Quick viewing(Text Mode)

UNDERSEA EXPLORER Photograph by DAMELYS MENDOZA

Victor Vescovo UNDERSEA EXPLORER Photograph by DAMELYS MENDOZA

After completing the “Explorer’s Grand Slam” by climbing the highest mountain on each of the world’s seven and skiing both Poles, the Dallas businessman and adventurer set himself the target of conquering the mirror image of those peaks, by becoming the first person to dive to the deepest point of the world’s . Atlantic , tick; , tick. And on April 28, 2019, Vescovo, 53, touched ground in his submersible, Limiting Factor, at the southern tip of the in the Pacific—known as the —setting a new record depth of 10,928 metres below sea-level. “I was drawn to the technical, organisational and logistical challenge of these missions,” he said, acknowledging his reliance on his Omega Seamaster timepieces in each operation. “I’ve worn my Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean Chronometer on every dive on the Five Deeps Expedition, to time the filling of my ballast tanks and help calculate my rate of descent. I also use it to set the master clock in the submersible—which I check constantly to ensure I execute my regular communications check—and to synchronise with the Omega worn on the surface by my dive master Patrick.” Three further Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean Ultra Deep timepieces made the dive: two attached to the submersible’s robotic arm, another to a lander. He jokes that in the submersible, as Einstein said, the passing of time is relative. “When you’re descending, a minute feels like three because you’re impatient to get to the mission area. When you’re on the bottom—working, exploring, mapping—a minute feels like 10 seconds. The older you get, the more you realise time is very precious and you can’t waste it on negative emotions or unproductive pursuits.” —S.E.

Photographed in Puerto Rico on July 16, 2019 wearing an Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m Co-Axial Master Chronometer Chronograph

000 VANITY FAIR ON TIME AUTUMN 2019 AUTUMN 2019 VANITY FAIR ON TIME 000