I doubt 300 ft. She was in front of Buddy Dive. I'm not sure there is 300 ft anywhere nearby, even halfway to Klein Bonaire.
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About the only evidence we get in cases like this is the computer download - which would be helpful in many ways even if its rarely definitive.I doubt 300 ft. She was in front of Buddy Dive. I'm not sure there is 300 ft anywhere nearby, even halfway to Klein Bonaire.
Well, 300 ft is confirmed, by head of tech ops at Buddy Dive. Worse, the dive was on air diluent. Jeez. One word: complacency. There are no other words for this type of pushing one's limits.I doubt 300 ft. She was in front of Buddy Dive. I'm not sure there is 300 ft anywhere nearby, even halfway to Klein Bonaire.
But if people could refrain from weighing in until they actually have specific facts instead of just opinions, then at least the families might be able to get the bodies in the ground, and there’d be at least the illusion of respect for the dead. And we could all still learn our important lessons.
Worse, the dive was on air diluent.
Well, 300 ft is confirmed, by head of tech ops at Buddy Dive. Worse, the dive was on air diluent. Jeez. One word: complacency. There are no other words for this type of pushing one's limits.
There isn’t an inherent conflict between showing some respect for the dead by limiting comment about the cause of death for a respectful length of time, and having a discussion for the benefit of others scuba divers regarding what is safe and what is unsafe. At least in concept, note can be made of a passing, and then people can keep still until someone actually knows something worth saying. Of course, in real life there will always be too many people who just want to hear themselves blather for that to actually work. But if people could refrain from weighing in until they actually have specific facts instead of just opinions, then at least the families might be able to get the bodies in the ground, and there’d be at least the illusion of respect for the dead. And we could all still learn our important lessons.
Let me add "hubris" as another word.Well, 300 ft is confirmed, by head of tech ops at Buddy Dive. Worse, the dive was on air diluent. Jeez. One word: complacency. There are no other words for this type of pushing one's limits.
I agree, it makes no sense. I saw two 40s, nothing more. The tech guy said 300 ft and air. Seems the channel between Buddy Dive and Klein goes to 600 ft. He said she swam straight out; I don't know how he knew that, since she was solo. I assume the 300 came from her handset. If she did get to 300, and back to the reef at 80, she almost made it. I don't know the status of her 40s. I'll report more if I learn more.Thanks @tursiops. I have to think something got garbled upstream from you. Complacency is one thing, but air DIL at 300'? Between the narcosis, DIL PO2 and gas density that's hard to fathom - a triple bust. And only having 2x 40s for bailout? Another bust. Solo?
I only met her in passing and can't claim to know her, but I would be shocked and amazed if she was planning a solo 300' dive with that set up no matter what the Tech Ops guy thought. That's too many busts for me to accept it. Not questioning your reporting or what that guy said, but it just doesn't make any sense.