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There is no step-by-step, every net situation is guaranteed to be different. The major problem that I've observed is that the top and bottom of the net are often in different places meaning that the the net is either stretched out beneath you or billowing over you. In either case the entanglement will most likely involve your instruments, snorkel, light, and/or your rig (this assumes that you're squared away with respect to things like fin straps). If all you've done is blunder into a net with your hands out in front, and all you've tangled is your gauges and maybe your snorkel, disentangling, backing up, observing which way the net is going and getting to a safe position should not be a big deal (I hate to see the guy who's overdriving the visibility on his scooter and plows into one, that's going to be a mess).Thalassamania,
If you would be willing, many here would like to hear some step by step procedure(s) that would be useful and successful with a backplate and Hog harness, 200 to 300 gram undies. I think most of us do our best to visualize what procedures we'd use/try with a net but I got some valuable insights from netdoc's post and would like to hear some procedure for nets in current, etc.
We can practice doff and dons all we want but it seems like it's pretty hard to truly practice for a net in current entanglement. (All that phantom knife slashing doesn't provide much definite
practice...in the mellow/shallow conditions I practice in.)
Anyone dealt with a gill net entanglement here who'd be willing to give us a step by step?
Thanks.
Where the problem comes in is when, for one reason or another, you get your rig fouled in the net in ways that you can not see. Some diver fell that their best bet at this point is to cut everything that they can until they're free ... there's something to be said for this approach but two [SIZE=-1]caveats[/SIZE]: before you start fussing be damn sure you know which way the net is going, which way the current flows, where you're going to go once free, and stay oriented; have a wrist lanyard for your knife, I once cut a diver out of a gill net who was as stuck as could be and whose knife was on the bottom, directly below us.
My approach is to put my paramediic shears on a lanyard over my wrist and then get out of my rig, gently untangle it, back away from the net cutting only as I have to, and once clear don my rig and get to a safe position.
Yes, we have taken nets of several designs into the pool and "confined water" to work with and we've even done observations on how fishing gear operates by climbing around on trawler nets whilst they were fishing in shallow water.