broncobowsher
Contributor
A crew that is helpful gets better tips as well. If they are willing to be helpful and work, make life better for the diver, they get the green stuff with larger numbers on it.
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I wasn't going to touch this one....But, here it goes. I'm soon to be 55 years old, I'm 6'3" tall, and 245Lbs, and I'm as strong as a bull. I dive with single Steel 121's, and single Steel 120's. on a regular basis, I toss them around pretty good. When, I'm kitted with double 120's, or 95's and (2) 40 cubic bottles I'm probably over 400 lbs. I had an instance a couple of weeks ago where the area to put your "Extra." equipment was full. So....in full gear, I climbed the steps, and walked to wear I could remove my gear. I could feel it in my legs, especially in my calves, and quads. (and then, for 3 days later.)because for me diving is about community and enjoying mutual interest as much as it is about the challenge.
So why do people make a condition of being able to climb a ladder with all your stuff in order to be able to techdive?
Even for recreational diving if you cant climb back on the ladder on your own or preform basic requirement that tells me you are dependent on other people and a possible burden should some is to happen.
I can give you a personal example - In a recent boat dive i had one of the divers got really sea sick right before climbing the ladder, he was non responsive almost as if he was in shock and beginning to drift away from the boat.
Since i was already out of my gear on the boat i jumped back in the water to drag him back, fighting against the 5-6ft swells and the ripping currents of the Med.
The last thing i would need at that moment is having to drag somebody else up the ladder because they are too overweight / out of shape / old / injured to do it themselves. (or if you cant even drag yourself back up how can you be expected to help drag someone else during an emergency?)
To sum it up if you are jumping in the water knowing full well you cannot preform what would be considered as basic tasks or requirements (what would happen if you encountered a current? say **** it and rely on your buddies to drag you?) than you are not only a burden but also reckless for willingly risking other people who might have to jump in and save you.
When i injured my knee i did not go diving knowing full well that if something is to happen im going to be a burden and possible risk for others.