Sharkshield
Feb/110
For all of you who are afraid of sharks while diving….and you have bad Karma because you still eat shark sandwiches …here is a great solution for you- the Sharkshield!
Diving Safely- Proper Reheating of the Body
Dec/100
One of the secret dangers of SCUBA diving (or doing any type of water sport where you are immersed in water for any length of time) is hypothermia. Much attention is given to having the proper equipment for diving safely; computers, mask, wetsuit, dive plan, BCs, but people also need to consider keeping the body safe from hypothermia. Here are some suggestions from PADI on how to protect yourself from the dangers of slow cooling…..
Because water has a specific heat approximately 1000 times greater than that of air and a thermal conductivity 24 times greater than that of air, the body loses heat much faster in water than in air of the same temperature.
Use of apparently adequate thermal protection in prolonged dives, or repeated dives over several days, may produce long slow cooling and undetected hypothermia even in tropical water.
At the end of a dive, a cold diver should be re-warmed. Cold divers should not make a second dive on the same day, because it is difficult to know when body heat has been restored. However, if a second dive is necessary, it is advisable to overdo the re-warming until sweating occurs, which indicates that body heat has been restored. The diver should then change into warm, dry clothing and continue some mild exercise to improve heat production and circulation.
Five Strategies for Preserving Body Heat:
For a more comfortable and ultimately safer dive follow these tips for conserving body heat.
Stay warm before the dive. Heat loss is gradual and can start long before you get to the dive site.
Stay warm between repetitive dives. Standing around in wet gear between dives can add to your body’s deprivation of warmth through evaporative heat loss.
Get warmed up as soon as possible after a dive. You can start on the dive boat by toweling off and getting into dry clothes.
You can develop hypothermia without immediately recognizing it. When choosing your exposure suit, err on the side of thermal protection.
Become an educated consumer. Visit your local dive shop and have them show you the different styles of protective garments and accessories. Don’t be afraid to ask questions.
This is a case for the Su
rf-fur!!!
New Features on Surf-fur Parka 2010!!
Nov/100
Our warehouse is now filled with the newest shipment of the Surf-fur Water Parka. For all of you loyal customers who have been waiting for the newest edition to our water parka design family….here it is!!! Thanks for waiting!
New Feature #1
A cozy neckwarmer has been added to the inner neckline. When you snap it up, it is like a warm fuzzy scarf has been placed lovingly around your neck. It will bring you back to the days when mom used to dress you for the 4 minute walk to school right after the big snow storm. The difference is that only one layer is required and you will still be able to put your arms fully down to your sides and turn your head….

New Feature #2
A BIGGER Ipod/ key pocket on the inside
Now you can put your Ipod, money clip, Blackberry, wedding ring, diamond tennis bracelet, AND your keys to the Ferrari in there. It fully velcros shut to lock them in.

New Feature #3
Zen Pockets. Ok, it is not really new…just moved around a bit to a better place… and feeling more …Zen…Om. Now, extreeme caution needs to be used when putting your hand through to the other side. It is for p-u-l-l-i-n-g UP p-a-n-t-s and helping you change easily and in privacy.

New Feature #4
Cool toggle used to tighten up the hood for those extra brisk days (this feature has been road tested in Chicago). It will be black, not red.

And the moment everyone has been waiting for……..New Feature #5
New and Improved SNAPS!! These are the highest quality snaps we could find on the market!

And, as always, they are fully wind-proof, water-resistant, breathable and cool looking.
Order yours today!
Ocean waves getting bigger, and stronger
Nov/100
Rogue waves challenge pilots; experts differ on whether climate change is the cause.
Borrowed from the McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON It’s one of the most treacherous stretches of water in the world, where 1 million cubic feet of water a second collides with 20- or 30-foot ocean swells over a four-mile stretch of shifting sand.
A small band of pilots braves often-treacherous conditions to guide ships across the Columbia River Bar.
The pilots who work the “Graveyard of the Pacific” have a deep respect for the relentless forces they face daily as they ride out to tankers, bulk carriers, car carriers, and cargo and passenger ships standing offshore. They commute in 72-foot self-righting boats that can roll over 360 degrees as winter gales and sometimes hurricane-force storms blast out of the North Pacific.
The pilots also confirm what marine scientists have just started talking about: Ocean waves are becoming bigger and more powerful, and climate change could be the cause.
“We’ve been talking about it for a couple of years now,” said Capt. Dan Jordan, who served in the merchant marine for 30 years before becoming a Columbia River Bar pilot. “Mother Nature has an easy way of telling us who is in charge.”
Using buoy data and models based on wind patterns, scientists say that the waves off the coast of the Pacific Northwest and along the Atlantic seaboard from West Palm Beach, Fla., to Cape Hatteras, N.C., are steadily increasing in size. And, at least in the Northwest, the larger waves are considered more of a threat to coastal communities and beaches than the rise in sea level accompanying global warming is.
Similar increases in wave height have been noticed in the North Atlantic off England.
Unclear is whether the number and height of “rogue” waves beyond the continental shelf have increased. The existence of such freak waves, which can reach 100 feet or more in height and can swamp a large ship in seconds, wasn’t proved until 2004, when European satellites equipped with radar detected 10 of them during a three-week period. According to some estimates, two merchant ships a month disappear without a trace, thought to be victims of rogue waves.
“Obviously, this is an issue we are interested in,” said Trevor Maynard of Lloyd’s of London’s emerging risk team, which tracks global climate-change developments. “We are seeing climate change fingerprints on a lot of events.”
Since the mid-1970s, buoy data show the height of the biggest waves off the Northwest coast has increased an average of about four inches a year, or about 10 feet total, according to Peter Ruggiero, an assistant geosciences professor at Oregon State University and the lead author of a study published recently in the journal Coastal Engineering.

Ruggiero and his colleagues also estimated how high a 100-year wave might be. These would be the largest waves expected to come along every 100 years. The estimate has increased 40 percent since the 1970s, from 33 feet to 46 feet. Some calculations estimate a 100-year wave might be 55 feet high, taller than a five-story building.
“We are assuming the trends will increase in the future,” Ruggiero said.
The future already may be here, however.
Jordan, the Columbia River pilot, said a 44-foot wave was recorded off the river in October. In a major spring storm in 2007, a 54-foot wave was recorded.
“After that the buoy quit recording,” Jordan said.
On the East Coast, a yet-to-be-published study also has showed that average wave heights have been increasing, by a couple of centimeters or so a year.
“The averages aren’t very exciting,” said Peter Adams, an assistant professor in the University of Florida’s Department of Geological Sciences who used wind data from the past 20 to 30 years to develop a wave height model. “Given that there are 3 million waves a year, one wave every 10 seconds, it’s not so alarming.”
Adams said he finds it startling that the height of the biggest waves has increased nearly a foot in 10 years.
“In a lifetime, that can be profound,” he said.
A scientific debate is raging over what’s causing the increase in wave size. Possible causes include changing storm tracks, higher winds and more intense winter storms – all signs of global climate change.
“While these increases are most likely due to Earth’s changing climate, uncertainty exists as to whether they are the product of human-induced greenhouse warming or represent variations related to natural multi-decadal climate cycles,” Ruggiero’s study said.
Among the weather phenomenon that could be affecting wave heights in the Pacific, Ruggiero said, are El Nino – warmer surface temperatures in the tropical eastern Pacific – and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation – 20- to 30-year patterns of warmer or cooler surface temperatures in the Pacific.
“There is a lot of speculation, a lot of reading of tea leaves,” he said.
Others are skeptical about any link to climate change.
Richard Seymour, the head of the Ocean Engineering Research Group at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California, said any connection between increased wave height and climate change is tenuous. In fact, Seymour said, there aren’t enough data on wave heights to provide the “statistical reliability” to predict any trends.
Seymour and others said too little is known about the oceans.
“It always struck me as odd we know more about the surface of Mars than the floor of the Pacific Ocean,” he said.
Surf-fur in action
Nov/100
Here is a picture of the Surf-fur camping in the Redwood forest. What a cute family! Thanks to the Marley family for sending that in!
We used ours last weekend camping at El Capitan Canyon. It was a cold night in the tent and none of us wanted to take the Surf-fur off before getting into our sleeping bags so… we slept in them!

Customer feedback of the day
Nov/100
Hi Cindy,
We just got back from a week diving in Roatan. We had a couple stormy/windy days towards the end of the week and the surf-fur was broken out after the first dive on Thursday morning. The coats received a lot of comments and questions from our dive group. Expect some new orders from Colorado.
Attached is an ‘action’ photo of Jane in her parka at speed on the dive boat.
Neatest comment I got on mine; In one of our on-land stops during a surface interval; I was wearing a full, mostly black wetsuit with black boots, with the parka on but unbuttoned and was walking though the area were one of the guys from one of the other boats called out – “Nice Darth Vader cloak!”
The parkas are everything you’ve claimed of them and will be a standard part of our dive gear in the future.

Customer Testimonial
Oct/100
We recently had a very interesting customer testimonial that had feedback in it that we have never heard before. It went like this….
“I really like the snap features on the Surf-fur water parka. I pictured myself accidentally falling off the boat with your average dive parka on…one with zippers…and it would be pretty hard to take that coat off under water. I would drown. The Surf-fur snaps will just need a good yank and all snaps pop open.”
He continued to purchase one for all of his kids and his wife. Thanks for that interesting new insight on snaps!
The New and Improved Surf-fur Water Parka!
Oct/100
We just got the production sample in of our new “improved” Surf-fur water parka and it is to DIE for!!! I don’t want to give too much away, but it is warmer, more functional and the best quality stitching and snaps ever!! I think we are ready to roll!
Germans fight for their right to SURF!
Sep/100

Surfing in the middle of one of Europe’s most expensive cities has just become legal. A river in Munich’s English Garden has hosted surfers and curious spectators alike for 30 years. Although long forbidden, experienced surfers can now ride the waves legally! Better get their Surf-fur water parkas on for the walk through that frigid city!!!! Check out the link to the full article below.
The White Room Episodes
Sep/100
We recently sent a bunch of Surf-furs to The White Room Episodes for their Big ski trip to Canada to film another episode of Board Stories.The Hawaiian based film crew was treated to some of Big White’s finest mountain activities and used their Surf-furs to keep them warm apres ski. Follow the team as they explore the most intimate secrets of this mountain town that sits just outside of Kelowna, BC. Filmed winter 09/2010
