ScubaPink
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Ok. This post may get moved. I was unsure where to actually post it. This happened, I was not involved and did not hear about it until many months later. I will not say where or who or what or any of those identifying details in the interest of protecting anyone involved. ( I also only read news reports and they vary so I am going on 2nd hand information) What happened is this:
A dive charter took a group out diving. On the way back, a wave came in behind the boat and it flipped over. The result was one death and 3 or four injured. When I heard about it, I looked into the conditions on that day and I learned the waves were 5-7 ft and gusting 25mph plus winds. The winds caused "row waves" of 13ft.
Being a new diver, I recall a trip when the conditions were "less than favorable" for diving but we went anyway. Just my group and one other group were on the boat. (about 8 people ) (I learned not to use the head when the boat is in motion in rough seas....lol.....and that it isn't pretty smelling with your head on the floor in that cramped space and all you hear is the water in the bowl swishing and swishing and you cannot help but pray you do not wind up with a head full of yellow stuff) It was ROUGH on that boat. The waves were big that day and so were the winds. You could not navigate around the boat without doing a Tom Cruise in Risky Business slide all over the place. However, I never even considered it might be unsafe to be out on a boat. Yes- admittedly dumb but it just did not occur to me. I "guess" I assumed the charter would call it if conditions were not safe. If they are willing to go, though it may be unpleasant, (and it was) then it must be ok. This boat, was a big boat. (sorry I do not know boats enough to tell you what kind it was) The boat that flipped was not a big boat.
So, I am sure I will hear it is ultimately the divers responsibility to make sure conditions are safe but I am not a boat captain nor particularly knowledgeable about a boats capabilities in what conditions.
Anyone want to share any thoughts about this? Has anyone ever arrived for a dive and the trip was called for conditions? Does this happen or are they too far into the money at this point to call it?
A dive charter took a group out diving. On the way back, a wave came in behind the boat and it flipped over. The result was one death and 3 or four injured. When I heard about it, I looked into the conditions on that day and I learned the waves were 5-7 ft and gusting 25mph plus winds. The winds caused "row waves" of 13ft.
Being a new diver, I recall a trip when the conditions were "less than favorable" for diving but we went anyway. Just my group and one other group were on the boat. (about 8 people ) (I learned not to use the head when the boat is in motion in rough seas....lol.....and that it isn't pretty smelling with your head on the floor in that cramped space and all you hear is the water in the bowl swishing and swishing and you cannot help but pray you do not wind up with a head full of yellow stuff) It was ROUGH on that boat. The waves were big that day and so were the winds. You could not navigate around the boat without doing a Tom Cruise in Risky Business slide all over the place. However, I never even considered it might be unsafe to be out on a boat. Yes- admittedly dumb but it just did not occur to me. I "guess" I assumed the charter would call it if conditions were not safe. If they are willing to go, though it may be unpleasant, (and it was) then it must be ok. This boat, was a big boat. (sorry I do not know boats enough to tell you what kind it was) The boat that flipped was not a big boat.
So, I am sure I will hear it is ultimately the divers responsibility to make sure conditions are safe but I am not a boat captain nor particularly knowledgeable about a boats capabilities in what conditions.
Anyone want to share any thoughts about this? Has anyone ever arrived for a dive and the trip was called for conditions? Does this happen or are they too far into the money at this point to call it?