phil8diver
Contributor
Hello everyone,
Just wanted to share a recent "near miss" with my dive buddies. No flaming please as I just wanted to share the importance of clear communication during dives and how slight miscommunication "even with your friends" can be catastrophic.
Just last yesterday, three of us (both of them are my usual dive buddies) went diving in Anilao, Philippines. This was our first dive and I was leading the dive as this sites around Anilao is very familiar with us. I gave my basic briefing and then headed out. We descended and I started to lead. As we were 8 minutes into the dive, I was feeling bit of current so I decided to check if everyone was ok, everyone replied back ok. We were at about 32 meters and proceeded onward. After about 15 minutes into the dive I asked again and one of my 1st buddies gave me sign which I thought he meant "getting tired or exhausting". So I told him ok and proceeded to 20 meters and looked for an area behind something. Told both of them to rest 2 minutes while I checked around. Then 2nd buddies told me he was half tank, so I said ok. I checked and found the current was getting stronger towards the area so I told them lets move backward. As we I was going and looked back my 1st buddies gave me the "getting tired or exhausting" so I went to him and helped pull him and while doing that asked him to show me his gauge. When I saw it I was shocked to see he had only 30 bars. At this point we were at 18 meters so I wasn't worried per say since I had over 100 bars. I gave my octopus to my 1st buddy and asked everyone to get closer to me and do a daisy chain ascent which I believe my 2nd buddy understood. Told my 2nd buddy to hold on to 1st buddy and I was holding onto the 2nd buddy to make sure we don't loose him. So we drifted to open blue water since there was current. Asked my 2nd buddy to hold on to me as I deployed my SMB/Balloon at 18 meters. Told my 1st buddy to deflate his BCD as I felt he was little stressed and was going up a bit and hold onto the SMB line. I was controlling our ascent and reached 10 meters. Told everyone that we will stay 1 minute and then proceeded to 5 meters and did our safety stop.
This was my first real situation and I really thank my training. Once we got out of the water, my 1st buddy had almost 0 bar and I had 40 bar left. My other buddy had 40 bar also.
Basically I was misunderstanding my 1st buddy telling me he was "low on air" and I thought he was saying "getting tired or exhausting". It basically shows that its very difficult to communicate and easy to misunderstand. There are so many "ifs" and "should have" to eliminate this whole situation but I also felt that this was wake up call on how important it is to physically double check the air myself. After this dive, we went thru all the signs again and told the 1st buddy to come to me and "alert" if he was already at cut off air. Our cut-off air was 70 bar.
Regards,
Just wanted to share a recent "near miss" with my dive buddies. No flaming please as I just wanted to share the importance of clear communication during dives and how slight miscommunication "even with your friends" can be catastrophic.
Just last yesterday, three of us (both of them are my usual dive buddies) went diving in Anilao, Philippines. This was our first dive and I was leading the dive as this sites around Anilao is very familiar with us. I gave my basic briefing and then headed out. We descended and I started to lead. As we were 8 minutes into the dive, I was feeling bit of current so I decided to check if everyone was ok, everyone replied back ok. We were at about 32 meters and proceeded onward. After about 15 minutes into the dive I asked again and one of my 1st buddies gave me sign which I thought he meant "getting tired or exhausting". So I told him ok and proceeded to 20 meters and looked for an area behind something. Told both of them to rest 2 minutes while I checked around. Then 2nd buddies told me he was half tank, so I said ok. I checked and found the current was getting stronger towards the area so I told them lets move backward. As we I was going and looked back my 1st buddies gave me the "getting tired or exhausting" so I went to him and helped pull him and while doing that asked him to show me his gauge. When I saw it I was shocked to see he had only 30 bars. At this point we were at 18 meters so I wasn't worried per say since I had over 100 bars. I gave my octopus to my 1st buddy and asked everyone to get closer to me and do a daisy chain ascent which I believe my 2nd buddy understood. Told my 2nd buddy to hold on to 1st buddy and I was holding onto the 2nd buddy to make sure we don't loose him. So we drifted to open blue water since there was current. Asked my 2nd buddy to hold on to me as I deployed my SMB/Balloon at 18 meters. Told my 1st buddy to deflate his BCD as I felt he was little stressed and was going up a bit and hold onto the SMB line. I was controlling our ascent and reached 10 meters. Told everyone that we will stay 1 minute and then proceeded to 5 meters and did our safety stop.
This was my first real situation and I really thank my training. Once we got out of the water, my 1st buddy had almost 0 bar and I had 40 bar left. My other buddy had 40 bar also.
Basically I was misunderstanding my 1st buddy telling me he was "low on air" and I thought he was saying "getting tired or exhausting". It basically shows that its very difficult to communicate and easy to misunderstand. There are so many "ifs" and "should have" to eliminate this whole situation but I also felt that this was wake up call on how important it is to physically double check the air myself. After this dive, we went thru all the signs again and told the 1st buddy to come to me and "alert" if he was already at cut off air. Our cut-off air was 70 bar.
Regards,