Bubbletrubble
Contributor
It sounds like you do have a fair amount of extra equipment to deal with. It's still a mystery to me why you would recommend intentionally over-weighting oneself during a rescue class. That's bad advice IMO.[QUOTE=Bubbletrubble" If you knew that you would be slinging a pony or stage bottle, you should have geared up that way for your rescue class.
Really... hate to burst your bubble but everyone does't bring everything they are going to dive with to a rescue course. Following that analogy I guess I should have brought my camera and both my dive lights, my scooter and my spear gun.
Let me ask you this. As a potential rescuer after the rescue class is over, do you thing you will be more, less, or equally prepared if you already practiced responding to a rescue scenario geared up in your "normal" configuration (whatever that may be)? Obviously certain pieces of gear are ditchable, and I think in an emergency situation a camera, scooter, and spear gun could be ditched.
For the record, I'm not saying that students should be bringing along everything he/she could possibly be equipped with during a rescue class. There's a high probability that some gear will be lost during the in-water rescue scenarios, and it would truly suck if you lost an expensive piece of gear. IMHO, a slung pony bottle adds an extra air source to a rescuer's toolset and could be a physical hindrance during certain stages of the rescue. It would be important for the diver to recognize the advantages/disadvantages of having that 30 cuft. tank strapped to him during a rescue situation. I would also like to point out that you may have deprived your fellow rescue class students from considering how additional gear, such as a pony tank, might complicate rescue of a problem diver (when you were playing the victim).
Why not maximize the usefulness of rescue class scenarios by trying to replicate real-world conditions?