I'm writing this because it is a fun story I have from a while ago, and some of you can learn from this. About 6 months ago, I was doing my deep dive for the advanced open water course. We had chosen to do this in Lake Travis, because it is a little safer than the ocean. We had descended perfectly fine, through the green murky water, when at about 74 feet we had encountered a thick layer of sediments. Seeing as we were deep enough already, (PADI requires 60ft for the deep dive), we had chosen to ascend. I had some slight issues going up, but I remembered to twist the exhaust valve the other way for the way up. Well, it turns out I hadn't. I accidentally let go of the reel anchored to the bottom, and I had to keep flipping over and ejecting the air from my BCD, thinking that would be enough. At first it was, and I managed to regroup and grab the reel. Then as we continued to go up, there was no more air in my BCD, I had flipped over, and I was now rocketing up to the surface. I couldn't eject air from my neck seal either, as I was feet first. At about 15 feet, my divemaster managed to hold onto me for 3 minutes for an emergency deco stop. When he couldn't hold on any longer I floated up to the surface, and on the way up my boots had fallen off, so I had to deflate myself and put my fins back on for any sort of mobility. Thinking back on this incident, if I had been in the ocean, it would have most certainly been worse, and I may not have made it. What had happened with my drysuit
was I apparently had the exhaust valve open at the bottom, and I had closed it for the ascent. This is why it is always important to remember, clockwise closes, counterclockwise opens. I was wondering if you guys have any similar stories or input?