mheaster:Dive operation 'scuba-do" has website of the same name.
Very Sad to hear this news!
Dived with them when i was in key largo if its the same ones. Had no problems/issues with them at all.
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mheaster:Dive operation 'scuba-do" has website of the same name.
Very Sad to hear this news!
... as an interesting aside... there are many who pontificat on ScubaBoard... bottom line... I don't *know* the qualifications of any of you. Yet "advise" is handed out willi-nilli... anybody thought of the "ramifications" of that? :no Yea... SOMEBODY out there is listening... and, perhaps, acting on what they choose to believe based on how its presented... maybe they validate it... maybe not.
... just a thought...
Unlikely... do you read scubaboard much?rscalzo:Wait until the facts come out. At least two were instructors and very experienced. There is much more to the story than has been published.
I'm sure there would be lots of volunteers among the technical diving community to recover the bodies. When divers have to be recovered from caves, they send in volunteer cave divers. You're right that it isn't fair for the responsibility to fall on fire or coast guard personel who are doing it professionally, but I don't think that has to be the case. I'm also not suggesting that the volunteers would think of this as a 'fun' dive, but they probably appreciate the opportunity to contribute something back to the sport using the impressive skills they have. So I don't think someone should be prevented from making their own safety decisions based on the dangers that people will "have" to go through to recover their bodies.Boatlawyer:My gripe with the those pushing the envelope in the name of adventure is the risk they place others in to recover their remains when things go wrong.
I have to agree with this statement. I've been watching this thread and the one on TDS and ALOT of speculation is whats being thrown around at the moment.....rscalzo:Wait until the facts come out. At least two were instructors and very experienced. There is much more to the story than has been published.
If it were my decision the recovery would be done by a commercial diving company, the Navy, the USGC Atantic Strike Team, or some other group that is trained and equipped to conduct such a operation. This dive is nothing special (except expensive) when done with surface supplied equipment.DeepBound:I'm sure there would be lots of volunteers among the technical diving community to recover the bodies. When divers have to be recovered from caves, they send in volunteer cave divers. You're right that it isn't fair for the responsibility to fall on fire or coast guard personel who are doing it professionally, but I don't think that has to be the case. I'm also not suggesting that the volunteers would think of this as a 'fun' dive, but they probably appreciate the opportunity to contribute something back to the sport using the impressive skills they have. So I don't think someone should be prevented from making their own safety decisions based on the dangers that people will "have" to go through to recover their bodies.
Considering the only facts are limited tomrjimboalaska:I have to agree with this statement. I've been watching this thread and the one on TDS and ALOT of speculation is whats being thrown around at the moment.....
Knight:Sometimes recovery can result in other deaths, I come from Netherland and know of few caves were they just had to leave a body in there for weeks till they could get the right people in there and sometimes you can't find the body, most of the time it happens with unexperienced divers who enter high level caves and do not know till they get in there that they are in big trouble.
With this accident I just really want to know if these divers had ropes to trail them back out, it would make sense for these cert. divers to do that right? well I know plenty of divers who don't do this they are so cocky or think so experienced they don't need em and sometimes I wonder how they are still alive. If you don't have ropes to trail your way back out then everyone is depending on the most skilled diver to get them back out and sometimes you have dis-agreements UW and one diver says "no we came from this way we must go out from here" while the other says "nope this is the way we came we need to go this way" and they will spend minutes trying to figure out what to do and who is right or not and then by the time they know it booom there lost, confused panic sets in, etc etc etc. I hope we get more details soon as what they find.
Always descending,
C.H.
pir8:Unfortunately it doesn't end. I would say you can leave a body in the Doria but not the SG.