SCUBA June 2025 issue 156 | Page 34

SCUBA presents the first set of entries for our 2025 writing competition, A Dive to Remember. See box for details on how to enter
Paul Friday tells of a shallow but memorable seal encounter in the Farne Islands
COMPETITION

A Dive to Remember: Your stories

SCUBA presents the first set of entries for our 2025 writing competition, A Dive to Remember. See box for details on how to enter

Deadline extended

We are extending the deadline to Friday 27 June. Hopefully the entries published here will spark a few ideas. For a full set of rules and guidelines, please check out the competition launch in April’ s SCUBA or go onto BSAC’ s website and search under the‘ News & blog’ banner. Scroll down to posts from 17 March and you’ ll find it. Otherwise, email the editor at simon @ scubamagazine. co. uk and he’ ll send you a copy. Or just follow the format presented here and you’ ll be in the running for sure.
Thanks again to our sponsor, the prestigious suit manufacturer O’ Three. They are offering the winner an O’ Three 90 Ninety Trilaminate Dry Suit, with three materials to choose from. The suit will be fully customisable by you, to a maximum value of £ 2,500. Manufactured and supported here in the UK, shipping to UK mainland included.
Worth £ 2500

Shiny things

Paul Friday tells of a shallow but memorable seal encounter in the Farne Islands

Briefing: It has to be The Farne Islands. I know it’ s not deep, dark or daring, but it is the most delightful diving when the seals are in town.
The dive: We usually lie in the kelp at around six metres and let the seals come to us- the young ones are curious and want to play and the older ones are often sleeping in the clefts. There’ s no point chasing after the youngsters: they are Formula One to our bicycles. The advantage is totally theirs. But if you wait, and particularly if you have something bright or shiny, they come to you. And if you do move about in the kelp, they sneak up on you. This usually means you find yourself towing one – you find yourself struggling to make progress, look round and there’ s a seal holding your fin in its mouth and getting a free ride.
On this dive we went for a swim along the side of one of the islets. It’ s all very well keeping still in the kelp, but it can get cold. We suffered a couple of sneaky tows before we stopped by some rocks with
Paul Friday in warmer waters a small group of seals and I swapped to my video camera. It’ s just a plain action camera, but it has a video light, and one of the seals took a great liking to the shiny bright thing. After a couple of close looks it tried to taste it. What then ensued was three minutes of me holding back a very determined young seal that really wanted the shiny thing.
I kept the camera running, not because I’ m a budding wildlife cameraman but because I was trying to prevent the seal from eating the camera with my free hand. At one point you can hear its teeth scrape the housing. I must stress that this was all playful – the seal was mouthing at me, just as a puppy would. I could see its teeth and claws, and if it really wanted to bite me it would do more than hold my hand in its mouth. Even so, one tooth popped the stitching in the Kevlar palm of my glove.
But anyway, after watching me with great amusement it was finally my buddy’ s turn. My seal got bored and went off to chew on someone else’ s fins, at which point a second seal wrapped a flipper around my second buddy’ s leg. It was my turn to laugh and film my friends turning round to find a seal that had already gone back behind them.
Even when they all departed and we were surface-swimming back to the boat, seal heads were popping up around us and some of the finning became suspiciously hard work.
Debrief: This is magical diving – sea creatures that are masters of their environment, yet choose to interact with us and want to play.
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