Sep 18, 2009

Scuba Diver, finally

My Open Water Dive Course
with Scuba Cat, Phuket
Sept 1-4, 2009

When we first published our Phuket & Phi Phi travel guide (this book is out of print few years since the tsunami), I have been doing fun dives (Discover Scuba) but mainly have been snorkeling around in Thailand and Indonesia. Since this is my work, I have to mix meetings with other photo targets with many other aqua activities.

Finally, I strung three days together, in a rain delayed Phuket schedule and got enrolled with Scuba Cat for an open water course. The first day in the pool was demanding indeed for someone who lives a desktop life in Mumbai. I must admire the fitness of my Instructor Khun Chart (a Thai Muslim, who adheres to Ramadan fasts), as he was patient with me and did many drills in the pool and next day in the open water- hungry till sunset! Khob Khun Maak Krap!

Anyway, the next two days were real dives off Racha, a great spot to learn diving- as there are reefs ranging from 2m-18m with sandy patches as well for the drills.

Just putting on the BCD (Bouyancy Control Device) and checking the regulator/tank requires discipline and attention. But since you go underwater with an instructor (I had two- Khun Chart and Staurt Roberson, who found that Phuket was the mid point in his life which was shared between UK/NZ).

At 12m depth, I can tell you it is a bit different than a pool, but if you follow the PADI methodology, and your instructors are as good as they were for me, you can apply enough technique to overcome the inexperience of doing drills.

What did I learn? Well a lot of scuba but a lot more about my own fitness and how to deal with situations (more positional play than tactics for me, for sure).

At least, I could get some shots after the scuba certification (full open water is few dives away...).

We will be including more dive options in our programs on itsaqua.com and Scuba Cat (they have a liveaboard catamaran which divers can stay overnight, with sleeper berth cabins)...

Thanks to Sarah and Kath and the staff for guiding me through (and scolding me when I missed the start date!).

Will upload more shots and videos and another essay on how breathing in Scuba is a type of Yoga..

But one thing is for sure, now I can go diving instead of ending up snorkeling, when I just had a day or morning to spare on my busy trips in SEAsia.... some day I will take a vacation...

Saumil
Mumbai, India
18 Sept 2009


Sachin's 4 innings ODIs

This is very welcoming news indeed- Sachin Tendulkar has proposed ODI cricket to have 2 innings of 25 overs each, so that the toss would not be a very big factor, especially in day-night games. He got this idea during a Sri Lanka match few years back, which was washed out due to rain, but Sri Lanka had already batted (and on the spare day as well). But India could not complete a minimum of 20 overs for a result...

This is what Tendulkar has proposed out of experience.

I have said the same thing in Dot Chess (2007 April), using a system of formal and abstract terminlogy (Cricket is an unsymmetric playing format as one team bats (scores runs) and the other team bowls (scores wickets); unlike say soccer, basketball, racing, chess etc, where the objectives (and skills) at a given phase are usually similar for both teams- score goals, be faster, capture pieces etc.

This unsymmetric nature therefore makes the toss important and also makes issues like declaration tricky. By pausing at the 25 over mark we just make the impact of the unsymmetric nature more evenly distributed (I assume that we continue the second innings at the point we left off in the first). More interesting would be to be able to decide at which over between 20-30th (by batting team?) to flip the symmetry and let the other side in.

saumilzx
Mumbai, India
18 Sept 2009
Question: This does not affect T20s much, since the total 40 overs fits evenly into a session which can be deemed equal all through. But there are some historic possibilities here as well - and logically sound :)