Like rearranging furniture, I felt like a change.Wait! Max & Merry have a new avatar? What's up with that??!!
rx7diver
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Like rearranging furniture, I felt like a change.Wait! Max & Merry have a new avatar? What's up with that??!!
rx7diver
Hahahahahaha!!!!B
By testing the Pee-valve with bad results![]()
As mentioned, the only inconvenience really is the non diving part. How easy is it for you to get undressed and dressed again without getting soaked?
So current and visibility might be bad because of the rain?
Any way to check that before getting into gears/water? (any websites with such info?)
SeattleHow do you think I came up with my username?
Yeah, for some reason I never liked being in wet clothes. Living through Northern Manitoba winters of temperatures that often reached minus 40, when it got too cold to snow didn't bother me. Nor does snow-- unless of course it's very WET snow.And do you care about getting soaked?
As a kid growing up in SE Mass, it was the closest to air conditioning I got, as long as we got out of the way of thunderstorms, we were good. Now in NorCal the rain is in the winter when it's colder, but as long as I avoid hypothermia I'm good. I hate the wind in the winter much worse.
It depends on the environment. If you're diving in a lake that has no current, even hurricane-level storms wouldn't really cause a current. In a river you might experience flash-flooding.So current and visibility might be bad because of the rain?
Any way to check that before getting into gears/water? (any websites with such info?)
With a few rare exceptions, the dive itself doesn't need to be more conservative. I mean nothing wrong with playing it safe, but when you're underwater, even the most severe weather might go overhead without you even noticing.This is an interesting thread. My first reaction, as that of many others, was "you're getting wet anyway... rain's not a problem!" But the feedback from those that have dived in the rain is really valuable. There are a lot of special considerations if diving in the rain, from how it could affect surface conditions, visibility, etc.
It seems that it comes back to planning conservatively, within limits of experience and training, and since rainy weather can be an unpredictable variable, a bit of extra conservatism when it's raining.