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c555:I forgot to tell you that I am going to be gone this weekend so I won't be able to watch this. If possible ill find internet but I can check up on this again on sunday night. Thanks everyone
But in your initial post you did say that she was a divemaster. Based on your additional comments, I suspect you are correct that she was not ...c555:To start with, this was not a shop dive. It was just a charter put on by tealwater.I don't know why the dive masters dove, but they did. I don't believe that the DM that was with us was trained, she was just a diver who thought she could guide us.
Yes I was confused … that’s why I asked for more information. Now that you’ve provided it, we can discuss this dive more intelligently. My intent isn’t to criticize, but to give you some things to think about for future dives. At some point, you need to consider what YOU can do to keep yourself and your dive buddies from having experiences like this one. Don’t rely on a “divemaster” or anyone else to protect you from harm … the whole reason for going through a class is to learn how to do this for yourself.c555:You seemed confused about what went on that day, so Ill retell you.
At which point, if he didn’t have a bottom-sounder to locate the wall he should have chosen an alternative dive site … as you discovered, there’s nothing else out there except a sloping sand bottom, seapens and the occasional pink tritonia nudibranch. Poor decision on the captain’s part.c555:When we got to the dive site, wich was fox island with a planned max deapth of 60 ft, the captian said he had placed a bouy there to mark it, but it was gone.
Should’ve anchored ... as you discovered, the bottom drops off rather suddenly to depths that inexperienced divers shouldn’t be going to.c555:He went to the place where he thought it would be and cut the engines to allow us the jump in.
Did you at any time during all of this consider that you were not OK? If she was asking, and you were responding “yes” she had no reason to believe she was doing anything wrong … other than not finding the wall. Once again, you need to take some responsibility for your dive … if you are uncomfortable and someone asks you if you are OK … don’t tell them that you are.c555:She took her compass bearing and began swimming very fast and kicking up a lot of silt. We followed her for about 10 minutes without finding the dive site. During this time, she had turned on her light but then just dropped it to hang on the lanyard for the rest of the dive. This is how it drug through everything. So after 10 min, she stopped to ask us if we were OK, we said yes so she took a new compass bearing and began swimming again. Her light was still dragging. 10 minutes after that, at about 20 minutes total bottom time, she stopped again asking if we were OK. We replied yes
At this point, you are not diving the plan … and should have considered ascending long ago regardless of how much air you had left. When you did your Open Water class, did they not tell you to “plan your dive and dive your plan”?c555:We followed her for 10 more minutes until she gave us the up sign, even though we still had 1/2 a tank left.
Did you remember to continue exhaling? Even from 7 feet you can easily damage your lungs if you hold your breath.c555:We started to ascend but she just bolted straight up. When we got to the safety stop, she wasn't there but we leveled off anyway. Then the DM just landed on top of me. She pulled me down some, but we got back to 15 ft. Then we just descided to go up because we hadn't been down very long, and again she swam up very fast. This time her light got caught on my primary regulators hose and began dragging me up. At about 7 ft, she ripped my regulator out, so I reached for my octo but I realized we were only a few feet down so I just swam the rest of the way up.
See above … once you’ve blown the dive plan, you should end the dive, regardless of how long you’ve been in the water or how much air you have left. It’s something that should have been covered in your Open Water class.c555:Our group of 3 reached the surface safely and we signaled the dive boat to come over. As it got closer, I saw one person sitting on the side breathing oxygen and everyone else was on board, even though it had only been a 1/2 hour.
From this description I would have to say that the divers in your group are so severely undertrained that they have no business doing boat dives in Puget Sound. They need to go back to the pool and learn some fundamental buoyancy skills. The divemaster is not responsible for uncontrolled descents and ascents … the individual divers are. That means if you don’t have the basic skills to make safe ascents and descents, you should not be diving in conditions that require them. Stick to shallow shore dives until you acquire some skills … and perhaps consider finding an instructor who will not hand you a C-card until you have themc555:When we were on board and out of our gear, I learned what happened. The group with my aunt and uncle had started their descent, but my aunt didn't control it. She began sinking extremely fast and finally hit the bottom at over 100 ft. Her buddy and the Dm reached her and were able to safely bring her to the surface. They were brought on and my uncle popped a blood vessel in his left eye so that his eye was not just pink and bloodshot but pure blood red.
The other group of divers, my dad and brother w/ their Dm had a similar problem. My brother is new and he also had an uncontrolled descent. They hit the bottom at 90 ft and then immediatly ascended to the surface. On this dive, no-one was injured.
From your description, the captain did make some poor decisions … as did the woman who pretended to be your divemaster. However, as a certified diver you are responsible for your own safety, and your own decisions to keep yourself safe.c555:The way the captian could have prevended this was drop us in the correct spot. When he cut the engines we were in about 30 ft of water but between then and the time we entered the water we drifted deeper. The captian could have dropped us in 30 ft not 100+ ft to stop the uncontrolled descents.
I’m glad to hear you had a good time … however, given what you described above I question the captain’s judgment in even allowing a second dive.c555:On the second dive at z's reef, my dad and I were the only people who did the second dive and I was with a different dive master and had a very good time.
NWGratefulDiver:But in your initial post you did say that she was a divemaster. Based on your additional comments, I suspect you are correct that she was not ...
Yes I was confused … that’s why I asked for more information. Now that you’ve provided it, we can discuss this dive more intelligently. My intent isn’t to criticize, but to give you some things to think about for future dives. At some point, you need to consider what YOU can do to keep yourself and your dive buddies from having experiences like this one. Don’t rely on a “divemaster” or anyone else to protect you from harm … the whole reason for going through a class is to learn how to do this for yourself.
At which point, if he didn’t have a bottom-sounder to locate the wall he should have chosen an alternative dive site … as you discovered, there’s nothing else out there except a sloping sand bottom, seapens and the occasional pink tritonia nudibranch. Poor decision on the captain’s part.
BTW - I’m assuming you were on the west wall … the east wall would’ve had heavy current that day, even at slack.
Should’ve anchored ... as you discovered, the bottom drops off rather suddenly to depths that inexperienced divers shouldn’t be going to.
Did you at any time during all of this consider that you were not OK? If she was asking, and you were responding “yes” she had no reason to believe she was doing anything wrong … other than not finding the wall. Once again, you need to take some responsibility for your dive … if you are uncomfortable and someone asks you if you are OK … don’t tell them that you are.
At this point, you are not diving the plan … and should have considered ascending long ago regardless of how much air you had left. When you did your Open Water class, did they not tell you to “plan your dive and dive your plan”?
Did you remember to continue exhaling? Even from 7 feet you can easily damage your lungs if you hold your breath.
See above … once you’ve blown the dive plan, you should end the dive, regardless of how long you’ve been in the water or how much air you have left. It’s something that should have been covered in your Open Water class.
From this description I would have to say that the divers in your group are so severely undertrained that they have no business doing boat dives in Puget Sound. They need to go back to the pool and learn some fundamental buoyancy skills. The divemaster is not responsible for uncontrolled descents and ascents … the individual divers are. That means if you don’t have the basic skills to make safe ascents and descents, you should not be diving in conditions that require them. Stick to shallow shore dives until you acquire some skills … and perhaps consider finding an instructor who will not hand you a C-card until you have them
From your description, the captain did make some poor decisions … as did the woman who pretended to be your divemaster. However, as a certified diver you are responsible for your own safety, and your own decisions to keep yourself safe.
I’m glad to hear you had a good time … however, given what you described above I question the captain’s judgment in even allowing a second dive.
From your description, you all were very lucky not to have had a serious injury or accident during these dives. Frankly, I would advise you to get more experience doing shallow shore dives … or even pool practice … before attempting another boat dive. From what you describe, the divemaster isn’t the only one in your group who had inadequate skills for the dives you were attempting to do.
At a minimum, consider calling the dive sooner next time something like this happens … your safety is worth way more than the price of a charter. And as you (hopefully) just learned, you cannot rely on someone else to keep you safe.
… Bob (Grateful Diver)
I wonder how common this is - non-qualified staff acting as divemasters. I certainly came across this with one company in Greece. I was chatting to the "divemaster" who'd been leading the dive afterwards and it came up that he actually only had AOW and was hoping to do his Rescue course soon... :shakeheadNWGratefulDiver:But in your initial post you did say that she was a divemaster. Based on your additional comments, I suspect you are correct that she was not ...