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COURAGE

I loved reading Cody Unser’s article

in the summer edition of

Alert

Diver

(Member to Member). As a

volunteer diver at the Aquarium

of the Pacific in Long Beach,

Calif., it has been my privilege

to dive with Cody on several

occasions. Each year the aquarium

presents the Festival of Human

Abilities, which brings together

at the aquarium individuals with

all sorts of challenges, and Cody

and her team have participated

in the event. When you consider

the courage it takes to dive in

deep water without the total use

of every physical attribute, Cody’s

achievements are even more

impressive. The opportunity to

dive with Cody has been humbling

and rewarding. Thank you for

helping tell her story.

— Andy Marias, via email

FOND MEMORIES

Typically, everything stops for

me when

Alert Diver

arrives,

and the Summer 2016 edition

was no exception. I particularly

enjoyed the piece on Kurt Amsler,

which brought back many good

memories.

When he arrived at UNEXSO,

in Freeport, Bahamas, I had been

on staff there for a year or so,

after a decade in the British navy.

As it was soon apparent that he

was just as broke as me, l let him

share my living quarters: the dive

club’s broom and wash bucket

closet. There was just enough

room for another cot. It was a

great couple of years diving and

socializing with this talented guy,

and, as your interview records,

he had a wonderfully developed

underwater eye.

Thank you for introducing

this remarkable underwater

photographic pioneer to today’s

diving community.

— Dick Clarke, Columbia, S.C.

OUR MARINE ENVIRONMENT

Kudos to Stephen Frink for

advancing the idea that divers

need to be doing more to promote

ocean conservation. Mentioning

David Doubilet’s concept that

every day is World Oceans Day is

right on point. Raising awareness

and encouraging divers to examine

how everyday choices affect the

oceans should be a part of the

diving curriculum. After all, the

dive industry would not exist if it

weren’t for the wondrous resources

found beneath the sea.

Every diver today should

be familiar with how plastics,

overfishing, bycatch, land-based

pollutants and fossil fuels affect our

marine ecosystems. Stephen, David

and other longtime observers of the

marine environment are well suited

to describe the changes and trends

they have seen over the years.

— Steve Mussman,

Lawrenceville, Ga.

I appreciated Stephen Frink’s

comments about plastic straws

and cups in the recent

Alert Diver

.

It is a shame that it’s cheaper for

bars to give out one plastic cup

after another than to wash and

reuse glassware. I actually have my

16

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FALL 2016

FROM THE SAFETY STOP

LETTERS FROM MEMBERS

MARLA BROSE/ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL