Hi all,
I just spent a month in Vanuatu (small island between Fidgi and Australia), diving almost daily on the wreck of the president Coolidge (200m long luxury cruise Liner conveniently sunk in 18 to 70m of water, easily accessible from the beach).
Sent by some french magazines, I'm part of a scientific mission (160 scientists from 25 countries) collecting samples below and above the surface.
It gave me the opportunity to meet 3 Cis-Lunar divers: Brian Greene, John Earle and Richard Pyle. They are all very nice chaps.
They collect samples during deep (100m range) and long (3 to 5 hours) dives.
Here is a pictures of them (from left to right):
- Brian Greene, editor of the famous "Rebreather FUNdamentals" DVD (cis-lunar)
- John Earle, oxygen cleaning specialist (cis-lunar)
- Richard Pyle, T-shirt diver (cis-lunar)
- Cedric Verdier, MIB (Megalodon)
- Claude Rives, french photographer for the National Geographic (Evolution)
and a picture of their units (from left to right):
yellow, yellow, yellow, small and yellow, black
more about this later
Cheers
Alright Cedric, you're more than current-no pun intended. Anybody missing from the list? He, He, He!
Mr. Pyle has been around for a long time-Hail Satan! What does he have to say about current ECCR technology/products? Is he impressed, or does he think we're all fools? He's got more hrs on ECCR than most of us... -Andy