Gdog
Contributor
Never Mind.
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Just like other popular dive destinations we have a healthy competition and banter between dive boats. But one thing we always do and that is, if the call goes out for a missing diver, everyone grabs tanks and gear and goes to find them even if it's a recovery dive. We pull people from 2 hours away that come running, ready to dive deep after the 1st team has hit NDL's and back them up to get in the water. Drop what you are doing, close shop, get off FB and get diving deep to go find them. Boats are always standing by and will go no matter what, just get to the dock.
A dive op may not be friendly with the boat that's in trouble, but it's a diver and you have to go. Doing your 2nd dive when you know there's an overdue diver and you have tanks, qualified DM's or passengers within ear shot that can make the dive but don't??? That's not right. And if you were a passenger on a boat waiting for your 2nd dive and still did it without redirecting to look (topside or bottom) shame on you. Even staying at 60 feet or snorkeling and looking down to the bottom is searching and helping. Every piece of sand or topside that you can cross off and marked covered helps.
Blowing off doing any help to search so you can continue a vacation?? I wouldn't be able to sleep at night.
I've lost the group a few times. IME, if you lose the group and did not see it happening, the chances are that they are downcurrent, not upcurrent from you.I am going to nitpick one element of Mike's previous post. If you suddenly realize that you are alone, your first thought should not be "panic." Ideally you have enough training/experience to think instead "Geez I screwed this up. Now where did they go?"
This is where the self-reliance training/experience comes into play. I do not know if what CowBells experienced was personal apprehension or a concern for her husband. She can address that with her husband or here as she chooses. My suggestion, beyond the self-reliance issue, is that if she photographs a lot, her buddy should be beside or behind her. I do not remember if Tormentos has coral heads suitable for getting behind and out of the current, but that option, along with facing into the current and slowly swimming to minimize current-induced separation.
You say that a lot, that you think that there are lots of diver deaths in the waters around Cozumel that we don't ever hear about. That's a pretty serious allegation; upon what do you base it?We never even hear about most of the losses I don't think.
My thoughts, which could be wrong. Maybe most of them do make US Google news.You say that a lot, that you think that there are lots of diver deaths in the waters around Cozumel that we don't ever hear about. That's a pretty serious allegation; upon what do you base it?
Not to take a news article as a fact source, but this casts a new possible view: "Emma said Tamara and her two brothers went to Cozumel for vacation and decided to try scuba diving. She said there was a large group on the dive with a number of guides, but that as the group surfaced, they lost sight of Tamara." It was mentioned early here that she was newly certified tho, so I don't guess this was after Discover training.Best wishes for the family. Utah woman missing in Mexico | ksl.com
DAN Report 2004I think locally here in Southern California we get about 5 scuba deaths a year. We may have 1,000 dives on Saturdays and Sundays but less than that on the weekdays, and probably less during winter weekends. It's too bad that the denominator in the equation is always a rough estimate. It would be interesting to have better data to make these type of comparisons. All things considered though scuba is relatively safe.