Green_Manelishi
Contributor
grassyknoll:I have read this a few times and wonder if it's true. Not that I would ever question GMs dive knowledge but two things make me question it. I have never seen an ocean current completely submerge a bouy, be it a crab pot marker, morring bouy or other. I don't know how much lift bouyancy a standard bouy has but I would think a fully inflated BC and empty tank would be in the balpark. And the other reason I wonder is due to my experiences waterskiing, even getting towed along at 5-10 knots in a horizontal position, I would usually not be fully submerged (note, I did not say I was even close to being a GOOD waterskier).
If anyone is willing to tie off in a reasonable current and report back it would be very enlightening, any takers.....anyone?
Well I am flattered but I've been wrong before and probably will be again. However, I have personally experienced being dragged under while on the surface, in a current and "anchored" to the bottom; I was holding onto a lobster trap warp line. One of the other posters commented about the basic mechanics involved.