwrite your original photo as you may want to do something else with it in the future.

Top Tip

You can automate this process by creating a Photoshop "Action" which can be stored in a library of requently used operations.

 

Running an action on a photo takes a fraction of the time compared to performing the steps manually.

 


Original image - very blue with virtually no red data


Poor results after using auto "per channel" levels


Best attempt to manually adjust "per channel" levels. Still no real improvement


Much better results after adding artifical red data


 
News from DiverMagazine.co.uk

EU donates research vessel
A ?2million marine research vessel has been donated by the EU to scientists working in the Egyptian Red Sea.

Missing diver's body found
The body of a British diver who went missing for nearly two weeks has been found inside a wreck in Malta.

Seychelles wreck sunk
A wreck has been purposely sunk off the Seychelles as an artificial reef for divers.

Missing British diver in Malta feared dead
A British diver who went missing during a wreck dive off Malta is feared dead.

BSAC in Greece agreement
BSAC has teamed up with a regional tourist development organisation to launch the BSAC diver training system in Greece.

David Lloyd
DIVE's former art director David Lloyd reports on his special dolphin encounter near the wreck of the Giannis D in the northern Red Sea .

Come for the wrecks, stay for the dolphins
The resident dolphins at Abu Nuhas have a habit of turning good dives into great dives. David Lloyd recounts an enthralling dive in the company of the cetacean with the perma-smile

MONTY: Wonders of the ocean
We are finally in the full flush of summer here in northwest Scotland; most days are pretty damn good.

BITE BACK - Palawan success
Politicians are a great deal better at talking about environmental solutions than implementing them.

Miniature Ascent Rate Alarm
The Miniature Ascent Rate Alarm (MARA) is designed to make diving safer by monitoring your ascent rate and reducing the risk of decompression sickness.

 News from ScubaHerald.com

Body of 25-year-old Pace diver found
According to the Marion County Florida Sheriff's Office, the body of Sean Patrick Spiegel, 25 of Pace, who went missing during a dive with friends about 1:30 a.m. Saturday, was found after two days of searching by about a dozen divers, including members of the Marion County Sheriff's Office Dive ...

who will be the next Cousteau?
We all know about Jacques Cousteau, and since then it seems that a lot of people want to be the New Cousteau, the new king of the seas, the new leader of the underwater world... When diver Jacques Cousteau died, he left behind a legacy of ocean exploration. But as his ...

ScubaHerald Gets Political


New Novel Spins Tale of Terrorism, International Intrigue and Suspense
CARLE PLACE, N.Y.- Fireworks (now available through AuthorHouse) by Paul J. Mila, features the return of SCUBA divers Terry Hunter and her husband, ex-NYPD detective Joe Manetta, in their third adventure, battling Al Qaeda terrorists in, and under, New York’s waters. The story was inspired by the author’s ...

Death of Moby Dives scuba instructor brings sadness to a community.
Malta. Valerie Bellini's vacant eyes take in the living room of her home in Xlendi, which was the soul of her family before her husband failed to return from a dive a month ago. "I'll be selling everything and returning to France. I have nothing keeping me here now and I ...

Say Hello to Electronic Dive Buddy
Let's face it, there are many BAD divers out there. Not bad as evil, but BAS as poor divers, with horrible buoyancy skills. Well, their time is close, thanks to a wicked kiwi idea : Dive Buddy. Anatoly Kudryashov and Jenny Xu from the Department of Mechanical Engineering’s Mechatronics Engineering specialisation ...

This is why we dive
We could write a long article about this photo... but sometimes, a scuba photo is better than 1000 underwater words. This is why we dive!

New Caledonia Scuba Diving Accident
A 48-year-old male Japanese tourist who died on Tuesday in New Caledonia following a severe diving accident has been identified as a Matsumoto Hiroaki from Kobe, local radio reports. Meanwhile, an inquiry has been launched in order to determine the circumstances surrounding what has been described as a rare diving accident. Several ...

Dude: where is my diving boat?
New Zealand: Two scuba divers had to swim up to three hours after their boat sank near Howe Point, in the Bay of Islands.The two men went diving at 1.45pm but when they failed to return at 10.30, one of the men's partners rang the Coastguard.Duty officer Katherine Andrews said ...

Valerie Taylor: 70 years and still playing with Sharks
If you think you are to old to dive with sharks, think again: for many, retirement means daytime chat shows on the telly and a slowing of the pace of life. But it is fair to say Ron and Valerie Taylor are not your average OAPs as they celebrate more than ...

 News from ScubaTravel.co.uk

Computers decide when to stop searches at sea
Researchers at Portsmouth University and the US Coast Guard are working together to develop a computer model that will predict how long someone will survive when lost at sea. The Search and Rescue Survival Model has been designed to take the pressure off rescuers making difficult decisions about when a search and rescue mission should be stopped.

Why a speeding shark is like a golf ball
Shortfin mako sharks can shoot through the ocean at up to 50 miles per hour (80 kilometres an hour). Now a trick that helps them to reach such speeds has been discovered - the sharks can raise their scales to create tiny wells across the surface of their skin, reducing drag like the dimples on a golf ball. Tiny vortices or whirlpools formed within the cavities between the scales. These vortices form a kind of "buffer layer" between the skin's surface and the fast moving fluid, preventing a turbulent wake from forming behind the shark.

Japan's whaling fleet sets out for Antarctic
The main ship in Japan's whaling fleet set out for the Antarctic on Monday for its first hunt in the region since limping home with just over half its planned catch in April following clashes with militant anti-whaling activists, environmentalist group Greenpeace said.

Sea snakes drink only freshwater
It has been the long-standing dogma that the roughly 60 species of venomous sea snakes worldwide satisfy their drinking needs by drinking seawater, with internal salt glands filtering and excreting the salt. Experiments published this month with three species of captive sea kraits captured near Taiwan, however, found that the snakes refused to drink saltwater even if thirsty - and then would drink only freshwater or heavily diluted saltwater.

Update: Diving in the Maldives
More dive sites and dive companies in the Maldives are now listed on the SCUBA Travel guide to diving around the world.

Oceans predict climate change
In a November special issue of the journal Ecology, a group of scientists report that if current patterns of change in the Arctic and North Atlantic Oceans continue, alterations of ocean circulation could occur on a global scale, with potentially dramatic implications for the world's climate and biosphere.

Recipe for rescuing our reefs
If current emission trends continue, we could see a doubling of atmospheric CO2 in as little as 50 years. This would lead to an unprecedented acidification of our oceans that coral reefs would be unlikely to survive. That would lead to the death of countless marine species as well as the devastation of economies dependent on ocean health and productivity. It would also mean the end of an era for coral reef and scuba diving aficionados around the world. So says Rod Salm writing on the BBC web site. He adds a list of practical measures that can be taken to protect the reefs. "We need to find ways to convince people to take action, but that is a major challenge."

A million tonnes of North Sea fish discarded every year
A million tonnes of fish and other sea creatures caught in the North Sea are thrown overboard every year, according to a new report from WWF-Germany. The study, Sea Creatures Are Not Rubbish, shows that one-third of North Sea catch is discarded and calls for a gradual ban on the practice of discarding in the European Union.

UN chief urges climate change help despite slowdown
United Nations Secretary-General urged developed countries not to neglect climate change as they tend to a global economic slowdown and called on rich nations to help poor countries prone to global warming. "The leaders of the developed countries should not neglect the issue of global warming," he said.

Update: Diving the Cook Islands
"There's something very cool about knowing you're the only divers in the ocean for 2000 miles." Just one of the comments on the diving in the Cook Islands now on the SCUBA Travel guide. "Good reefs, warm water, huge viz, some big life"...Diving was fantastic in the blue ocean."