For the first time since I started diving late last year, I canceled a dive. It was a boat dive scheduled for tomorrow morning, on a WWII P-38 at 135fsw off La Jolla. I canceled because it feels like the dive exceeds my training. It was a hard call to make, as people knew I was going on it, my tank was filled, my gear mostly packed, all ready to go. Except it didnt feel right.
I have PADI AOW certification. I have 63 logged dives, 29 dives to 65 ft or less, 33 dives from 65-100 ft, and one over 100 feet (119fsw), all in cold water. My buoyancy is pretty good, if I do say so. I really work at it. My SAC rate is improving, but I am a big man and diving wet, so its not great (.7-.8). I had my HP120 filled with 27.5% nitrox for a MOD of 135 at PPO2 1.4. My weighting is absolutely dialed in. Descent and ascent are along a guideline, not an anchor or roped buoy and this would not be a problem for me. I do not need to hold on. I really want to see this wreck. I feel like it is a dive within my capabilities, as long as nothing goes wrong.
I was going as a single, and would pick up an insta-buddy. I dont have a redundant air source and this dive would probably best be done a 40 cu ft bailout bottle. And, it pains me to say, the fact is I am just not trained for the depth.
When I began diving I committed to a safe approach. As a younger man riding fast motorcycles, the saying was, Crashing is learning, a philosophy that doesnt have any place in diving. As I gain experience, I struggle to stay within the limits of my training. There is always a voice telling me to go for it, you can do it, nothing will go wrong.
Probably nothing would go wrong and it would be a great dive, but I am opting to stay within the limits of my training, and I am actually listening to the other voice that tells me, you know the right thing to do.
This is a dive I will make before long, but I will make it when I am trained for it and prepared for it going bad. There is another saying in motorcycles, a little oblique maybe, but I think it fits: Dress for the crash, not the ride.
I have PADI AOW certification. I have 63 logged dives, 29 dives to 65 ft or less, 33 dives from 65-100 ft, and one over 100 feet (119fsw), all in cold water. My buoyancy is pretty good, if I do say so. I really work at it. My SAC rate is improving, but I am a big man and diving wet, so its not great (.7-.8). I had my HP120 filled with 27.5% nitrox for a MOD of 135 at PPO2 1.4. My weighting is absolutely dialed in. Descent and ascent are along a guideline, not an anchor or roped buoy and this would not be a problem for me. I do not need to hold on. I really want to see this wreck. I feel like it is a dive within my capabilities, as long as nothing goes wrong.
I was going as a single, and would pick up an insta-buddy. I dont have a redundant air source and this dive would probably best be done a 40 cu ft bailout bottle. And, it pains me to say, the fact is I am just not trained for the depth.
When I began diving I committed to a safe approach. As a younger man riding fast motorcycles, the saying was, Crashing is learning, a philosophy that doesnt have any place in diving. As I gain experience, I struggle to stay within the limits of my training. There is always a voice telling me to go for it, you can do it, nothing will go wrong.
Probably nothing would go wrong and it would be a great dive, but I am opting to stay within the limits of my training, and I am actually listening to the other voice that tells me, you know the right thing to do.
This is a dive I will make before long, but I will make it when I am trained for it and prepared for it going bad. There is another saying in motorcycles, a little oblique maybe, but I think it fits: Dress for the crash, not the ride.