It's amazing but this stuff really does happen every day. It's not just dive operators but instructors do the same things...take people where they are not prepared to go.
Just because you are in a AOW class doesn't prepare you for deeper diving. I helped an instructor friend with an AOW deep dive once. He conducted the dive and I was there just in case anyone needed any help.
It was a 100 fsw easy daytime dive. One guy freaked out the minute we got to 100 fsw so the instructor asked me to take him shallow which I did.
I was on a 130 fsw wreck in British Columbia and an instructor and his girlfriend DM brought a AOW class over from Calgary. It was a CF. My buddy and I got in the water first and got deep fast and avoided the mess until the end of our dive. Once we got up to the deck at 85 fsw and above that to some of the superstructure we started to encounter the class.
It was a mess. Most of the students were crawling and pulling themselves along even at the very top of the structure at 45 fsw. You would think they were conquering the Titanic. We just moved back into the open water to hover for a minute to let the brawl move on through. You would think we were in terrible current or some other adverse condition but it was perfectly calm. They just didn't want to "fall" into the deep.
Once back on deck, I went to the bathroom and the window looked out on to the bow. The instructor and his class were on the bow debriefing so I could clearly here everything that was said.
Everyone was excited at their great adventure. Many of them said things like "there was no way I was going to go past 85 fsw". The DM said "well, I did go to 100 fsw but there was no way I was going to let go of the buoy line!"
No one in that group had any business being there.
Unfortunately, it really does happen every day.
Just because you are in a AOW class doesn't prepare you for deeper diving. I helped an instructor friend with an AOW deep dive once. He conducted the dive and I was there just in case anyone needed any help.
It was a 100 fsw easy daytime dive. One guy freaked out the minute we got to 100 fsw so the instructor asked me to take him shallow which I did.
I was on a 130 fsw wreck in British Columbia and an instructor and his girlfriend DM brought a AOW class over from Calgary. It was a CF. My buddy and I got in the water first and got deep fast and avoided the mess until the end of our dive. Once we got up to the deck at 85 fsw and above that to some of the superstructure we started to encounter the class.
It was a mess. Most of the students were crawling and pulling themselves along even at the very top of the structure at 45 fsw. You would think they were conquering the Titanic. We just moved back into the open water to hover for a minute to let the brawl move on through. You would think we were in terrible current or some other adverse condition but it was perfectly calm. They just didn't want to "fall" into the deep.
Once back on deck, I went to the bathroom and the window looked out on to the bow. The instructor and his class were on the bow debriefing so I could clearly here everything that was said.
Everyone was excited at their great adventure. Many of them said things like "there was no way I was going to go past 85 fsw". The DM said "well, I did go to 100 fsw but there was no way I was going to let go of the buoy line!"
No one in that group had any business being there.
Unfortunately, it really does happen every day.
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