barbaroonie
Registered
Thank you very much for sharing that Komodo experience. Out of curiosity, were you at one of the 'Current City' area sites (Batu Bolong, etc) when that incident happened? Hopefully not South Rinca!
It happened off Taka Makassar, which is a manta aggregation site that you have to hit when the tides are changing to catch the cleaning and feeding action. So while that site is not known for rippers like Batu Bolong, it definitely has fast moving water as the tides shift. (And for those who don't know, some sites in this area have the highest amount of sea change of anywhere in the world, due to the steep sided volcanic islands that rise out of the seabed and channel the water.) The idea is you drop right in (not very deep - maybe 10 meters), bury your muck stick in the rubble, and wait for the action that will come to you. And that day was a doozy-- there were hundreds of mantas flying formations overhead, in feeding chains, etc. Maybe due to the weather change, the surface current was running especially fast that day, and we'd stayed down 75 mins rather than the 60 agreed upon when we entered. But the boat tender should not have left the site, and could have easily seen our bubbles in one spot.
I mentioned to someone else privately that I think this was a one-off issue and not systemic-- I've dived maybe 8x on their LOB fleet with no issues or concerns. It was turnover day, the crew was busy cleaning and stocking, and normally there would not even be dives that day. Having said that, Komodo is not an area that should be dived by newer divers or those not accustomed to current. Downcurrents, thermoclines and washing machines are not uncommon, though a good dive operator will drop a DM to check conditions underwater before deciding to stay on a site, as the underwater topography means conditions change quickly and radically. You need to be confident of your skills, carry all appropriate devices to be self-sufficient, and use your training and good judgement to call off a dive if it's beyond your means.
It happened off Taka Makassar, which is a manta aggregation site that you have to hit when the tides are changing to catch the cleaning and feeding action. So while that site is not known for rippers like Batu Bolong, it definitely has fast moving water as the tides shift. (And for those who don't know, some sites in this area have the highest amount of sea change of anywhere in the world, due to the steep sided volcanic islands that rise out of the seabed and channel the water.) The idea is you drop right in (not very deep - maybe 10 meters), bury your muck stick in the rubble, and wait for the action that will come to you. And that day was a doozy-- there were hundreds of mantas flying formations overhead, in feeding chains, etc. Maybe due to the weather change, the surface current was running especially fast that day, and we'd stayed down 75 mins rather than the 60 agreed upon when we entered. But the boat tender should not have left the site, and could have easily seen our bubbles in one spot.
I mentioned to someone else privately that I think this was a one-off issue and not systemic-- I've dived maybe 8x on their LOB fleet with no issues or concerns. It was turnover day, the crew was busy cleaning and stocking, and normally there would not even be dives that day. Having said that, Komodo is not an area that should be dived by newer divers or those not accustomed to current. Downcurrents, thermoclines and washing machines are not uncommon, though a good dive operator will drop a DM to check conditions underwater before deciding to stay on a site, as the underwater topography means conditions change quickly and radically. You need to be confident of your skills, carry all appropriate devices to be self-sufficient, and use your training and good judgement to call off a dive if it's beyond your means.