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The true story of extreme deep diving with air and with
rebreathers, in which Leonardo Fusco pioneers a new frontier for a
centuries old maritime tradition. As friends who also push the
limits of this new fron- tier are killed, Leonardo pioneers the
use of hyperba- ric and submersible technology, with assistance
from his friends Hans Hass and Gerhard Haux.
For Captain Leonardo Fusco the discovery of the sea started at the
age of nine. Years later while snorkeling off the coast of
Palinuro, he discovered a branch of Corallium Rubrum (red coral)
that for centuries has been widely traded and highly valued in the
jewelry industry. As a result of this discovery, he started to
search for coral and soon he became the first coral- laro.
The intention of the author in writing this book is to make the
nations of the world aware of this sad reality and to promote a
universal consensus for the protection of Red and Pink Coral (Corallium
Rubrum) and for making trade of all coral illegal.
A portion of the proceeds from this book will go to www.Reef.org
Leonardo Fusco after being licensed as an off- shore captain in
1950, kept practicing this dangerous and mysterious profession of
corallaro (diving for red coral) for over thirty years. He then
travelled to anywhere in the world where the presence of red coral
was known or suspected: in Sardinia, then Costa Azzurra, Costa
Brava, Morocco and for five long years in Tunisia, and finally in
Japan. He then started researching and experiment- ing in order to
improve both diving safety standards and the survival of the
Corallium Rubrum species.
In 1953, at Cape Spartivento, Leonardo Fusco made his first Aqua
Lung dive, and everything changed. As spearfishing led Hans Hass
to an underwater career of science, film and photo- graphy, so
spearfishing led Leonardo to an under-water career of coral
harvesting, marine biology, mixed gas technology and hyperbaric
research.
This book written by Leonardo Fusco is dedicated to the worldwide
protection of red and pink coral off the coast of Sardinia, the
Mediterranean and throughout the world, which is in danger of
extinction due to human intervention.
Leonardo Fusco, is known all over Europe and Japan as “ il
Comandante” (The Captain) or the “ Master Mariner” for his astute
knowledge of all things of the sea. I have known him well, as we
met multiple times years ago, mostly in Italy at meetings
dedicated to hyperbaric medicine: I had newly been elected
President of the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society. It is an
international and scholarly non- profit organization dedicated to
the worldwide collection of scientific information for diving and
hyperbaric medicine. When I met Fusco in 1995, he had already
completed several careers: as an underwater explorer, as a self
taught diving maverick, as a business entrepreneur providing
zoological specimens to sea aquariums throughout Europe and as a
collector and harvester of red coral. Finally, Leonardo Fusco
coupled his empirical knowledge and experience to safely dive to
the dangerous depths where the Mediterranean red coral thrives,
usually around 80 meters underwater and deeper than it is safe to
reach on a simple compressed-air dive. He called this book of his
memoirs “Red Gold”, in honor of the organism and the precious
stone he learned to harvest and (as he admits) to “plunder” as a
young explorer. He is now trying to create ways to re-seed the
coral and re-populate this unique creature as a renewable resource
of the seas.
Our first of many meetings stands out in my mind, as “ il
Comandante” and his German wife, Vera, hosted me and my Sicilian
wife, Pat, at their house in Palinuro. In this sleepy coastal town
south of Napoli, across a table overlooking the sea, we shared an
al fresco dinner. We discussed various underwater artifacts from
several civilizations that he had observed and collected not too
far from his house, in this same sea. It was a cultured discussion
in English, German and Italian and in diverse Italian dialects. We
evaluated the advantages of Heliox diving, a mixture of Helium and
Oxygen, and the use of the latest rebreathers apparatus. This is a
very advanced technical breathing equipment, that we had recently
used during experiments at the Duke Environmental Laboratories at
Duke University, in North Carolina, with the support of the US
Navy Diving Unit. Fusco, to my surprise, had already adaqpted and
used this technique in the open waters of Sardinia.
Enrico Camporesi, MD Emeritus Professor of Surgery/Anestheosiology
University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa General
Hospital.
Leonardo Fusco entered the pristine Mediterranean Sea in 1949 and
was hypnotized by the underwater beauty that he saw and by the
surge of adventure that raced though his body. Lured by the
challenge of exploring the Blue Cave at Palinuro he started fee
diving with home-made equipment, following the path that Austrian
pioneer Professor Hans Hass had taken a decade earlier.
History records that during 1930-1940 the early pioneers of
untethered “swim diving” were mainly hunters, and developed their
breath-hold endurance by chasing and spearing fish. Leonardo
became one of these. Their athleticism and abilities underwater
allowed them glimpses of a new world that hardy any humans had
seen. The availability of the Cousteau-Gagnan Aqua Lung in Europe
during the late 1940’s and early 1950’s gave these free divers the
ability to not only stay longer in their new world, but to dive
much deeper into it. Exploration could last for more than one
breath. This ability to stay longer and go deeper allowed a
detailed exploration of the sea bed, and in the case of Leonardo,
allowed him to create a new fisheries trade. He became, in
essence, an underwater farmer of Red Coral. However, when
harvesting the crop, no thought was directed at its re-cultivation
or sustainability. It was not until later is his career that these
issues came to the fore and redirected his energies.
Before Leonardo entered the sea, Red Coral had been harvested for
centuries from the oceans surface by a boat dragging a dredge and
net, called The Cross of Saint Andrew, across the sea floor and
snagging the coral in the net. In this style of fishing, the boat
crew never saw what they were catching until they hauled the net
up. It was random fishing that wrought random destruction of
everything living on the sea floor, scarring it on an immense
scale.
A far more environmentally successful method of harvesting the red
coral came about with the development of the deep sea diving
helmet in the mid 1800’s. Since that period a few divers equipped
with the traditional copper and brass diving helmet had gathered
red coral from the depths by harvesting each branch face-to-face
through the view ports of their helmets. However, their cumbersome
equipment, and the air hose that attached them like a leash to the
surface boat, restricted the range of underwater harvesting to a
very limited area.
Then in 1953, at Cape Spartivento, Leonardo Fusco made his first
Aqua Lung dive, and everything changed. As spearfishing led Hans
Hass to an underwater career of science, film and photography, so
spearfishing led Leonardo to an underwater career of coral
harvesting, marine biology, mixed gas technology and hyperbaric
research. Diving to recover his lost speargun, Leonardo discovered
a carpet of red coral, and his life took a whole new direction.
Using the Aqua Lung Leonardo became probably the first
free-swimming underwater farmer, as he took to the deep dark
depths of the Mediterranean to harvest crops of Red Coral in
locations that had never been seen by human eyes. His were to be
the first. They would not be the last. More divers quickly
appeared and the underwater Red Gold Rush started. The harvesting
methods developed by Leonardo and the divers who followed him were
far less damaging to the surrounding marine environment as they
were able to select individual corals, but they were so effective
that corals that had thrived for thousands of years were almost
harvested to extinction.
But in a Gold Rush of any hue, sustainability and preservation
seldom enter the equation. En mass the Red Coral divers pushed
onwards, attempting dives that were deeper and longer.
To this day, diving deeper and longer continues to be a goal for
humans. During Leonardo’s time there was only limited information
available to him on the risk of decompression sickness.
Leslie Leaney, Co-Founder of Historical Diver Society, USA.
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