we dove the drop off a number of times back in the 70's... at times descending deeper than we should have - mesmerizing, it was so easy to just float & drift down - and look out and see a sea turtle or ray pass by - or a shark, just hanging, hovering off in the deep blue. some of the most incredible dives & experiences I have had in my 66 years. Unbelievable - fantastic... beautiful
O man, I agree! We started going to Grand Cayman in the early 70s. Cayman Kai didn't have a certified dive instructor - we'd just go with one of the employees. I'm embarrassed to admit that we went well over 200 feet a few times.... unbelievable, and no doubt foolish. But what incredible experiences! Sadly they had someone drown diving in very shallow water, and obviously from then on they hired a Dive Master to run the whole operation... no more 200+ dives, but I'll never forget it.
I snorkeled the other side of the reef, but just 10s of feet from the dropoff. If I were snorkeling and met that wall I would have a heart attack! I'm an excellent swimmer, but have a strange fear of water heights. Beautiful video!
Is it dangerous swimming /snorkeling / diving RIGHT ON the drop off , as in , do you risk getting sucked down by some strong currents, or what kind of forces are at play right on the edge of the drop??
Great footage! I have an affinity for water but deep drop offs scare me to bits, i won't go near one. To me, the drop off is the start of no-mans land. The dark belongs to the creatures of the abyss
Not entirely factual....Grand Cayman's Northern Wall drops off to depths near 2,000 feet at its deepest. Only in the Cayman trench will reach depths range 24K feet and that's about 30 miles south of the island. Beautiful video though.....
Dove this many years ago when the whale shark came up the wall and was caught on video by first dive underwater photographers! ...they were extremely startled. Simply amazing. The wall way out did Stingray City or the cemetery reef turtle but the sunset sail from the Hyatt used to be phenomenal. I miss the good old days!
While the Cayman North wall is impressive it is not over 25,000 ft deep. At 0:28 you are referring to the Cayman Trench which is located south of the Grand Cayman, nowhere near your dive site.
The video has been colour graded to bring back some of the colour, that's why it is brown. Your eyes would see it as all blue at that depth (colours are lost as light passes through water, starting at the red end of the spectrum). Colour grading can't bring back missing red if there is none captured by the camera. Without powerful lights, and at distances of more than c3-6 feet, there would be no red to recover. Night diving on the North Wall can be fantastic. Clear water makes it look like you are in air, and your dive lights illuminate the true colours of the sponges, corals etc.
we dove the drop off a number of times back in the 70's... at times descending deeper than we should have - mesmerizing, it was so easy to just float & drift down - and look out and see a sea turtle or ray pass by - or a shark, just hanging, hovering off in the deep blue. some of the most incredible dives & experiences I have had in my 66 years. Unbelievable - fantastic... beautiful
O man, I agree! We started going to Grand Cayman in the early 70s. Cayman Kai didn't have a certified dive instructor - we'd just go with one of the employees. I'm embarrassed to admit that we went well over 200 feet a few times.... unbelievable, and no doubt foolish. But what incredible experiences!
Sadly they had someone drown diving in very shallow water, and obviously from then on they hired a Dive Master to run the whole operation... no more 200+ dives, but I'll never forget it.
I snorkeled the other side of the reef, but just 10s of feet from the dropoff. If I were snorkeling and met that wall I would have a heart attack! I'm an excellent swimmer, but have a strange fear of water heights. Beautiful video!
Is it dangerous swimming /snorkeling / diving RIGHT ON the drop off , as in , do you risk getting sucked down by some strong currents, or what kind of forces are at play right on the edge of the drop??
I agree. Deep water scares the s**t out of me. I think it's the vulnerability and the not knowing what's beneath you...
the same about me:-O
§paethon same
I would love to try and swim down see how far I can make it lol
I was jet skiing by the western beach. It scared me when the water was suddenly very dark. I went back to the blue/green water quickly.
I've always gotten chills when I dive into that pit
Incredible! Just marvelous. What an experience...
Great footage! I have an affinity for water but deep drop offs scare me to bits, i won't go near one. To me, the drop off is the start of no-mans land. The dark belongs to the creatures of the abyss
I'm with you !
One of my favorite dive sites in the world….. Grand Cayman has so many awesome dive sites and shore diving is also grand….
This part in Nemo scared the shit outta me bruh
glad I wasn't the only one to think of that! lol
our oceans are incredible. must be protected.
The view is gorgeous.
The music? Beyond soul touching.
Ever find out what song that was??
@@justinfutch6279 See the description to the video
That's an interesting ship. I think it's cool/interesting that you can swim through the ships that have drowned.
Not entirely factual....Grand Cayman's Northern Wall drops off to depths near 2,000 feet at its deepest. Only in the Cayman trench will reach depths range 24K feet and that's about 30 miles south of the island. Beautiful video though.....
Omg that scares me so much but at the same time I want to experience this so bad.
Just imagine what is down there
Avenged Rider Yes... Imagine... Many undiscovered species for sure. And Geological featues and anomalies...
Not very much
0:25 Very scary😩
Beautiful ❤️.
i have dreams about these places and i literally just want to shut my eyes and leave when i see them
Dove this many years ago when the whale shark came up the wall and was caught on video by first dive underwater photographers! ...they were extremely startled. Simply amazing. The wall way out did Stingray City or the cemetery reef turtle but the sunset sail from the Hyatt used to be phenomenal. I miss the good old days!
This isnt considered deep diving though right ? Like..where you have to be careful of your ascension?
While the Cayman North wall is impressive it is not over 25,000 ft deep. At 0:28 you are referring to the Cayman Trench which is located south of the Grand Cayman, nowhere near your dive site.
Ah yes my daily dose of existential dread
I was there and saw the trench
Did you have your white balance on auto or manual?
Steven Paige manual always. Also using red filter to add red back at depth. Need to keep manually changing wb as you change depth
How deep did you guys go?
They used Nitrox (presumably 32% oxygen) so maximum depth of 110ft.
Warning: entering ecological dead zone
Lol
Great video but coral reefs need to be in a low nutrient environment to thrive. At least that's what I learned when I took marine biology.
Not for me I'll watch it on RUclips. Too scared of deep dark unknown waters. I'll die if I see that drop off.
did all that coral used to be colorful? looks brown and kinda dead :( i feel like its supposed to be full of color
loses color below 60 feet or so - when doing photography you need lights to see the color
The video has been colour graded to bring back some of the colour, that's why it is brown. Your eyes would see it as all blue at that depth (colours are lost as light passes through water, starting at the red end of the spectrum). Colour grading can't bring back missing red if there is none captured by the camera. Without powerful lights, and at distances of more than c3-6 feet, there would be no red to recover. Night diving on the North Wall can be fantastic. Clear water makes it look like you are in air, and your dive lights illuminate the true colours of the sponges, corals etc.
that reef dead af
Nieds welp you can thank our love for the environment for that. Our reefs are fading away due to chemicals and litter in the water.
Lmao