Ok I'm ready to post my lesson.
Catalina Casino point. The situation was 3rd dive of the day. Very new diver, 12th ow dive in a very comfortable place (read false sense of security). In between dives I overheard someone say something to the effect of he was “tired of giving all this gas back to them” and indicating he was going to use up all his air. I thought to myself, yeah, I should use up more of my gas as I usually start with 3000 and return 900-1200. (Alum 80) Like the 8$ for air is too expensive. We usually use the rule of thirds. Anyway we were tired, and decided to do an easy dive along the wall at 20-30 feet and just sightsee and work on buoyancy. What I did not take into consideration was that it was windy up top, and we were diving with the current and I was tired. In addition the tide was just about turning to go out. Down below I did notice the current and thought to myself that it was going to be a hard swim back. We were holding onto the rocks to slow our speed/be able to look at the small critters. Barely even had to kick to move. I had no concept of how fast the current was and how far we went in such little time. At pressure of 1000 we decided to head back, thinking we were no more 5-10 min away from the steps. I blew through a lot of air fighting the current and at 250 decided I needed to surface and just swim in. Up top I was shocked at how far we had gone. It was windy (against me) and choppy on top. Still working hard, and frightened to descend because of my low air/current and now a surge as the tide was going out. Used my snorkel, but it was very scary, I was swallowing some water that was slopping into my snorkel , coughing a little and I was so tired. Every once in a while I took a few pulls from my reg as it was easier to breathe that way. My buddy stayed at my side the whole swim back, and his asking if I was ok made me feel so much safer. Made it to the steps with air in the tank, but needed help getting onto the steps as I could not pull myself up, and the tide was down so I was standing on rocks and trying to jump up with each incoming wave and being dragged back in with each outgoing wave.
I have heard that usually accidents are a cascade of events, one item alone may not endanger you but several together can present an insurmountable risk.
Here are my lessons, I’m sure there are more. Feel free but be gentle with me.
Don’t let others influence your safety.
Stick to the rules that are there for good reason. We do the thirds rule because I want a safety net.
Dive against the current and ride it back in
Know which way the current is going, and keep an eye on it for changes.
There is no such thing as a safe place to dive. You have to treat each dive with respect as things can go
bad quickly.
There is no such thing as an easy dive until you are back on dry land.
I need to be more aware of how the current, tide surge and swell affect diving.
I should have turned back when I noticed the current and just sightsee the other direction.
Don’t be cheap
I need to work on stamina for situations like these.
I should have put my weights on the steps to get out easier.
It was a humbling experience as I knew all the mistakes I was making, but did not listen to that wee little voice in my head.
Ok...GO
Catalina Casino point. The situation was 3rd dive of the day. Very new diver, 12th ow dive in a very comfortable place (read false sense of security). In between dives I overheard someone say something to the effect of he was “tired of giving all this gas back to them” and indicating he was going to use up all his air. I thought to myself, yeah, I should use up more of my gas as I usually start with 3000 and return 900-1200. (Alum 80) Like the 8$ for air is too expensive. We usually use the rule of thirds. Anyway we were tired, and decided to do an easy dive along the wall at 20-30 feet and just sightsee and work on buoyancy. What I did not take into consideration was that it was windy up top, and we were diving with the current and I was tired. In addition the tide was just about turning to go out. Down below I did notice the current and thought to myself that it was going to be a hard swim back. We were holding onto the rocks to slow our speed/be able to look at the small critters. Barely even had to kick to move. I had no concept of how fast the current was and how far we went in such little time. At pressure of 1000 we decided to head back, thinking we were no more 5-10 min away from the steps. I blew through a lot of air fighting the current and at 250 decided I needed to surface and just swim in. Up top I was shocked at how far we had gone. It was windy (against me) and choppy on top. Still working hard, and frightened to descend because of my low air/current and now a surge as the tide was going out. Used my snorkel, but it was very scary, I was swallowing some water that was slopping into my snorkel , coughing a little and I was so tired. Every once in a while I took a few pulls from my reg as it was easier to breathe that way. My buddy stayed at my side the whole swim back, and his asking if I was ok made me feel so much safer. Made it to the steps with air in the tank, but needed help getting onto the steps as I could not pull myself up, and the tide was down so I was standing on rocks and trying to jump up with each incoming wave and being dragged back in with each outgoing wave.
I have heard that usually accidents are a cascade of events, one item alone may not endanger you but several together can present an insurmountable risk.
Here are my lessons, I’m sure there are more. Feel free but be gentle with me.
Don’t let others influence your safety.
Stick to the rules that are there for good reason. We do the thirds rule because I want a safety net.
Dive against the current and ride it back in
Know which way the current is going, and keep an eye on it for changes.
There is no such thing as a safe place to dive. You have to treat each dive with respect as things can go
bad quickly.
There is no such thing as an easy dive until you are back on dry land.
I need to be more aware of how the current, tide surge and swell affect diving.
I should have turned back when I noticed the current and just sightsee the other direction.
Don’t be cheap
I need to work on stamina for situations like these.
I should have put my weights on the steps to get out easier.
It was a humbling experience as I knew all the mistakes I was making, but did not listen to that wee little voice in my head.
Ok...GO