Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Catch Up Time!

It's been a while, but a friend of mine had me answer some questions for their blog which I thought I'd post as a nice update on what's been going on, and a good excuse to start writing again.

The context: I'm just finishing my dive instructor course at Buddha View in Koh Tao, Thailand.

The link to the blog: http://www.gopro-divetalk.com

The transcript:



Hey, I'm Chris from Toronto. I just graduated from university a couple years ago - BFA in film production - where I spent every waking moment of every day making films, working on set, watching movies, talking about movies, and generally not having a minute of spare time for anything else. I wanted to get away for a bit of an adventure though before I got too entrenched in the industry and started to settle in.

So I've been wandering around the world for the last year and a half or so, and when I finally made it here to Koh Tao something clicked, and I decided I'd finally found somewhere to settle down for a while, and a job I'd be excited to do.

Where did you start diving?
My first time diving was a few years ago in New Zealand where a friend of mine kit me up in his equipment, threw me out into the water in a shallow bay, and I got to helplessly float around for a while without really getting how it all worked.
Since then I've done my Open Water in Koh Tao I've made it back to NZ for a couple dives where I actually knew what I was doing, but most of my experience is here on Koh Tao where I've been doing my Divemaster internship at New Way Diving and working for a couple months as a freelance Divemaster.

What means diving for you?
Since I was a kid I've been just fascinated by learning about the underwater world, loved snorkeling, and couldn't wait for the day when I finally learned to dive.
I love the way it feels, the graceful way you hover about in a three dimensional space, and the completely new world that you find yourself in unlike anything you're ever used to out of the water.
I especially love taking people out and showing them all of my favourite things - just spreading my enthusiasm to new people every time I take out a new customer.

Why did you choose to do the IDC and why did you choose Buddha View?
A few of my good friends had done their IDC at Buddha View and highly recommended it. Then when I met Mark and saw how entertaining he was, and how much experience he had on Koh Tao with the hundreds of crazy dive stories to go behind it, I was pretty sold.

Do you feel any anxiety for the IDC? Why, why not?
I'm really not too worried actually. The instructors who lead my divemaster course at New Way did such a great job at showing me how to teach (I assisted on 15 courses) and helping me work on all my short comings as a dive leader, that I've really feel completely confident in my abilities to teach a course from the start of the IDC. Plus the experience leading customers on dives and teaching scuba reviews has really helped me as well.

What do you think about the IDC so far?
It's been really cool. A great group of guys, some really good instructors, and enough humour and good stories to always keep things interesting.
After all the stuff they're putting us through, I'm confident we'll all be able to pass our IE no problem. I am just itching to get back in the ocean and start leading dives again though.

What is your plan after you passed the exam?
As soon as I'm finished recovering for the post IE party hangover, I'm gonna pick up a couple specialty instructor certifications, start hanging around some of my favourite shops on the island looking for freelance work, and scouring the bars for potential new students.
Really, it's strictly for professional reasons - it kills me to have to be out on the beach having a few quiet Changs every night....

If you knew the manager of the dive center, you really want to work
for, would read this interview, what would you like to tell about
yourself?

It's all mostly all in here. I guess I'd just have to add that I'm getting myself ready to be call every minute of the day - ready to pick up whatever comes my way from showing up on twenty minutes notice to teach a single diver to taking out a big group with a bigger shop.
And that I'm really too excited to start teaching.

Where can this manager or other divers with questions find you?
Got a horribly out of date website that I really gotta start working on again:
www.chrisciosk.com
Email: chrisciosk@gmail.com
Chris Ciosk on Facebook: I'm the only one!

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Kashmir

The cause of three wars between India and Pakistan, home to perennial violence and political unrest, the Kashmir valley lay waiting at the other end of the tunnel that my bus was speeding through.

Once the security checks were finished and we finally emerged on the other side though, it wasn’t the barren landscape pockmarked by war that one might expect. My first thought, actually, was ‘It’s the shire!’ One of the most gorgeous places I’d seen in my entire trip to India. Guess it would have to be somewhere worth fighting over.

Even though the landscape wouldn’t look too out of place in somewhere like New Zealand or British Columbia, there’s something really immediate about the place – like anything could happen at any moment. There’s a sort of intensity behind it all. The gardens you wander through don’t feel like the product of some aging women’s horticultural association with too much time on their hands. They’re places of such simple beauty that men have been fighting for claim over them for centuries

The barbed wire, machine guns, soldiers, only make things seem more fragile, immediate. The much photographed Dal Lake looks all the more serene when you’re seeing it within the context of the conflict that’s raging around it.

When I arrived in Srinigar, the capital of the state, most of the city had been shut down. There’d been a city wide strike lasting more than a week already after the rape and murder of two Kashmiri girls – supposedly by the Indian army. The only thing I could see of most it was from the inside of the richshaw. The driver didn’t think it was safe for me to go outside.

If that wasn’t enough prices all seemed to be set for proper Western tourists with actual money – not poor backpackers like myself – so after splurging and renting my very own houseboat where I spent a day recuperating from the long bus trip, I caught the first bus I could out of the valley and up onto the Tibetan Plateau.

The living room in my boat

It’s not the sort of place that makes you want to stop in your tracks and settle in for a while by a long shot, but it’s definitely one of those places that would really be a terrible thing to miss.

The Blog Continues

If you haven't noticed, it's been a long time.
Here I am in Wellington already, and I've left you all stranded back in Jammu half a year ago.
The latest? *Spoiler Alert* I'm still alive. *Spoiler Alert*
The hobbit doc? Unlikely. I think that Andy was a lot closer to the mark then we expected him to be.
Becoming an elf: Still on. I may even have some new companions joining me.
The blog: We're going to Kashmir! I'm picking up where I left off half a year ago to take us all the way up to the present moment. So, a warm welcome to everyone who's come back to join me on my global perambulations. Good to see you again!
And now, without further ado, let's go back in time to June of 2009 where we left off.