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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 325
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Ever heard of Pickles Bank (Caribbean)?
On Apr 12, 3:07 am, "-hh" wrote:
Larry wrote:
"-hh" wrote
Pickles Bank
Google is so much fun....(c;
I found Abanks' Diving on Little Cayman
tel 345-945-1444
FAX 345-945-3319
96 S Church Street
Little Cayman Island.http://www.abanks.com.ky/isdead as their website.
Doesn't matter if they're DOA, since there is no "Church Street" on
Little Cayman. I did some checking and it turns out that the above
address is over in Georgetown, Grand Cayman.
Give 'em a jingle and ask 'em! They'll know exactly where it is if it
exists...I bet.
The Dive Operators don't know, but this makes sense because all three
(3) of the Cayman Islands are functionally deepwater pinnacles, so
there's no diving more than a 1/2 mile or so offshore because you're
beyond the dropoff, and with two exceptions, all of them are just
dayboats.
For an example of the local topology, here's a sounding map of western
Cayman Brac; depths are in feet. The island is roughly a mile wide,
so you can see that the 200ft line is only ~400yds (1/4 mile) offshore
and the 1000ft line is only a mile offsho
http://www.huntzinger.com/photo/2003/brac/cayman_brac_depths.jpg
Here's another look at the same info (Excel graph); two miles out, you
have 3000ft of water under your keel:
http://www.huntzinger.com/photo/2003/brac/brac_depths.jpg
With no water shallow enough for diving after you're a 1/2 mile
offshore and figuratively speaking, "Cuba", the dive operations have
generally no interest and thus, no knowledge. The furthest offshore
that they generally ever get is to make the 5 mile crossing of the
Bogue between Cayman Brac and Little Cayman.
I have done some more of my own digging and found that "Pickle Bank"
is another name/spelling.
http://rwsmaps.griffel.se/CoverageArea.jpg
http://greenwood.cr.usgs.gov/energy/...K/spatial/pdf/
caribbean.pdf
http://www.caymannetnews.com/Archive...icles/February
%202001/Issue%2060/picklebank.html
states:
[after an 8 hour transit from Rum Point, Grand Cayman]: "Pickle Bank,
located Northeast of Grand Cayman and approximately 85 miles South of
Cuba, is actually the top of a submerged seamount about three miles
long and one mile wide. The undersea mountain rises up from the ocean
floor 6,000 feet below, ascending to within 72 feet of the surface.
The shallow water environment attracts a multitude of small fish and
reef dwelling life, that in turn attracts the predators in the form of
shark, barracuda, tuna, dolphin, marlin and wahoo."
Sounds interesting...
-hh
Sounds like you talk to the fishermen instead of all the folks on the
pretty boats.
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