That would be fine if the student is above OW student in training (and I was also writing about the loss of both contacts, not just a single contact - and - this is assuming they were blind as a bat if that should happen)
So you're assuming just because it's a new OW diver or a student that nothing is going to happen to their buddy? If they are at a point in their training where they are in open water they need to be able to function period.
We are talking about an OW student. You have a terror/panic situation, that's what
If they are having terror/panic issues when they can't see their gauge for the short time it takes to do an ascent from the bottom of a pool then they have NO business in open water until they overcome that. A student in open water is a certified diver in a short time...terror/panic triggers need to be overcome before they are ever given their card.
Yes, there are, with practice and experience... an OW student has neither (and the hypothetical concerned an OW student who lost both contacts and was blind as a bat without them)
That's funny, I can have brand spanking new people doing 30fpm ascents in the pool without looking at their gauges in a very short time. Generally I only need to show them once, we all ascend together at 30fpm so they can feel how slow that is. Even my legally blind without his contacts student did just fine, in fact he said it was easy for him because he was used to using senses other than sight. The pool is a fine place to gain practice and experience on ascent speed.
Again, the OP refers to a OW student, not someone seasoned and practiced... I would expect them to skip the "Safety" stop and get to the surface.
They don't have to make the safety stop, some feel better if they make a stop of some sort and I'm simply pointing out that it's possible. When you give OW students a chance to exceed expectations it's amazing what they can accomplish.
Please, please, please tell me you have NEVER done this with an OW student! I am quite sure these procedures are not part of curriculum for OW certification of any agency
It's been part of our OW curriculum for nearly 30 years and the treasure hunt is a favorite of the students. Actually that exercise is the reason I teach today, I wanted to be on the staff side of it. The blackout mask OOA is done on the surface first to work out communication/execution problems then in the shallows with a staff member right next to them to intervene if necessary. It's an easy exercise that's done during one of the final pool sessions; one qualifier, the students have spend almost 20 hours in the pool by this time so it's not necessarily an appropriate exercise for faster classes but it CAN be done with OW students. Zero visibility is a possiblity at our dive sites (even on OW check-out dives) and the students need to know they have the ability to function and abort a dive without being able to see, we are not training them to continue dives when the vis goes to zero simply to exit a zero visibility situation if it occurs and we stress that.
Huh?
The hypothetical was based on helping the OW student not panic after losing both contacts at depth, AFTER certification, not during student training... as a means of preemptive solution... where it is important, yes.
I am only assuming your meaning on this last one, because I cannot make sense of it.
We train students without their contacts in and with their eyes open. Those who are "blind as a bat" sometimes have trouble seeing the demonstrations depending on where they position themselves in relation to the person doing the demo. We group our visually challenged students together and do up-close demo's for them to avoid that "What did they just do? I couldn't see it" bewilderment (a pre-emptive solution).
They shouldn't be in open water if they are going to panic if they lose their contacts. This is something that's so simple to deal with in the pool that it should never be an issue in open water.
Here's a scenario that illustrates what I'm hearing you say and maybe I'm just misunderstanding you.
Diver 1 "Hi, I panic if I lose both my contacts underwater"
Diver 2 "Um ok, how do you want to deal with that"
Diver 1 "If both my contacts come out I'll give you this hand signal"
You know what I'm going to do if I'm diver #2?
"Tell you what, take your contacts out and bring just your snorkel and come with me. We'll have you comfortable without them in no time."
A little patience and time and the panic issue can be resolved making the signal a moot point.
Ber :lilbunny: