Dean's Blue Hole, preparing for the world champs
Sunday, November 15, 2009, 04:18 PM
Posted by Administrator
It is pretty unbelievable that I have already been here for ten days, where does the time go?
I travel a lot so usually when I arrive in a new place it takes me a few days before I feel settled and relaxed. When I arrived on Long Island I was initially disappointed with the room that I had rented. It was suppose to have a kitchen, necessary really because I am here for a month and it only had a very small fridge. I chose not to worry about it, because I knew something great would come up and “Rowdy Boys” happens to have some of the best fish burgers and fries on this planet. After a few days I moved into a beautiful, big house that is very quiet and peaceful.
Initially there were not many divers on the island, Alexey and I thought we would pick a not so popular time of day to dive, the morning. Things can get pretty hectic on the lines here after 10:30am until the mid afternoon. 10:30 is Will Trubridge’s time slot, and with Rob, Johan and Herbert diving after that so there is really no other times to dive except in the late afternoon or the morning. Diving in the late afternoon makes the rest of the day useless, although after my morning dive, lunch and a nap the sun has usually gone down.
When Guillaume, Ryuzo , Kathryn and Chris discovered we were diving in the morning they all decided to join us. Suddenly our not so popular slot has become the most popular time of the day. The majority of the French team arrived yesterday and now there is around 10 of us on the platform from 9:20 to 10:40am. In a way all of these people on the platform feels like diving in competition, another good way to prepare.
Long Island is known for being a very slow island with not a lot to do. But with all of the diving I have been doing, plus land training and a few dinners with friends the days are fading away very fast.
More people will be arriving everyday now and the atmosphere will continue to change and become more exciting. Hopefully days will continue to be filled with great dives and wonderful friends.
The biggest battle I have been fighting here has been with the sand flies aka no see ums. These nasty little bugs make you feel grateful for mosquitoes. After 2 nights of stormy rainy weather I was covered in about 200 very itchy bites. I would be waking up in the middle of the night scratching my legs very hard. If you are coming here start taking vitamin B1 NOW! The only person who has not been badly bitten is Ryuzo and he normally takes this vitamin. I have been trying all sorts of experimental treatments that I found on the internet and I am able to sleep through the night now.

This is Guana Cay, one of my favorite places on the island.
Diving has been going well, then not so well, then a few days ago it started to feel good again. My head likes to play funny games with my body. The first few days I put no pressure on myself at all to do any deep dives and things were feeling wonderful, I was comfortable at depth and I was doing deeper dives in training then I have done since February.
That made me feel fantastic and very confident about my abilities for this upcoming competition. As some of you may know I typically change my favorite disciplines after I set a record. While I am training I can be very motivated by the challenge to do things that I did not think were possible for me to accomplish. Usually after I have reached my goal I need a mental break and so I change my focus to another discipline.
I think it is also common knowledge that I am not a big fan of CWT, simply because I have problems relaxing at depth and therefore I cannot equalize. This is a common in most beginners and during CWT I find humility. I am not challenged by lactic build up or by hypoxia, but this is where my head comes in and creates a limit for me. Anyway this is my very long way of starting my story that in the beginning of this trip I was loving CWT! It was feeling easy, very nice and I was equalizing much deeper than I usually do. Of course my ego loves this, and my head is off to the races about what I will do in the competition and how easy it will be to dive deeper. I am thinking the next dive will be great, when I try to go deeper then my other training dives, what happens? I can’t equalize, hmmm expectations ruin everything, thus is life and definitely not a new lesson.
I believe that if I had an opportunity to train CWT without the pressure of an upcoming competition that I would do much better in that discipline, but for now being new to the sport and having had great results in many other disciplines, I am okay with laying my goal of achieving records in CWT to rest until I am more experienced, I have a lot of time and much still to learn.

The competition is approaching very quickly and so now I must focus and prepare myself for CNF. I did my first CNF on day three to 30M and it was so hard. This is how CNF feels if you have not done it in a while. I got a few suggestions from Kerian about a better way for me to train and I have had two successful CNF days in a row and tomorrow I will take my 2nd day off since I got here.
My body has been feeling very stiff recently. My plan is to begin practicing yoga again, also being more diligent about stretching in the morning before the dive. I am not a morning person and the idea of getting out of bed, without food or coffee in the morning is not something I would do for anything other then diving. The last two days I have stretched and I have had very nice feelings during my dives so stretching does me well.