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Archive for June, 2008

Stranding in Racha Yai

Friday, 27th June, 2008 9:44 pm by FiNS Team

Photos: Racha Seamaster Divers
Photo by Racha SeamasterAt around 18:40 on 26 June, more than 30 small cetaceans that appear to be false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) stranded themselves on the beach at the western side of Racha Yai in southern Thailand. 

Khun Sing of Racha Seamaster Divers reports that local residents, tourists and staff of local hotels and businesses pitched in and managed to return at least 20 of the beached whales to the sea in relatively short order. The rescuers then successfully moved another 10 individuals (that were stranded higher up on the beach) to the opposite side of the bay, where the water was more calm. 

After being returned safely to sea, the whales stayed in the bay, as if waiting for Read more…

A Day on Mabul Island

Wednesday, 25th June, 2008 4:13 pm by FiNS Team

Scubacam Lembeh Photography Excursion

Tuesday, 24th June, 2008 6:48 pm by FiNS Team

ScubaCam

Scubacam Singapore is organising an informal underwater photography outing at Kasawari Lembeh Resort. Superb accommodation and photography facilities will be offered for all participants. 

 

Special invited guest will be Tony Wu, who will be available for discussions about photo techniques, tips, and advice. David Cheung and Sanah Z of Scubacam will be there to provide technical advice on equipment and maintenance.

 

Scubacam prizes will be offered for the best three photos taken during the week.

 

The trip is planned for March 2009, exact dates to be finalised.

 

For more information, contact Scubacam. To read more about Tony’s most recent visits to Lembeh, see the following posts here and here on his blog.

 

The Last Frontier

Monday, 23rd June, 2008 11:45 pm by FiNS Team

SihanoukvilleWhen you think of muck diving destinations, Sihanoukville, Cambodia probably doesn’t jump to mind.

But according to an email we received from FiNS readers who recently visited and dived the area, there are many undiscovered reefs and and abundance of marine life just a couple of hours offshore.

During an an 80-minute dive at a site called the Corral, they saw: nine Hippocampus kuda seahorses, including two beautiful juveniles; Chaetoderma penicilligera (leafy or weedy filefish); ocellated (spotted) octopuses (which seemed to be in every other clam shell); a pipefish that looked like Acentronura gracilissima (graceful or bastard seahorse); Cephaloscyllium umbratile (30cm juvenile balloon or swell shark, often found in Japan but uncommon in the Indochina Sea); sting rays; dragonets; and a number of nudibranchs: Bornella stellifer, Pteraeolidia ianthina, Thecacera pennigera, and various Chromodoris.

SihanoukvilleThey dived with the Dive Shop, located on the road to Serendipity Beach, right next to the well-known the Monkey Republic Bar, Restaurant and Guesthouse. The Dive Shop’s guides, Bora, Shina and Paul, were on hand to help them spot all the little critters.

If you’re interested in looking further into diving Cambodia, here’s some general information that the divers passed along to us: “Accommodation ranges from 8-15 USD, food costs 2-3 USD per meal (try the Cambodian Lok Lak, it’s tasty!), and Anchor Beer costs 1 USD per bottle in the bar (0.75 cents at happy hour). A day trip for diving runs about 50 USD for two dives. And lastly, there’s plenty to do in the beach town when you’re not diving…cool beach bars, wooden huts with hammocks, music clubs, and even a couple of casinos to keep anyone entertain.”If anyone else heads over there, drop us an email and let us know more.

Colour from Compact Cameras

Tuesday, 17th June, 2008 4:17 pm by FiNS Team

Sony W300Tony Wu has recently posted a short article about getting colourful shots underwater with a compact camera using the dedicated underwater mode.See his blog for more details.

Big Changes to FiNS Magazine

Wednesday, 11th June, 2008 5:35 pm by FiNS Team

Recently, the FiNS Team had a rare and happy opportunity. Normally scattered across the globe, we gathered for a few days in Bangkok, Thailand for a recent dive show. Having most of the team in a single location for the first occasion in recent memory gave us time to have some fun, and also to chat about the direction of FiNS.

As you may recall, FiNS initially started as a small publication in Singapore, and over the past seven years, we’ve grown into a much bigger effort, with offices in three countries and contributors, subscribers and friends around the world.

In addition, we’ve always been at the forefront of change…experimenting with and implementing new forms of communication to stay in touch with the dive community and to keep you informed.

Our website is the most popular of any dive publication in the Asia-Pacific region. Our discussion forum was the first successful English-language forum in the region. We launched our blog two years ago to keep you abreast of breaking news, and to date, we’re still the only major dive publication in Asia to use this effective media form to reach divers everywhere.

In addition, we’ve re-designed our print magazine twice, provided free PDF versions of our magazine, established the FiNS Magazine podcast on iTunes, created innovative and humourous magazine column concepts instead of copying what everyone else does, and organised the most successful Divers’ Night parties the region has ever seen.

Not bad for a bunch of divers donating their spare time, right?

That’s right. Many of you may not be aware of this, but everyone involved with FiNS works other full-time jobs. We don’t get paid or subsidised by large parent companies for our FiNS-related endeavours. In fact, we invest a lot of personal time with little to no financial reward. We create FiNS because we love the oceans and we believe in what we do.

During our group eat-and-chat sessions in Bangkok about where to take FiNS, we discussed a wide range of topics, but found our thoughts returning often to four major themes:

Our Expectations: First is our own expectations. FiNS Magazine has become incredibly popular. We get dozens of emails each day asking about subscriptions, shop orders, article ideas and contributions, general feedback, and much more.

On the one hand, we’re really happy to receive acknowledgment for our efforts. But at the same time, we’re increasingly finding ourselves unable to respond in a timely manner…which bums us out. Try as we might, we simply can’t keep up with the escalating flood of communication sent our way each day, since we all work full-time jobs to pay bills.

State of Print Media: Next, we’ve watched the health of most forms of print media decline all over the world. The highly respected and successful LIFE magazine, for instance, discontinued its print edition recently, opting to go online only. Underlying decisions like this are statistics that demonstrate a precipitous decline in newspaper and periodical subscriptions in almost every market and area of interest.

Accompanying this is a drop in advertising revenue, which is the backbone of every print publication. Newspapers in the United States, for instance, saw a 9.4% plunge in revenues last year, the worst decline in 50 years (Source: Newspaper Association of America).

In this climate, many periodicals have been forced to cut costs and streamline dramatically to survive. Newsweek, for instance, recently let 20% of their staff go (Source: Wall Street Journal, p.B1, 4 April 2008).

In contrast, both viewership and revenue for online media have been growing. As one example, internet ad revenue for major newspapers in the US has jumped from an estimated US$2 billion to US$3.2 billion between 2005 and 2007 (Source: Newspaper Association of America).

Consistent with these figures, we ourselves have seen magazine subscriptions increase, but we’ve seen website viewership, PDF downloads, and iTunes podcast accesses literally explode.

There’s a lot more data underscoring this worldwide trend, but you get the point. The writing is on the wall, so to speak.

Integrity: One thing that’s always been a concern to us is being able to maintain editorial integrity. You see, here’s the inside scoop on the dive industry.

Print magazines rely primarily on advertisers (not subscribers) to pay the bills. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that many advertisers only want (and expect) good things to be said about them. In cases where positive views are warranted, there’s no problem. In situations where there’s a need for constructive criticism or worse…most dive magazines have their hands (and tongues) tied.

During our seven years, we have chosen to speak out with constructive feedback on certain occasions, and we consequently suffered the wrath of advertisers and other parties in the dive industry (though ordinary divers rallied around us).

In addition, people have at times asked us to remove or censor opinions they didn’t like which were posted by divers on our forum, which we of course did not.

Standing on principle as we’ve done often means losing money and taking sh*t, but we believe that the lure of extra cash to pay the bills isn’t worth compromising our integrity.

Still, given the exceedingly high cost of producing and distributing a print magazine, we occasionally find ourselves biting our tongues when we really want to address controversial topics…and not being happy about it. Ideally, we’d like to have complete freedom to express opinions…good or otherwise…that are in the best interest of divers.

In other words, we believe FiNS should be created by divers, for divers, without any strings attached and without any vested interest dictating the agenda.

The Environment: Finally, there’s the environment. No matter how we dress it up, printing thousands of copies of FiNS Magazine and sending them all over the world every two months is not environmentally friendly, especially when there are now alternative forms of media available that are both easily accessible and rapidly gaining in popularity.

Magazine production, storage and transport consumes trees, generates pollution and contributes to carbon emissions.

We’re not overzealous eco-warriors, and we’re not by any means advocating a ban against the use of paper, but we do believe in optimising our own environmental impact, and we believe in practicing what we preach.

We are, after all, the first and only dive magazine in the Asia-Pacific region willing and able to state openly that we don’t consume shark fin. When it comes to environmental issues, it’s easy to talk the talk, but not necessarily to walk the walk.

Summary: After careful reflection upon these and other related issues, we decided that it’s time once again for FiNS to evolve…in order to look to the future and embrace the rapid and exciting changes in the world, rather than to cling to the past…and also to bolster our editorial independence while minimising our environmental impact.

To this end, we have developed and set in motion plans to unveil FiNS version 4.0, the details of which we will make public in the coming months.

The one aspect of our plans that we can announce now is that we will cease printing FiNS Magazine in paper form with immediate effect. Clearly, this was a difficult decision for us, as we are proud of our print edition’s success and popularity, and we certainly enjoy the positive feedback we receive.

However, in the final analysis, we do not feel that the satisfaction we would derive from continuing our print magazine would outweigh our environmental concerns or the diminishing effectiveness of print media.

Don’t panic though! This does not mean that FiNS Magazine will disappear. Quite the contrary.

FiNS v4.0 will be packed with informative content, our trademark sense of humour, and lots of brand new features…plus FiNS will continue to be run by divers for divers, providing you with straight-up, well-informed and unbiased information.

Ironically, our plans will probably end up resulting in more work and additional lost sleep for us, but then again, innovation never comes easy.

Until we implement the changes we have in mind, our website will stay up, and if you are one of our valued subscribers, contributors or advertisers, we will be in touch soon regarding how this decision affects you. This undertaking will require communicating with thousands of people all over the world, so please bear with us.

Thank you for your support, and stay tuned for the next FiNS Evolution.

Download the PDF version of this announcement here

The FiNS Team

 

Help Patrol Misool’s MPA

Wednesday, 11th June, 2008 10:33 am by FiNS Team

In 2006, Misool Eco Resort helped to create a Marine Protected Area in Raja Ampat encompassing 200 sq km of sea surrounding the resort. Hook- and line-fishing, dynamite- and cyanide-fishing, long-lining, netting, shark finning, harvesting turtle eggs and other similar activities are prohibited in the MPA.

The good news is that local villages and government support these measures. The bad news is that non-local commercial fishing enterprises aren’t as conservation-minded.

To address the need to patrol the boundaries of the MPA, the resort is raising funds for the Misool Ranger Project in conjunction with French charity Precious Planet. For every 50 Euros donated to the Misool Ranger Project, donors will be entered into a lucky draw for a free stay at Misool Eco Resort.

The deadline for entry is 1 August, so contribute to a good cause and secure your chance to win a free stay at the resort!

For more information, click here.

Missing Divers in Komodo Found

Saturday, 7th June, 2008 1:09 pm by FiNS Team

Following is a statement we just received from Komodo regarding the missing divers, now found:

Five divers were found alive today more than 40 hours after they were reported missing in Komodo National Park.

The three British nationals, Charlotte Allin, James Manning and locally-based dive-master Kathleen Mitchinson, and an unidentified Swedish woman and Frenchman, were discovered on the beach on the south of Komodo Island near Tanjung Manta at 11.10 am (Bali time) by Pt. Putri Naga Komodo’s speedboat Cakalang.

All divers, who were first reported missing at 5.30pm on Thursday evening (5 June 2008), were reportedly in remarkably good condition after their ordeal and a medical team from Labuan Bajo, the gateway to the park, is heading toward the site to rendezvous with the speedboat.

The Park is considered one of the world’s premier dive sites but is also home to some of the swiftest and most unpredictable currents and undertows on the planet. Ironically, these fierce currents, a constant concern for divers here, are at least partly responsible for Komodo’s famously rich abundance of marine life.

Three cheers for the search and rescue team!!!

Another update to follow as soon as the divers reach Labuan Bajo.

Wetpixel Quarterly Available Now

Saturday, 7th June, 2008 12:18 pm by FiNS Team

Wet Pixel The latest issue of Wetpixel Quarterly has just shipped, with this edition featuring the work of Alex Kirkbride, who undertook a three-year project to photograph the waters of America’s 50 states, plus the winners of the 2008 Our-World Underwater and DEEP Indonesia photo competitions.

In addition, Christopher Bahnsen writes about a colony of up to 100 large green turtles that have managed to thrive in San Diego Bay, one of the busiest harbours in the world.

More information at the Wetpixel Quarterly site.

Divers Missing in Komodo

Saturday, 7th June, 2008 7:57 am by FiNS Team

Five divers from the UK have gone missing in Komodo after a drift dive.  Read more…