Mr. Clean for the ocean
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Deepa Bharath
Tony Mickelson likens himself to a gardener mowing lawns. Only,
Mickelson needs to scuba dive to do his job.
He and his team of divers go underwater and clean the hulls of
several boats docked in the bay.
“A lot of people who buy boats don’t think about the Pacific Ocean
growing under their boats,” Mickelson said.
His job is basically to clean the hulls of boats that are coated
with a protective paint called anti-fouling paint. That paint has a
copper oxide base that minimizes growth of barnacles and other sea
growth on the hull. Mickelson and his divers clean the growth with
soft pads before it eats up the paint. When, and if that happens, the
paint can get diffused into the ocean, causing environmental
problems, he said.
“By keeping the hulls clean, boat owners also save on fuel,”
Mickelson said. “Because when you operate the boat with all that
growth, it gets bogged down instead of skimming along in a nice,
smooth pace.”
The strain of pulling all the extra weight also causes the boat’s
engine to overheat, he said.
Mickelson and two other divers who work for him clean about 250
boats a month. He has operated his business for about 25 years now.
“It’s a small operation, but we have our loyal customers,” he
said.
Different boats have different schedules, Mickelson said. Some are
cleaned weekly, others once every two weeks. Most are cleaned
monthly.
The biggest challenge the divers face is the weather, Mickelson
said.
“After a major rainstorm like we had earlier this week, it’s very
hard for us to get in the bay,” he said. “Visibility becomes zero,
and the water poses bad conditions for us because of the runoff from
the road.”
They have still managed to “do our route” despite the weather.
Mickelson mostly charges a flat rate to customers -- anywhere between
$1.20 a foot to $5 a foot, depending on the mess.
Mickelson doesn’t dive just to pull out the barnacles. Very often,
panicking customers call him to fetch car keys they dropped in the
bay. He runs a 24-hour emergency service just for situations like
that.
“We’ve got all sorts of things from the bay, from car keys to
watches and sunglasses,” he said. “I’ve heard of other divers finding
false teeth and wheelchairs.”
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