Managaha Island
Photos by Kotaro Tsujino
Inhale. Exhale. Inhale, exhale! C’mon you can do it. Practice breathing through your mouth!
This was the first time I was given breathing lessons and I was finding
it hard with the mask on my face, over two pounds weight tied to my
waist and an oxygen tank strapped to my back.
Two dive instructors from the Aquaconnections dive shop checked our
progress as they gave me and my three office mates Jeanette, Arnold and
Andrew a crash course in scuba diving. I had wanted to try diving for a
long time but always backed out at the thought that I would be required
to learn how to swim first.
There I was, drowsy after a leisurely lunch and dragging my heavy
body into the pristine waters of Managaha Island one Saturday afternoon,
asking myself if I could really do it.
I had visions of taking Scuba Diving 101 and undergo hours of
classroom instruction where we will be introduced into the different
diving gear and their uses and be given time to practice wearing them on
dry land before being launched into the water. I had tried snorkeling a
couple of times in Davao and in Palau but snorkeling was different.
But there we were, doing a few minutes of underwater breathing
exercises and before we knew it, our instructors were guiding us deeper
beneath the huge waves, holding onto the ropes to stay together.
For first timers, we sure picked up a windy day where strong currents
make diving difficult but we didn’t know that yet. We held on to the
ropes as lifelines as we edged our way down into the deep. (well, not
that deep at 8 feet, but for a non-swimmer like me, it sure was deep!)
Our instructors monitored us, checking if we were doing okay and
gauging our breathing by the bubbles we made. We had to give them the
“ok” signal with our hands from time to time.
I was exhilarated thinking I was actually scuba diving when suddenly,
everything went dark and all I saw were strands of dark floating things
covering my mask. I forgot to breathe through my mouth and I then
remembered that I was a non-swimmer. What was I doing underwater when I
can’t even float a meter’s distance? Panicking, I flailed my arms and
tried to surface. A dive instructor immediately assisted me and pushed
me to the surface where huge waves tossed me around. He told me to relax
and turned me face up on the water as I took in huge gulps of air. I
realized my hair had gone loose and covered my mask but after I fixed my
hair, I assured my instructor I was definitely going down again.
I forgot all kinds of fear when we reached our destination.
Multi-colored fishes swam toward us and around a bed of corals we
couldn’t help but reach out to touch them. Everything was just
beautiful.
We stayed down for about 25 minutes before
our dive instructors signaled us to go back. It was a first experience
which just spurred my interest to go diving again.

Completing our scuba diving experience was photographer and diving
instructor Kotaro Tsujino of Underwater Adventures who documented our
first attempts at diving. Tsujino said he had been photographing and
taking underwater video of divers for several years, including events
like underwater weddings. He can be contacted at 670-322-0599 or email
him at otanog@pticom.com.
Our dive instructors from the Aquaconnections were Youme Sharry and
Takehiro Fukuya but they have two other instructors—Tohru Narita and
Donato Beside. You can visit www.saipan-aquaconnections.com or email
them at
aquainc@pticom.com for more information.
Diving at Managaha Island is indeed an experience you would like to do again and again!

To get to Managaha Island, call Tasi Tours & Transportation Inc. at (670) 234-7148, fax (670) 235-7141 or email
managahatasi@tasitours.com.