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Don said: Oh it happens many places, more so than not. The key is to be a prepared and competent diver, or for newbies to hire private DMs the first day.
Well said Don, what a difference it may have made.
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Don said: Oh it happens many places, more so than not. The key is to be a prepared and competent diver, or for newbies to hire private DMs the first day.
The peoples bubbles are kind of staying in place and when they reach a certain point they go down instead of up so they had some strong currents that day, said Schoonover.
Turco said where the bubbles get sucked down is where Cassin gave him a signal that she wanted to go back up to the boat.
" I turned to let the dive master to let him know that we were going up and when I turned back, I didnt see her. So I assumed that she started to go up without me, said Turco.
When Turco and the dive master with Sand Dollar Sports surfaced, Cassin was nowhere to be found.
They think she got swept away under the water, said Schoonover.
It is debatable if she actually reached the surface or was lost at depth.The dive guide from their group approached the husband to ask him what happened and he said he saw her surface.
The crew of the Sand Dollar made it perfectly clear, in our pre-dive briefing, that the currents were present and that they were moving north to south, away from the wall and (with serious emphasis)DOWN. "Watch your depth! If you feel your ears popping or see the other divers above you, get back up to the max depth which is 80'! Do not leave your dive buddy and keep your eyes on your dive guide!)
If there is doubt about the accuracy or veracity of the posts I linked to, you would have to take that up with the authors. I have not seen anything "official" to either corroborate or refute these accounts. The similarity of accounts and in particular the details and first-hand nature of the first one leads me to believe it is probably true.
Similarly explained that last Tuesday he had a meeting with all the dealers of Tourist Services, such as diving and snorkeling, where they were asked to take further training with their staff and the care with tourists, since in these There is now a strong current in the sea and currents are found, which has been with the harbor pilots who are responsible for giving out to the cruise and are moved abruptly by the weather.
I have no illusions that this happens in many places, and i appreciate MMM's post. However, there seems to have been several recent accidents involving bad judgement (my opinion only) by DMs, Ops, and of course the divers themselves. Yes, I'm sure this happens in many other places, but there is a large pro-Coz crowd on SB and it seems(again my opinion) like every other a&i thread deals with Coz. And for every Coz thread in this forum, there are a half dozen spinoffs.
My opinion of Coz, based solely on these threads, is that even though the diving may be great it has the potential to get way beyond my experience level rather quickly. Then there's Don's 2nd favorite saying
Just to be clear, I as not challenging you in asking for the links--I wanted the information. I was surprised--apparently naively so--that I had not heard more about those incidents.
Drift diving in Cozumel is some of the easiest diving we do. You dive in, you pull the lever back on your lazy boy recliner and you drift along watching the show. You can drift along at 20 feet above the reef, above your group, you can kick a few times and go off to the sides of your group, you can go down and skim over the surface of the reef 6 inches above it, you can stop by kicking a bit and move out of the current, you can hole up behind some reef structure... in short you're totally in control the whole time, it's simple, it's easy and it's made for lazy divers.
I'm not a Cozumel groupie, what I've written is the reality of Cozumel, it's going to be some of the easiest diving you've ever done.
Those statements generally are accurate, and reflect experiences at about any dive location when the conditions are good -- or at least, not difficult. But it's a mistake to think -- ever -- that you'll always be in total control of what goes on. And it might be a good idea to imagine what you're going to do if you're drifting peacefully along Santa Rosa wall and suddenly find yourself caught in a downcurrent that won't allow you to swim toward the surface, and the bubbles are blowing down so you cannot read a gauge or your computer. My guess is that the diving won't seem nearly as easy, or nearly as as much fun.
Relatively benign conditions most of the time.
But it's a mistake to think -- ever -- that you'll always be in total control of what goes on. And it might be a good idea to imagine what you're going to do if you're drifting peacefully along Santa Rosa wall and suddenly find yourself caught in a downcurrent that won't allow you to swim toward the surface, and the bubbles are blowing down so you cannot read a gauge or your computer. My guess is that the diving won't seem nearly as easy, or nearly as as much fun.
Drift diving in Cozumel is some of the easiest diving we do. You dive in, you pull the lever back on your lazy boy recliner and you drift along watching the show. You can drift along at 20 feet above the reef, above your group, you can kick a few times and go off to the sides of your group, you can go down and skim over the surface of the reef 6 inches above it, you can stop by kicking a bit and move out of the current, you can hole up behind some reef structure... in short you're totally in control the whole time, it's simple, it's easy and it's made for lazy divers.
Those statements generally are accurate, and reflect experiences at about any dive location when the conditions are good -- or at least, not difficult. But it's a mistake to think -- ever -- that you'll always be in total control of what goes on. And it might be a good idea to imagine what you're going to do if you're drifting peacefully along Santa Rosa wall and suddenly find yourself caught in a downcurrent that won't allow you to swim toward the surface, and the bubbles are blowing down so you cannot read a gauge or your computer. My guess is that the diving won't seem nearly as easy, or nearly as as much fun.