Bernie Chowdhury

Bernie
Chowdhury, CHT, is a popular
and engaging speaker who has presented at dive shows, shops and clubs
throughout the U.S., and in eight foreign countries. He has worn many
hats during his 24 years in diving, including: instructor, expedition
organizer, industry consultant, documentary co-producer, lecturer,
magazine publisher, and author, to name a few. His first book, The Last Dive, (non-fiction, published by HarperCollins
in North America, Oct., 2000; paperback, March, 2002) has received
critical acclaim. It has been published in 10 languages, and two audio
versions. Bernie is a Fellow of the Explorers Club, was named 2001
Diver of the Year (Education) by Beneath the Sea, which hosts North
America's largest consumer scuba diving show (at New Jersey's
Meadowlands), was on the Board of Directors of the Historical Diving
Society and was tech column editor for Canadian-based Diver magazine.
He has been a (U.S.) board-certified hyperbaric technologist (CHT)
since 2004. Bernie presented at Shipwrecks/2002 (The Last Dive) and Shipwrecks/2003 (Norway: "Wrecks of the Norwegian
Arctic at Narvik")
"Controversial War Wrecks of the
Orkney Islands/Scapa Flow"
Scapa
Flow, in Scotland's Orkney
Islands, is Europe's wreck diving Mecca. All levels of diver, from cold
water beginners through the most experienced technical divers, have
plenty of history - and controversial wrecks - to explore. The main
attraction for divers continues to be the remnants of the German World
War l High Seas Fleet, which fought that war's major naval conflict,
the Battle of Jutland. These wrecks include three dreadnought class
battleships and four light cruisers.
In recent years, the rise of technical
diving has opened up ever more
challenging sites. In May, 1996, a team of technical divers from the
British Army set out to find and dive the World War l British
destroyer H.M.S. Pheasant, which sank mysteriously in 1917. This
project was the first of its kind approved by the British military and
is noteworthy because it employed technical, rather than commercial or
military, techniques. The team found what it believes to be the
H.M.S. Pheasant in 280 feet. Some of Bernie's underwater video taken on
this project was shown on BBC Scotland news. Other dives in the Orkney
Islands include the controversial war grave H.M.S. Hampshire, which
took British Secretary for War Lord Kitchener and his general staff to
their graves in June, 1916, at the height of World War l. Recent
British Parliamentary action has now officially restricted these
sites. Video and slides from Bernie's fourteen trips to Orkney will be
shown.