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I don't want to argue...and I will only respond this time because I don't think I made one aspect of the drift drop on a wreck clear....
If I am being dropped on the 100 foot deep Castor in mild current, or the 225 foot deep Skycliff in huge current, the issue of whether I have 100 foot vis, or 5 foot vis, will not effect my success or failure in hitting the wreck in 9 out of ten approaches.....in 9 out of ten approaches, all I do is swim down straight to the bottom--there is NO navigating, and there is no necessary familiarity with an "approach path" to the wreck--9 our of ten times...or maybe even 95 out of 100 times....the norm is that I swim to the bottom, and then all of a sudden, the wreck is coming at me....If the current is screaming, the wreck comes at me fast. You are looking for this--expecting this, so if the vis is 5 feet, and the current is screaming, you will probably want to either belly to the bottom out of current, or, get up high enough so that you wont impact into the side of the wreck--so in the low vis conditons, local knowledge would be a value, to avoid a hard impact.
But if one of our Captains had time perfecting drops on this UK wreck you speak of, I don't see the difference between low vis and big or small current here, versus low vis and big or small current where you are in the UK. Beyond current or multiple currents the captain needs to figure vectors for, what else does the captain need to know? For us as divers--we just swim straight down--the shipwreck comes to us.![]()
... only works in low-vis if the current's predictable. Sorry Dan, if you tried that here you'd spend more time wandering around in the mud wondering where you were than you'd spend on the wrecks ... and may end up ascending miles from where the boat expects you to. Ain't interested in an argument ... maybe that technique works well for you ... but in my experience, that would be an extremely risky and stupid way to dive a deep wreck in the environment I'm used to diving in.
Maybe someday you'll come to realize that not all environments are exactly like south Florida. Maybe not. Wouldn't really care if you'd quit using words like "deficient" and "lazy" to describe that which you clearly do not understand.
Tell ya what ... we've got a good-sized and pretty well organized DIR community up here. Come dive with them sometime. Maybe once you've experienced our conditions you might understand why your methods won't work here.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)