Along
a nondescript residential lane in Pondicherry, close to the railway station,
there exists a strange residence. As you enter the gate expecting to see the
family car blocking the porch, what you come across instead is neoprene suits
and compressed air cylinders.
There
are strange looking dudes, walking about and a large water tank with masked men
and women immersed therein, undergoing animated training sessions.
Inside
the house is a large atrium with a spiral staircase from which goras/goris seem
to keep coming down. There is an office looking table with a housecat sleeping
under the computer screen. The decoration in the drawing room consists of
diving gear hanging on display and neat looking stuff like underwater torches
and notebooks in the display cases. The whole thing looks surreal. Welcome to
the headquarters of M/S Temple Adventures.
Well
this is the “Pondicherry spiritual temple experience” that Divya and Rohan selected for us on our
first visit to their house after they made JIPMER their new home. None of that
customary visit to the beach or Ashram for us. This is the real stuff guys. We
had enrolled with what has been described by many as the best “diving
experience providers” on mainland India.
We
were met and guided through the paperwork by Khush Kabraji, a ruggedly handsome
man, who got us into the training tank and patiently explained everything
including skills such as removing the regulator from the mouth while still
underwater!!. That done we were told to be back next morning at 6:30 AM sharp.
After a quick breakfast (I don’t think anyone had much of an appetite) we were
loaded into the trucks and headed out to the harbour.
(We
did file a formal clearance with the coast guard). The boat that took us to the
dive site was captained by Ravi who headed out into the open sea for about half
an hour and then stopped. As if by black magic he knew that the dive site was
under us. There was no buoy or marking of any sort in this patch of the high
seas. Then just for confirmation, he switched on the GPS and true enough we
were right on the spot.
The
“dive site” has been created by the company with the help of a cage weighed
down by rocks with addition of palm trees etc to create an artificial habitat.
The fish incidentally are very happy for this sanctuary and seem to flock in
large numbers.
Inspite
of whatever training that we went through, there was no getting around the moment
of truth.. and the emotions that accompany any moment of truth. Sheer undiluted
panic.!!
We
were expected to sit with the back to the sea on the edge of the boat, and just
flip over backwards. Why on earth did I sign up for this. What was I thinking…
I
was being helped by our captain of the boat cum assistant to make that leap of
faith. Finally the only thing that worked, as they show in the
skydiving/parajumping movies, was the friendly shove and in an instant, it was
over.
Slowly
the physics and physiology took over. The water was cold, but not freezing. I
had a neoprene suit in place. For some reason I was not sinking. Remember
yesterdays lesson. I was wearing a buoyancy control device. The inflated jacket
basically..but I was also wearing a belt with lead weights around my waist… Of
course I was also clutching to every part of the instructor … which must have
helped.
After
a few practice breaths, the panic eased out a bit. As I tried to breathe
through the regulator, and it wasn’t tough at all, the first thing that I realized
was that being in the open sea was much calmer than being in the rocking boat.
After a few minutes of bobbing around on the surface, I decided that the time
had come. One look downward through my mask and I was convinced that we had not
come here in vain. Firstly I could see. Even at the surface there was this layer
of plankton floating around (the first stage of the food chain of the universe,
the primordial soup as it were). Then as we tried to descend, I realized what
the instructor meant the previous day. You have to do only three things. The
rest we will do. Remember to breathe. (I was managing), equalize (the valsalva)
and that seemed to really be a problem right now. No amount of anticipation
could have prepared me for the crushing pressure on the ears. And that
precisely was preventing me from doing the third thing as instructed. Have
fun.
I
tried all the tricks, used the soft shell of the mask around the nose to pinch
and blow out but the equalization took its time coming. And after a few minutes
of pain in the ears, came the stuff that dreams are made of.
Suddenly everything was calm around me. All
manner and colour of fish were swimming around. I could only hear my own
breathing. (The exhalation is quite loud by the way.) It was truly the ZNMD
moment when Hritik has conquered all his demons. One could see large schools of
colourful fish (puffers, silvermunis, barracudas etc) swimming all around.
There were large and small jellyfish too. Every time one extended the hand out
to catch them, they seemed to be out of grasp (It is an optical illusion;
things are 30% farther than what they seem).
The description of awe and amazement can go on and on. We reached the ocean
floor, about 12 metres deep, a couple of times. The thirty minute dive seemed
like straight out of Alice in Wonderland….
Getting
back up was easy enough (no bends) and once on the boat one seemed to be at a
loss of words. It was enough to silently bob up and down in the boat and
reflect upon what had just transpired over the past 24 hours.
Everyone
completed their dives and enjoyed thoroughly. As expected Sangeeta and Divya
puked their guts out before the dive. We
were told it was a good thing!!. Shivani started hyperventilating, as expected,
but had been pushed over before she could make much of a scene. Her -3
prescription mask had leaked a bit and so she had to surface once, but had a
good time thereafter. The instructors kept clicking away with their waterproof
cameras and we managed some nice pics of the dives. As the PADI (professional
association of diving instructors) motto says. Don’t take anything but memories
and don’t leave anything but bubbles.
Later
in the day we celebrated with friends as we made short work of the famous 1/2
metre, charcoal fired pizza at Xtasi off J N Road.
Factfile:
Temple
Adventures operates out of Pondicherry. The packages are clearly mentioned on
the website and there are no hidden charges. The equipment used is first class.
The instructors are fabulous and complete safety is ensured throughout the
experience. Most importantly the whole thing is made to seem like fun, even if
its real serious business.
If
you were to compare the prices with those mentioned on the packages ex Port
Blair, this does seem more expensive. Someone who has done both may be able to
compare!!
Very interesting. Will get more details from you.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. Will get more details from you.
ReplyDeleteGreat experience & well written blog. I tried it at Port Blair & could relate to many of the emotions you went through.
ReplyDelete