Graham\’s Dive\’s and Rants

Just another Thedeepstop.com weblog

The Bucket Manoeuvre

I posted this on YD a while back but i still get asked about my dark distant past so here for everyone is the Bucket Dive

but before i do I’ll give you a bit of diving background i had done about 350 - 400 dives previously in both the army and makeshift kit including a length of gas hose on a tyre compressor for a gravel pit dive searching for carp rods pulled in by the fish, weight belt was made from a seatbelt and track pins, after moving to Devon parachuting was out as the wind called most of it off, i i turned to diving and the legal side, i did the PADI course at Aquanauts with Simon and found it more enjoyable with the right kit and training. i now have clocked up about another 400+ dives since then with the last 60 -70 dives below 50 meters, with about 22 below 75 meters so now its time to move on to the rebreather and go deeper

It started with a Friday pint i had finished my PADI open water course and was looking forward to diving legal, i had to now i had a family to think of so insurance was a must. so back to the dive, a friend of mine had dropped his engine a Honda 45 of the back of his boat  whilst kicking crap out of it because it wouldn’t start.

now he had marked the point and was looking for a way to get it back…. so came the question after a few beers “Graham would you get my engine for me?” reply “Yea go on then it will cost you a beer or two… where is it?” 

my mate explained it was in a hole off the North Devon coast in about 28-30 meters a hole used by locals to catch congers and crabs. OK so the plan was hatched,

now i had limited kit so the dive would have to be planned around what kit i had which was
one set of regs for a single cylinder
two cylinders
and the usual kit mask BCD etc

Not alot for embarking on this, the problem was how do i change cylinders at the bottom 

I got hold of a black bucket and strapped lines and weights to it to hold it to the seabed, the idea was to place the top of the cylinder inside fill with air and remove the valve drop the cylinder place the new one in and refit the valve, great idea but i took to long to refit the valve and ran out of air …..so now i cut the bottom of the bucket off and place a clear plastic bag inside and secure withe an inner-tube cut from a truck tyre. now i can see what i am doing and the time increases so i can now do it quickly, tests done and practise sorted I’m off to sea!! i must admit people did give me funny looks in the pool stages of this plan.

we get to the location and i kitted up and in the spare cylinder is sent down the shot line so it is ready at the bottom, when i get there i tie off a line and start searching for the motor, i eventually find it and after some grunting get a line on it and send the line to the surface for collection by my mate, now because i am new to this malarkey I’m nearly out of air about 25bar so back to the line and carry out the bucket drill as its now known (in Plymouth). cylinder changed and kit secured I’m off up the line to the boat and some serious beers …. now half way up i start thinking about deco as i told about DCS i stop for 10 at 20m then 5 at 10m and finally 6 at 5meters total dive time 49 minutes and on hell of a headache.

now i tried to work this out for the log book dive number 7 and cant so i ring Dougie in Plymouth and ask for some help working it out, after i told him the dive he said pop in Thursday and he’ll do the log for me

Thursday comes i go around to Dougie to get a slap across the head and a three hour lecture on DCS and theory’s i didn’t know or even heard of …safe to say that i now plan dives and deco and follow all the details on the plan and the kit i now dive is setup so I’ll never have to do the bucket manoeuvre again “a manoeuvre i am not proud to be known by” but i was a good idea at the time ……………..soldiers do anything for a beer!!

October 27th, 2006 Posted by grahammills | Uncategorized | no comments

About Me

well a few people have met me on boats and said your nothing like i expected so i thought i would write abit about me and where i am today

I left school in 84, the only thing i ever wanted to do was become a soldier so as soon as i was free of school i walked into the careers office and joined up, i wont bore you with details but i spent 13 years and two wives in there, the second wife married 7 years together only 2 the job was just to much and everything that came up i volunteered for. I wont say it was all roses. I have seen things that nobody should ever see or would want to. i would also go as far as to say there are things i have done for the army that I’m not proud off but that is what they paid me for,

 

i left the army in 97 and due to my skills was kept on service for a further 9 years but now i had no job and i needed something having just left my second wife who took every thing i had nothing except the clothes on my back, no body wanted my skills so i went into Truck driving this i enjoyed working on my own and being answerable just to myself, something i was used to. 

during this time i met  Paulette, people say that when you meet the right one you know, well there was no mistaking her and i love her more today than the day we met, she is my sole mate and best friend, there is no substitute, i have two fantastic kids who i would move heaven and earth for like every parent i worry every day about them. 

due to the time i was away driving i missed allot of personnel time so a job change was in order i bluffed my way into Worldcom and worked there for some years, until a friend asked me to help get his business up and running, i dropped everything and worked there for three years getting the business to a 10 million pound company, but i wanted something else

so came the move to UK Forces Networks a company i have started to help the forces around the world, this has now grown to the Police, Fire and Ambulance, so i hope that goes well, and if you need anything to do with communications drop me a line

as for hobbies i have a few

Climbing: military joint services rock climbing instructor most difficult climb Strawberry’s EVS B4 climb i couldn’t do it now and the grad has gone up

Riding: played POLO for the regiment and i still do some point to point

Parachuting:CAT8 jumper squares and conicals but down in Devon the weather kills it more than diving

Diving:diving for some years until forced to do a proper course and get some kind of ticket did alot of gravel pit dives in a compressor and gas hose looking for fishing kit stupid now i look back on it, but fun at the time

i have true friends that i could count on my fingers and shit loads of mates, due to the way i am i look after my friends and would do anything for them, same as my family who are the most precious thing in my life. i am passionate about my ideals and don’t suffer fools, 

i belive in the truth and Honor and my word is never broken, i expect people to treat me the same as i was to treat them, I’ll help anyone just ask, if i can help i will, if you do see me on a boat and I’m normally with Gary if not I’m SOLO say hello i don’t bite

October 10th, 2006 Posted by grahammills | Uncategorized | 5 comments