Category: Gulf Oil Spill

April 22nd-Oil Rig Sinks, Night Dive in Curacao

April 22nd-Oil Rig Sinks, Night Dive in Curacao

Dive #478–Dive #17 of the week in Curacao, N.A. located 12 degrees 10′ 0″ N and 68 degrees 93′ 0″ W or about 50 miles north of Venezuela. Descent time-6.57pm. Water temperature-82 degrees. Location-House Reef at Habitat Curacao. Maximum depth-42 feet. Dive time-40 minutes.

After a week of really wonderful diving with a great group of friends, I was looking forward to the night dive because I get to see things not normally seen during daylight dives. I was also dreading it because it was the last dive of the trip. I was tired because I had over 14 hours underwater during the last five days. Even with my fatigue I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to submerge just one more time.

The night fish were out hunting. The reef was alive. I was treated to seeing an octopus curled under a nice coral head. Everything was going along just fine. Then I began to taste petroleum residue in my mouth. I thought it odd as I had no experience of weird tasting air thus far in the week (not a good thing when diving, especially due to partial pressures creating an exaggerated and therefore negative and toxic effect at depth). It was so pronounced that I turned the dive and came up to a very shallow depth in case there was a problem with the air.

I started to feel awful and it wasn’t only my body that felt bad. I experienced a general feeling of unrest and despair and had absolutely no frame of reference for any of the emotions. There was no current. Navigation was easy. It was a lovely night for diving. As I surfaced I immediately felt very sick. Two weeks later I was diagnosed with pneumonia and a sinus infection from which it took me weeks to recover.

My dive buddies’ air was fine and at the surface mine was perfectly okay with no foul taste or odor. So what was the problem? My experience on the dive bugged me but I dismissed it until I returned home and learned about the Deepwater Horizon oil rig sinking on the same date I had my weird experience underwater. I began to wonder…..

I’m not suggesting I was actually tasting oil from the explosion and spill but on some level I think I must have known the ocean was in trouble. They say energy travels instantaneously, that we are all connected to each other, especially those we love the most. My experience on the night of April 22nd helped me know the truth of that.

I adore the ocean and its amazing and wonderful creatures. I feel more at home underwater than I do on dry land. I have written about my love of the saltwater environment. So when it was grievously injured, why wouldn’t I feel it? We’ve all heard experiences of people dreaming about a loved one that comes to say goodbye in the dreamtime and upon waking we discover they did, in fact, die. The night of April 22nd I knew, on some level, that the ocean was being desperately hurt. Of this truth, I have no doubt.

Red Tape Kills

Red Tape Kills

The Coast Guard was asked to allow the Alabama Point/Perdido Pass to be boomed and closed with gate before the oil arrived. They said no. Somehow the oil slipped passed the battalion of helicopters and planes flying over the beaches and oil moved into Perdido Pass and coated Cotton Bayou with its suffocating grasp….. Then the Coast Guard approved boom and a gate over the pass.

The fire chief of Magnolia Springs, Alabama is my new hero. He and others in my hometown devised a plan using barges and boom that will hopefully protect the mouth of Weeks Bay and the two rivers and estuary that lie beyond Big Mouth, as we call it. He applied for permits and asked for help and nobody did anything except threaten to arrest him if they close the mouth.

The barges are in place and at the first sign of oil the mouth of Weeks Bay will be closed. We need MORE people like this who will recognize the absolute fact that red tape involved in disasters like this KILLS! At some point, everyday people have to go beyond what authority says is okay and do the right thing.

James Hinton, you are a man that walks his talk and isn’t afraid to do the right thing, no matter the consequences. Thank you!

Read the New York Times story about Mr. Hinton

Today is World Ocean Day, BP Gives Profits (?) to Wildlife, Super-Weeds

Today is World Ocean Day, BP Gives Profits (?) to Wildlife, Super-Weeds

BP announced yesterday it would give net profits from the oil being pumped from Deepwater Horizon to Gulf Coast wildlife. Since they say they’ve already spent a billion dollars on the cleanup I’m wondering if they really expect to have a net profit from the well. Seems like a blatantly stupid way to make themselves look good. Seriously, BP. And if they simply calculate just expense on this particular well it’s a fair bet that the 45 days it took them to design something that is half-way working to capture the oil was pretty darned expensive. Hmmmm….hmmmmm???

Today is World Ocean Day and my dive agency, PADI, is asking people to be aware that sharks are becoming more and more scarce. When the shark population crashes, everything under it will crash due to the balance sharks create in our waters. I tried explaining that to a man and his family who had caught a shark and left it to die on the beach. My environmental lesson didn’t help the shark. I walked back by later and found it rolling in the water. They had tossed it like garbage into the water.

Sometimes its difficult to stay hopeful, to stay positive with the environmental catastrophe happening in the Gulf. Yet I know nature is resilient and much more intelligent than humans. An example….Monsanto engineered seeds that were resistant to Roundup so fields could be sprayed with Roundup to kill weeds but not the crop. Now, weeds have evolved to the point where Roundup is no longer working. The solution? Go back to more toxic sprays, more genetically engineered seeds…at least for some farmers. Others are going organic. Those who realize nature will outsmart us are learning to work with nature, not against it.

Slowly, seemingly at a snail’s pace, we are learning that nature is more powerful than we are and the only way to preserve any quality of life for ourselves and wildlife on the planet is to work with earth’s energies…the plants, ocean, wind…sunlight. If we make a friend of nature we can all thrive. To pit ourselves against it is a death sentence.

BP’s a Corporation?

BP’s a Corporation?

At 2.30am I was dreaming about blobs of thick, oozing oil on the white sand with the sound of helicopters flying overhead. I awakened with the phrase, “BP needs a piece of equipment large enough to hold the oil it is bringing to the surface but it will take two weeks to arrive from the North Sea.” I awakened with this statement echoing in my mind and couldn’t get back to sleep.

Can anyone help me understand how Buffoon Petroleum can be so short sighted? It is one bit of stupidity after another and frankly I don’t understand how they operate, seeing that they are the 5th or 6th biggest oil company in the world. And we trust our waters to these nut-jobs?

Okay…enough of the sleep-deprived rant. Now….before federal waters in the Pensacola area were closed a couple of guys were out scuba diving and one came up through a plume (remember those things BP says do not exist?) of oil 60 feet under the surface. He was coated in oil. Did you hear that from the media? Also, before the federal waters were closed a charter boat was snapper fishing and oil came up on their line and the snapper, caught at about 100 feet of depth, were coated in oil. This was reported on CNN.

Friends of mine have neighbors in Pensacola that are captains for oil rig vessels. The guy worked for Transocean until he resigned in December because he thought they didn’t have their stuff together. Coupled with BP, who are known to have safety violations in the past that caused accidents and deaths and Haliburton (I am intentionally leaving out the part of Satan’s spawn owning Haliburton because it might be too harsh) who is owned by one less-than-trustworthy person, are we really surprised that we have the scale of disaster in the Gulf of Mexico? We as a nation must stand up and demand accountability starting with ourselves, our governments and these sleeze-ball corporations who rape and pillage our earth while we stand by with dazed stares.

I like to focus my comments on what I experience while on the beaches but my nightmares prompted this commentary. Rather than seascapes I bring dreamscapes–nightmares– to the blog today. And this comes from the grief I am feeling which I describe this way: If I take all the sadness and grief I’ve ever felt in this lifetime about friends and family dying and multiply that by 100, it begins to describe my feelings. I can only touch small bits at a time and breath through it.

It’s the End of the World As We Know It

It’s the End of the World As We Know It

I’m not sure I need to write anything as the picture of the shell pretty much says it all. Is this how Shell Oil got it’s name?

The Bon Secour National Wildlife Refuge STILL HAS NOT BEEN CLEANED from three days ago when I reported it. To find out I had to park in a trail parking lot (the beach parking lot was closed due to cleanup activity) and hike through sweltering dunes to the beach. After about 3 miles…1.5 through the relic dunes and then another 1.5 on the beach, I saw a few of Clean Harbors employees working IN FRONT OF THE FEW HO– USES at the refuge. NOTHING….NOTHING had been done in the refuge itself. When I exited the relic dunes and came over the primary dune line the sight was horrific. Huge pools of oil far down from where the pittance of Clean Harbor crew was working. By the way, Clean Harbor is a company from California. Glad that’s close to the Gulf Coast…wouldn’t wanna hire folks not from here. (you can check out my video from June 6th on youtube.com….search under simonelipscomb — no space). And they are the worst of the cleanup crews I have witnessed ‘working’ along the coast. BP–you are wastin’ your money on them.

At Gulf State Park, there was a sign posted clearly stating it is unsafe to swim in the water. I walked down the beach to the condos and people were swimming in the water there. I asked two women if they weren’t concerned and did their condo tell them about the danger of swimming in the Gulf. They said they were only there for a week so didn’t think just a week would kill them. I told them I hoped they were right.

Or what about the kids and families in the water….is anybody paying attention to the signs, the warnings? Have they not looked around them at the oil-soaked seaweed or jumped over cow-pattie sized oil melts to get to the water?
Where is this child’s parents? Do they know how to read?

I met a couple walking on the beach. He saw all my cameras and gear and walked over…he said, Is there oil on the beach? I said, Yes. See those blobs of brown melting to black? He says, Oh…so that’s what was on my feet when I came in the condo last night. I would argue that his University of Alabama hat predicted the behavior but nobody in his condo warned him of the oil-soaked beach. Are the condo owners/managers willing to risk people’s health to boost the economy? And why are they allowing the beaches to remain open to swimming? If people cannot act to protect themselves, then somebody must.
I used to like chocolate. Now I’m not so sure. But one thing I am sure of…it IS truly the end of the world as we know it. And it’s just the tip of the proverbial iceburg here in Alabama, of that I am sure.