|
For
those of us at Halcyon, diving is more than
"just another way to spend the weekend."
- It's the rush that
never fails to kick in each time you slip beneath the water
and draw your first breaths from the regulator.
- It's cobalt blue
water and seeing the boat from your 180' stop.
- It's realizing that
you know your tables by heart.
- It's wondering if
the shark was ten or fifteen feet long.
- It's when you think
"I wonder if it goes..." whenever you see a sinkhole.
- It's when your dive
gear costs more than your car.
- It's about late
nights with friends in Cayman, trying to remember the year of
your first staged decompression dive.
- It's when 50 degrees
and ten feet of visibility sounds about right.
- It's knowing that
no other human (besides your dive buddy) has ever seen what
you have.
The dive's
the thing. We make the gear that we know will make our diving
better. The process begins with designing, testing and refining;
making it better in the process, never settling for "good
enough." It's knowing it as opposed to guessing it. It's
about having such high standards and expectations in how we want
our products to perform that we are relentless in our pursuit
of perfection.
 |
| 2004:
Jarrod Jablonski and Robert Carmichael, on location in Bimini
for Halcyon's catalog photo shoot |
Halcyon began
as a group of divers who knew exactly what they wanted but couldn't
find in any dive store. Our passion for the dive led us to business.
We started designing wings and lights to satisfy ourselves, but
soon discovered that we were not alone in our pursuit of equipment
in tune with the approach known as "Doing It Right"
diving.
Robert Carmichael
has been a mainstay of the Florida diving industry since he was
a teenager selling masks and fins from the back of a Zodiac to
the yacht crews wintering in Ft. Lauderdale. As the owner of Brownie's
Third Lung, Robert helped to define the use of surface floatation
hookah diving. Robert's development of the original Halcyon rebreather
in the mid 1990s provided an essential component in the Woodville
Karst Plain Project's record-setting exploration of the Wakulla
Springs cave system.
 |
| 1999:
Jarrod Jablonski (left) plans the day's dives on the Britannic
with Todd Kincaid and Richard Lundgren |
Back when
Jarrod Jablonski was a college student living in a trailer at
Ginnie Springs, he surrounded himself with a group of friends
who were literally taking more breaths a day through a regulator
underwater than of fresh air between dives. When not teaching
diving, Jarrod was pushing the boundaries of cave diving with
his team in north Florida. Robert began using his Brownie's factory
to produce a new, simplified buoyancy system engineered to the
specifications of the divers on the team.
Meanwhile,
Jarrod began to see the advantage of teaching his students the
sort of teamwork, emphasis on buoyancy skills, and rational approach
to gear selection that the team used for its big exploration dives.
By 1998,
Jarrod had formed the non-profit Global
Underwater Explorers as both a platform for his drive to elevate
the quality of dive instruction, and as a framework for underwater
research and conservation projects. That same year he started
Extreme Exposure
to build lights and accessories. Halcyon had grown into a full-fledged
business in its own right; in 2001 Halcyon split off from Brownies
and Jarrod consolidated operations with Extreme Exposure's production
facilities in our north Florida home under the name Halcyon Manufacturing.
 |
1999:
Halcyon sponsors GUE's expedition
to unlock the secrets of the Britannic |
Jarrod formed
his own team of accomplished divers to handle operations at Halcyon.
As one of Jarrod's friends and long-time diving buddies, Halcyon's
COO Casey McKinlay left the routine of the corporate world for
the challenge of managing Halcyon’s day-to-day operations.
Accomplished himself as a diver, Casey began cave diving with
Jarrod more than fifteen years ago and has partnered with Jarrod
on many of the north Florida cave exploration pushes. In addition
to overseeing Halcyon's daily operations, Casey serves as the
Project Director for the Woodville
Karst Plain Project and advises state and federal agencies
on cave and resource management issues.
The senior
staff at the factory have come from diverse backgrounds ranging
from academia to manufacturing consulting, but they share one
common thread: an average of 20 years of dives in each of their
log books.
If you ask a Halcyon
staff member why they dive, you're likely to get a variation of
the response provided to us by our friend David Rhea, whose photographs
grace our catalogs:
I
dive because it is my life, my passion, my love.
[Next:
Halcyon Product Development and Testing]
|