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Wet Suit And Dry Suit Cleaning & Care

Regular cleaning with Wet Suit & Dry Suit Shampoo prevents chlorine and salt damage and keeps suits looking and feeling like new. McNett makes it easy to care for your suit. Simply add 2 capfuls of Wet Suit & Dry Suit Shampoo to a large tub then submerge your suit and give it a good scrub. To remove odors from your wet suit, add 2 capfuls of MiraZyme™ Enzyme Based Gear Deodorizer to a second tub and submerge the suit. Hang suit to dry on on a thick Hanger. As the suit dries, MiraZyme does its work – consuming organic matter such as mold, mildew, algae and bacteria, leaving your suit odor-free.

Everyone had a great time diving the Pinta on the John Jack. ScubaVenture’s own Theresa Frank was the divemaster and the skipper and crew made sure everyone had a great time. Click the pictures for larger versions.

Come join us on a great Ocean Diving Adventure on the Pinta Wreck. We will be diving on the Dive Vessel “John Jack” out of Pt. Pleasant, NJ. The trip is scheduled for June 19th. The trip leaves the dock at 7:00 AM so you need to be there by 6:15. Directions to the John Jack can be picked up at Scuba Venture. This is a great dive for both New and Advanced Divers. Artifacts, Lobsters, and fish life can be found on this wreck. Teresa Franke will be leading the trip from Scuba Venture.


Ship’s Name: Pinta
Owner’s: The Pinta, operated by Heide’s Shipping and Trading, was registered in Rotterdam
Design: 500 ton motorship, 194′ long, built in 1959 in Denmark
Circumstances:
The Pinta was small in size compared to most of the ocean going freighters. She had picked up her cargo of lumber in Nicaragua and after a stop in Norfolk, was headed for Port Newark. At one minute after sundown on May 7, 1963, with a 17 knot wind, 3-4 foot seas, and 15 mile visibility, the Pinta mysteriously collided with the 7,547 ton British freighter, City of Perth. The 485′ long City of Perth was out of New York bound for Adelaide, Australia.

The bow of the City of Perth cut into the port side of the Pinta. The Pinta would remain afloat for only 48 minutes, but it was time enough for the twelve man crew to safely abandon ship and be taken aboard the lightly damaged City of Perth. The City of perth safely would deposit the Pinta’s crew in Hoboken and ten days later sailed again for Australia, after modest repairs.

How could these two ships, both with radar, collide in such mild weather and good visibility? The Coast Guard never investigated the incident as it involved international ships in international waters. Diver John Dewhurst researched the collision through the ship’s insurance carriers to try to solve the mystery. The loss of the PINTA was small by maritime standards, damages to the City of Perth minimal, and there was no loss of life or serious injuries. John discovered that for these reasons the parties involved found it financially prudent to bear their own losses in silence rather than take the matter to court. No explanation of how the collision occurred has ever been offered to this day.

In 1968, the City of Perth, now with the new owners, and renamed the ELENI-F, sank after hitting a submerged wreck off Alexandria, Egypt. She was declared a total loss.

Location: 6.5 miles NE of Asbury Park
Depths: Top of the wreck is in less than 60′ of water. Depth at the sand is 90′
Condtions: Mostly intact, lying on her partially buried port side. Some of her cargo of lumber is pilled out onto the sand.
Goodies: The wreck is pretty easy to get around on, and just about always produces lobster. This is one of Mark’s favorite New Jersey wrecks.
Cautions:
1. Watch your depth and time. Plan up to 90′ tables.
2. Ascend on anchor line.
3. Penetration is not recommended. Lumber suspended overhead in the cargo area that creates a very dangerous situation. This wreck is dangerous to penetrate.

Jacque Cousteau would have turned 100 this month and TCM is celebrating with underwater movies on Friday nights from 7 until ?. All kinds of classic movies including his original movies. This may be something you may be interested in.

North Carolina Wreck Diving Adventure

Join Mark Stitzer, owner of Scuba Venture, on an exciting North Carolina shipwreck diving adventure.Mark has been diving in North Carolina for over 30 years and knows the wrecks and best restaurants! He has made hundreds of NC wreck dives for artifacts, spearfishing, and picture taking. We can help turn you into a real wreck diver. The fish life is great also for anyone wanting to see Caribbean fish with out the price tag that goes with it. How about diving a German U-Boat, or ships sunk by U-Boats? There is a great deal of underwater history that you will see on this trip. Many artifacts from his NC trips, decorate SV.

The Crew on the Olympus Dive Boat will take great care of everyone. This boat is one of the most comfortable on the Eastern Coast. We will automatically certify you in boat diver after completing these four days, FREE with book purchase. How about finishing some other specialty dives while we are all having fun? There is just so much to see and do!

If you have any questions please call Mark at 877-685-0944.

We are now off our winter hours and open 7 days a week: Monday to Friday: 11-7:30, Saturday: 10-5, and Sunday 11-5

This is our 20th Anniversary in business so expect lots of new specials, and chances to win great items or maybe even…………………..trips! Free Food! And sales reps bringing their demo stuff to sell. We will also have presentations on equipment, travel, and training throughout both days. I will keep you posted closer to the event. This is your opportunity to sell your old and get something new. Don’t you deserve it?

Divers have asked me whether or not they could wear 3mm gloves this time of year. It all depends on you but I would recommend 6.5/7mm minimum this time of year. You can probably get away with 3mm gloves August and September without getting too cold. The water temp is between 45 and 52 this time of year at our local dive spots. Remember that a cold diver is an unhappy diver!

MarkGrandchild

Savanah Mae Guziak
Born: 2/17/10
Weight: 10 lbs, 6 1/2 oz., 23 inches long

Congratulations to Nicole & Matt Guziak and our new grandfather Mark Stitzer and grandmother Sandy Stitzer!

Announcement involves company’s NEMO air dive computer.
Mares Diving has announced a product safety recall involving the company’s NEMO Air scuba diving computer. Under certain circumstances, the O-ring can fail and cause a slow leak of breathing gas through the Quick Connector, which could require a diver to surface quickly and face possible risk of injury or running out of air.

Any air leak resulting from an O-ring failure would be slow, because these fittings are designed to the EN250 standard, which requires a very small (0.3mm) opening in the high-pressure hose fitting, but we nevertheless take this issue seriously and intend to correct all affected units.

The O-rings in some units may have been replaced in an earlier service campaign, but this recall requires replacing the entire metal quick connector female fitting at the end of the high pressure air hose that holds the O-ring (new Mares part no. 44200829). Replacement connector assemblies have a groove machined around the middle of the fitting, but recalled units do not.

ALL CONSUMERS SHOULD STOP USING ANY NEMO AIR DIVE COMPUTER, AND ALL RETAILERS SHOULD REMOVE THESE UNITS FROM DISTRIBUTION, UNTIL THEY HAVE BEEN INSPECTED AND REPAIRED BY AN AUTHORIZED MARES DEALER / SERVICE CENTER.

Affected product codes are:
Finished goods
414158 – DIVE COMPUTER NEMO AIR
414159 – DIVE COMPUTER NEMO AIR W/COMPASS
Spare parts
44200771 – HP HOSE W/QUICK CONNECTOR NEMO AIR
44200770 – QUICK CONNECTOR ASSY. FEMALE NEMO AIR

Please contact an Authorized Mares Dealer/Service Center in your area to schedule the removal and substitution of your Nemo Air computer Quick Connector Assembly Female with the new Nemo Air computer Quick Connector Assembly Female. If you want MARES to perform the above service procedures, please contact our customer service department at 1-800-874-3236 for a return authorization number. You will need to provide the unit(s) serial number(s).

ALL NEMO AIR QUICK CONNECTOR FEMALE ASSEMBLIES MUST BE REMOVED AND SUBSTITUTED WITH THE NEW ONE PRIOR TO DIVING NEMO AIR. THERE IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICE.

For detailed information please go to www.mares.com

This voluntary recall is being conducted by Mares in cooperation with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.