DIVING: DIVE INTO THE NIGHT
Do you have what it takes to dive in the dark? Surrounded by nothing but pitch black, not knowing what is around you, whatever sounds you make come out muffled. Who would willingly put themselves in such a situation? Scuba divers that’s who. Whilst diving in the day exposes you to a whole new world of perfectly illuminated underwater wildlife, diving at night is considered special.
Pakistan is blessed with an incredibly rich and diverse underwater wildlife. We have very vibrant and thriving coral reefs, full of the beautiful tropical fish, crustaceans and other animals. Diving season here roughly begins in late September or early October and ends around mid-April, as monsoon winds that come in summer make the sea too rough and too unsafe to swim, let alone dive. So this is smack in the middle of the prime time for diving in Pakistan.
Every single week brings something new: from reefs full of eels during their mating season, to the sudden emergence of salps (jelly-like beings that emerge in warmer waters and clear the water of carbon dioxide). On another visit, one may see colonies of coral polyps full of eggs for their annual spawning. In the last few weeks, jellyfish (some up to a several feet in size) have made an appearance and the sea has been covered with phytoplankton — it looks green and slimy on the surface but after sunset, in the dark, it glows. It’s quite magical.
With the flick of the switch, a whole new world of diverse aquatic life is illuminated before you
My first night dive (and consecutive dives) in Pakistan have been with one of the only two recreational diving institutes in the country. A few minutes before sunset, we were instructed by the dive master, who would be leading the dive, to start getting ready to and jump into the water. Torches have to be turned on before getting off the boat. Lose your torch and no one will be able to see you. As an added precaution, glow sticks were attached to our gear. As the sun began to set, we put our regulators in our mouth, emptied our BCDs (buoyancy control device — the jackets we can fill and empty with air) and began to descend into the deep.