Parks employee and beach visitors join to save distressed diver - York, Maine

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DandyDon

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Not to be confused with the other accident with a diver fatality the following day at the same Nubble Lighthouse.

Human Chain Helps Pull Distressed Scuba Diver To Safety In Maine
YORK, M.E. (CBS) — A scuba diver in Maine is safe thanks to strangers who joined together to make a human chain and pull him from choppy water. It happened near Nubble Lighthouse in York around 11 a.m. Monday.

“I was surprised to see how many people got in that line to help out,” said John Antonelli of Haverhill. He and his wife, Rosanna, were walking on the rocks when they noticed the scuba diver and heard him yell for help.

Antonelli quickly started preparing to go into the water to rescue the man himself but he was stopped by a Parks and Recreation employee. Together they decided only one of them should get into the water to avoid them both being overcome by the tide.

Instead, Antonelli should act as an anchor on shore while the other man pulled the scuba diver in.

“I waded to the edge and as I was doing that a whole line of people got up behind us and lined up to hold us in place. I didn’t even realize that was going on,” said Antonelli.

About nine people stopped to help.

As the Parks employee pulled the diver in, Antonelli grabbed onto the diver’s shoulder strap. With the help of the line behind him, “we slowly pulled him out of the water and off the wet rocks, they were really slippery,” Antonelli said. “I just kept telling him ‘I’m not going to let go.'”

They got the diver to dry rocks as the paramedics arrived.

“He was exhausted, you could tell that he could barely breathe but at least he was breathing. Little by little as we took off the gear, I didn’t realize how heavy it was, as we were unclamping everything I’m like ‘oh my god, this was really weighing him down,'” said Antonelli.

The diver, a 57-year-old man, was treated by first responders at the scene and released.

“I said thank you to the guy who jumped in the water and the guy who was holding my hand because I was talking to him as we were racing to pull him up,” said Antonelli, but he would have liked to give the same message to the others.

“Not only were they helping that scuba diver get out of the water, but they were also keeping me from falling in. So to everybody that was in that line, I would like to say thank you.”
 
I don't take anything in the water I won't ditch. This could have easily been a fatality, and if not for teamwork possibly more.
 
I don't take anything in the water I won't ditch. This could have easily been a fatality, and if not for teamwork possibly more.

Maybe his bc was keeping him afloat.
 
Maybe his bc was keeping him afloat.

Cold water, the wet, or dry, suit will keep you afloat once the steel tank and weights are gone, and it's easier to scramble up onto the rocks without all the extra weight. I dive the NorCal coast, both scuba and free, and it's easier to get out free diving than scuba, and even easier if I drop the belt free diving.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/peregrine/

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