27 sailfish
04-01-2010, 07:00 PM
Friend of mine has a side scan unit and we used it to look at some of my dive sites.
I dive a lot in the upper Chesapeake bay - near Annapolis , Md. and the visibility is often less then 6 inches.
I was hoping the side scan would shed some light on what I've been crawling over the last few years.
We went to a sewer pipe outflow - gotta love local diving - and got a good picture of the exposed pipe and we could even see the plume of discharge. This spot is often good to find snagged anchors.
http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q295/lisazinck/shot58.png
Went to another spot - an old barge. I've only dove this a few times but plan to explore it more. It is not well known so there are few anchors to find. We think the blurry thing is a lost net.
http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q295/lisazinck/shot72.png
The side scan is a wild tool. Really helps to see before going over the side.
I dive a lot in the upper Chesapeake bay - near Annapolis , Md. and the visibility is often less then 6 inches.
I was hoping the side scan would shed some light on what I've been crawling over the last few years.
We went to a sewer pipe outflow - gotta love local diving - and got a good picture of the exposed pipe and we could even see the plume of discharge. This spot is often good to find snagged anchors.
http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q295/lisazinck/shot58.png
Went to another spot - an old barge. I've only dove this a few times but plan to explore it more. It is not well known so there are few anchors to find. We think the blurry thing is a lost net.
http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q295/lisazinck/shot72.png
The side scan is a wild tool. Really helps to see before going over the side.