This accident happened on Saturday Saturday morning during a dive off of Sambro Island.
From the Halifax Chronicle Herald:
Woman dies in diving accident - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca
Woman dies in diving accident
By KELLY SHIERS and STEVE BRUCE Staff Reporters
Sun. Nov 2 - 5:14 AM
A scuba diver died Saturday after something went wrong during a morning dive off Sambro Island.
The 28-year-old woman was brought ashore by a coast guard rescue boat at about 11:30 a.m. and rushed to the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax in critical condition.
She was pronounced dead at hospital. Her name wasn't released.
The woman was picked up by crew from the coast guard cutter Sambro about 1.6 kilometres southwest of Sambro Island, said navy Capt. Edward Stewart, spokesman for the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre.
She had been diving from the boat Ryan & Erin, Capt. Stewart said.
He said coast guard employees in a rigid-hulled inflatable boat were working on a buoy in the area, overheard the distress call and were able to get to the dive site in about six minutes.
The unconscious woman was taken to the Sambro wharf to waiting paramedics.
"Shortly after 11:30, a rescue boat arrived at the wharf with a 28-year-old female," said Emergency Health Services spokesman Paul Maynard. "She was unresponsive and unconscious.
"We transported her to the QEII Code 1, which is lights and sirens it's an urgent transfer."
The Ryan & Erin is a 10.5-metre Cape Island-style fishing boat operated by Skipper Dave's Charters of Sambro Head.
Dave Gray, the boat's skipper, said Saturday night he didn't want to comment on the tragedy out of respect for the victim's family. Asked if he'd had a rough day, Mr. Gray said, "Put yourself in my shoes."
The website describes Skipper Dave's as the "top dive charter operation in the Halifax, Sambro and St. Margarets Bay areas."
"Skipper Dave Gray is a semi-retired commercial fisherman who knows the water and ocean bottom around the Halifax and Sambro area as well as any man alive," the website says. "For divers, this means Dave knows where the choice shipwrecks are."
The website says the Ryan & Erin can accommodate up to 12 divers.
( kshiers@herald.ca)
From the Halifax Chronicle Herald:
Woman dies in diving accident - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca
Woman dies in diving accident
By KELLY SHIERS and STEVE BRUCE Staff Reporters
Sun. Nov 2 - 5:14 AM
A scuba diver died Saturday after something went wrong during a morning dive off Sambro Island.
The 28-year-old woman was brought ashore by a coast guard rescue boat at about 11:30 a.m. and rushed to the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax in critical condition.
She was pronounced dead at hospital. Her name wasn't released.
The woman was picked up by crew from the coast guard cutter Sambro about 1.6 kilometres southwest of Sambro Island, said navy Capt. Edward Stewart, spokesman for the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre.
She had been diving from the boat Ryan & Erin, Capt. Stewart said.
He said coast guard employees in a rigid-hulled inflatable boat were working on a buoy in the area, overheard the distress call and were able to get to the dive site in about six minutes.
The unconscious woman was taken to the Sambro wharf to waiting paramedics.
"Shortly after 11:30, a rescue boat arrived at the wharf with a 28-year-old female," said Emergency Health Services spokesman Paul Maynard. "She was unresponsive and unconscious.
"We transported her to the QEII Code 1, which is lights and sirens it's an urgent transfer."
The Ryan & Erin is a 10.5-metre Cape Island-style fishing boat operated by Skipper Dave's Charters of Sambro Head.
Dave Gray, the boat's skipper, said Saturday night he didn't want to comment on the tragedy out of respect for the victim's family. Asked if he'd had a rough day, Mr. Gray said, "Put yourself in my shoes."
The website describes Skipper Dave's as the "top dive charter operation in the Halifax, Sambro and St. Margarets Bay areas."
"Skipper Dave Gray is a semi-retired commercial fisherman who knows the water and ocean bottom around the Halifax and Sambro area as well as any man alive," the website says. "For divers, this means Dave knows where the choice shipwrecks are."
The website says the Ryan & Erin can accommodate up to 12 divers.
( kshiers@herald.ca)