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Beyond Limits Herbert Nitsch was given the prestigious title of The Deepest Man on Earth, when he set the current world record for free-diving at an incredible depth of 214 metres in 2007.
 
As one of the spearheads of free-diving today, Herbert intends to push the limits even further by becoming the first breath-hold athlete to break the 300- metre barrier.
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Nov 06
2009

Day 1 - at the Freediving World Championships 2009 in the Bahamas

Posted by: Herbert Nitsch

Tagged in: Blog

The journey to Dean’s Blue Hole was rather troublesome: From Vienna, to Frankfurt, to Miami, to Nassau, to Long Island, including 2 nights in hotels in Frankfurt and in Nassau. During some of the flights I performed my (now daily) breath-hold training, in order to be in good shape from the very beginning of my deep freediving training at Dean's Blue Hole. Upon my arrival, I moved in my new home for the next 6 weeks, sharing an apartment with Robert King (USA) and Johan Dahlström (SWE), who arrived already two days earlier. Later on William Winram (CAN) will join us. At noon, the same day, Rob, Johan and I, went to the Blue Hole for a training session.

We had the Blue Hole for ourselves - the weather was somewhat "not so nice" - strong winds and thick clouds. It was my first deep diving since early summer. Consequently I start with a long series of easy, shallow warm-up dives. We took turns in safetying each other. After getting comfortable, I performed a dive to 50 meters. Since we haven’t eaten for a long time we decided to go hunting for our dinner. We jumped in our car with the wetsuits still on and drove to the next bay, called Turtle Cove, where Rob and Johan caught 4 Lobsters. I wasn't that lucky. Maybe because I was concentrating too much on specific fishes I wanted to eat. But the lobsters were quit "OK" to eat too :) Slightly annoying were the aggressive mosquitoes, eating us alive. Sitting outside for dinner was impossible.