I guess I'm a little confused here...and I admit I'm new, and I have a lot to learn. But, I don't understand where the OP did anything wrong?
She gored a sacred cow. Maybe we should feed cows to Lionfish.
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I guess I'm a little confused here...and I admit I'm new, and I have a lot to learn. But, I don't understand where the OP did anything wrong?
Yeah Lionfish and Ciguatera, the Facts have Changed | The CORE FoundationBesides wasn't there a recent post where some lionfish meat was coming back toxic to eat? So taking them to eat might be a bad choice. Course can't find the link to where I read that.
Totally different toxin - kills quickly.I have not heard that one yet, are you sure it was lionfish and not fugu??
DandyDon:Yeah Lionfish and Ciguatera, the Facts have Changed | The CORE Foundation
QUOTE]
I saw this article a while back and initially it surprised me as I have eaten a lot of lionfish. We have a small group of us who fry up a bunch one or two times a week here.
After reading the article again, the thing that jumps out at me is that it only says the fish tested positive for the presence of Ciguatera, but makes no mention of the levels found or what level can cause sickness.
I'd be willing to bet that other fish that are at the same risk, but which we generally assume are safe to eat like grouper and snapper would have a high rate of the toxin being present as well.
Until I see some kind of information about the acutal levels of toxin found and the levels found in other fish or some actual cases of people getting sick from lionfish I won't be worrying.
Sorry to veer off track.
Eddittid four Grhammur.
I never described "a bolt to the surface", I said it was a controlled emergency ascent. And yes, I'm annoyed; if the PAID guide would've been guiding the dive instead of spearing/filleting/feeding all those lionfish, he wouldn't have been stung in the first place. Let me be clear, this was not one of those entertainment-type feed dives that some operators offer, this was supposed to be a standard reef dive by a reputable dive shop. There's a final bit of irony to this story: the guide did try to stay underwater with the group despite his pain; he didn't last much longer than me. In the end, he also aborted with a controlled emergency ascent and skipped the safety stop.
As noted, I didn't depend on him for safety, but the "what more" I expected was for him to do what he was paid to do. Let me ask you something, since you're SB staff and an Assimilated Medical Mod: Let's say you are the paid guide. Someone in the group is bit by an eel, exhibiting symptoms of pain, flashing a "not OK" sign and has substantive bleeding. Do you just shrug your shoulders or are you planning to at least swim over and access the situation? Let's try this a different way: Let's say you pay $130 for a guided dive with your son or daughter. The guide is a camera buff. He's so busy taking photos he doesn't notice your kid gets bit by an eel...but hey, you're a calm, collected and experienced buddy, so you're entirely capable of handling the situation. You aren't the least bit bothered by this scenario?
I love it when someone cites their "great deal of experience with pain" in order to pass judgment on what others ought to be able to handle. DD used that same logic. Your "great deal of experience" never qualifies you to gauge the subjective level of someone else's pain level or ability to manage. When you're deep underwater, injured to the point that you don't have full control of your gear because of the nature or location of the injury, have significant bleeding, are concerned about passing out or having an adverse reaction (and to top it all off, you've got a guide who's too busy hunting lionfish to pay attention to his group) the safest, most intelligent choice is a controlled emergency ascent. Thats what I said I did. And fortunately, I had a buddy who was able to assist.
I'm sorry; I generally loathe people who multiquote, and here I am going to do it.
Maybe I am misreading, but the use of the term "CESA" and the description of your buddy having to manage your BC on ascent just didn't give me much a feeling of control. Even if you had an injured hand, you had another one that wasn't, that could operate your BC. Becoming dependent on a buddy for buoyancy control is a high degree of incapacitation in my book.
This is where we really do have a totally different idea of how things go in the water. If I were injured, or my loved one were injured, I'd signal the guide and tell him we were leaving. I would not expect him to assist, unless the problem were beyond me, in which case I would signal and ask him to come (and I'm having trouble envisioning what that circumstance might be -- and it is far more difficult to coordinate an underwater rescue effort with three people involved in it than it is with just two). I don't expect the guide to be watching out for injuries or even problems -- I am responsible for my own dive, as are my buddies. I don't know what you think the guide should have done to assist you, especially as he was charged with guiding the entire group, not all of whom needed to abort their dive because of your injury.
You are right -- I have no right to judge the amount of pain you were in. But I am judging your capacity to cope with it. You had an injury that, as it turns out, didn't even require closure, and as a result of that injury, you were unable to manage your own exit from the dive. That bothers me, and I think it should bother you. We all have a point at which we are incapacitated by pain, and as an ER doc I see this all the time. Patients range from the ones who can't stop crying and screaming because they caught their finger in a door, to the ones who walk into the ER with a dislocated shoulder and tell me they don't want any pain meds because they make them sleepy. I think what people do need to do, though, is reflect on their pain tolerance and what implications it has for their ability to cope in the situations they put themselves into, whether that's somebody who's doing back country skiing, surfing, or diving.
DD - Im taking your dumb ass award and giving it to the professional guide who was PAID to be a guide and was dumb ass enough to get stung while lionfish hunting on everyone else's dime.!
Yet you dive with Bob?I generally loathe people who multiquote.