SolarStorm
Contributor
My daughter is a national level athlete. She tore her ACL. The hard part during the recovery was when she started to "feel" better, but the graft was not strong enough take the physical activity. Her friend also tore her ACL almost at the same time. My daughter followed her PT her friend did not. Her friend is not playing and now waiting for a corrective surgery as she streched her new graft. (and you only have so many places to take a graft from)
My biggest fear would be your geared up, on the boat and wave rocks the boat and you loose balance. Thrust your leg out at an awkward angle and rotate to maintain balance. This would probably land you back in surgery. The other potential problems have already been answered.
The choice is yours. In 6 weeks you will "feel" good. The new graft will probably not be that strong. You simply need to quantify your risks.
Diving = fun
100% chance of success (you are diving after all)
surgery = no fun
small chance of injury, but with large consequences.
Pick a card, any card...
My biggest fear would be your geared up, on the boat and wave rocks the boat and you loose balance. Thrust your leg out at an awkward angle and rotate to maintain balance. This would probably land you back in surgery. The other potential problems have already been answered.
The choice is yours. In 6 weeks you will "feel" good. The new graft will probably not be that strong. You simply need to quantify your risks.
Diving = fun
100% chance of success (you are diving after all)
surgery = no fun
small chance of injury, but with large consequences.
Pick a card, any card...