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  • (breathing thru oxygen tank)

  • LAURA: I remember my first night dive,

  • we were down at Titlow Beach

  • and I had this little teeny light...

  • and my beam of light was just big enough to light up

  • one little alabaster nudibranch.

  • And I got this in my beam and I'm like,

  • "That is the coolest thing I've ever seen...

  • it's like, crazy!"

  • I didn't have any words to describe it when I got

  • out of the water.

  • The process of shooting underwater

  • can be somewhat physically demanding.

  • You're actually trying to hold very still in a sometimes

  • very dynamic environment and so trying to hold

  • really, really steady and get that shot, and hold still...

  • it's hard on the surface to get the shots you want...

  • it's multiplied by four or five underwater.

  • And then you can't talk to each other.

  • It's incredibly important to have a good team that you trust,

  • especially when you're shooting video

  • because I'm focused on the camera.

  • You know,if I have a leak in my tanks or something's

  • going wrong, I know that they're right there.

  • (music)

  • To go do these dives, I need a dive buddy...

  • and sometimes that dive buddy's, you know,

  • maybe someone who doesn't have all the gear they need yet.

  • Well, and I've been lucky because I had a dive shop

  • and I could accumulate a fair bit of gear...

  • um, tanks, regulators, lots and lots of lights, more tanks,

  • rebreather, drysuit, drysuit underwear, cameras,

  • housings for cameras, fins, lots of fins, masks,

  • I think I only have one snorkel...

  • What else do I have?

  • ...Lots and lots and lots.

  • (dog shaking)

  • When you get all the layers on, when I get my really

  • heavy undergarments, like that are twice as thick

  • as these guys, um, I feel like a little kid in a snowsuit

  • and you need like your parents to like roll you to the water.

  • Because of the cold, the water actually can,

  • hold more oxygen...

  • and so, the marine life is incredibly diverse out here.

  • It's got so much life.

  • It's got the metridium anemones, those are the big white

  • cauliflower-looking guys, you've got all the nudibranchs

  • and different invertebrate marine life...

  • you've got the world's biggest octopus?

  • I mean, really, how could I not dive out here.

  • (laughing, water splash)

  • I'm really lucky that I get invited to lots of different

  • places to give presentations...

  • to schools, community clubs.

  • I was at the West Seattle Rotary and I put on some video of a

  • storm drain and they were watching the video of this

  • very large outfall and they were confused a little bit

  • by what they were seeing and they were shocked

  • and the screen went black...

  • and I paused...

  • and then I pointed to the window and I said,

  • "That storm drain is right there."

  • When people describe that smell and that feel after a rainstorm,

  • what do they say...

  • "It's so clean,"

  • "It's so fresh,"

  • but what they don't think about is,

  • "Where did all that go?"

  • Everything's so clean because all of the trash went

  • right out into Puget Sound.

  • Ever since I was a little kid, I wanted to make the

  • world a better place.

  • And I didn't know how I was going to do it,

  • I just knew that it was what I had to do.

  • Diving and Puget Sound has given me so much

  • that it's kind of my duty to give back.

  • My role in this is to use the skills I have and help share

  • what I see and help grow awareness and give Puget Sound

  • and the critters that live there, a voice.

  • My name is Laura James.

  • I'm a diver, videographer, and environmental activist

  • out here in Puget Sound.

(breathing thru oxygen tank)

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