RoatanMan:
Larry, you'll know me when you see me, I am the guy with thousands of warm water dives not wearing any gloves. All ten fingers still attached! (technically)
Hi RoatanMan,
I was going to respond yesterday but I was busy...buying more gloves.
For the record, I too have logged thousands of dives and I'm sure you like myself have learned many valuable lessons from our boating environment.
Since we are trading barbs, I wasn't quite sure if your "terminally clumsy" was referring to me or you. I can assure you that the ladder was not in any disrepair. We returned to the boat to discover that the seas had gone from calm to nearly constant 6 foot "rollers". There was nothing wrong with the ladder. Like many ladders, it is hinged at the base (this is a 25 foot pleasure boat with a small platform rather than a commercial dive boat). The surge was so great that one had to time planting the feet on the first rung of the ladder before the next swell. Unfortunately, once I planted my foot the stern surged upwards causing my gloved hands to slip down the polished tube of the ladder. Then as the stern then plunged downwards, the hand slipped upwards into the built in ladder hinge where it connects to the platform. At the same time the ladder did as it was designed to do...it swung out and up...opening the gap in the hinge and my hand was now between the top of the ladder tube and the platform. The next surge of the stern upwards caused the ladder to swing back to its fully extended position except that my fingertip was clamped in between. My full weight and the added momentum of the the upward surge was applied to my fingertip. Kind of like hitting your finger with a sledge hammer. It only took about once second.
The thickness of the glove actually saved my finger tip. As the glove material was compressed, it pushed my finger ever so slightly away from being completely crushed by the ladder tube.
So much for teminally clumsy and not inspecting the ladder...that is simply more BS to support your perhaps misguided opinion that one should wear gloves.
For the record, I DO believe that divers wearing gloves are more likely to touch something...they feel protected. I won't argue with this. MY POINT is not one of reef protection but one of personal protection. You wear sunglasses and a hat for protection on the boat taking you to your dive site (where you might engage in uninvited touching). You wear a dive skin, or a wetsuit or perhaps only a tee shirt for protection from stings and bites while diving. Would it not be logical to also argue that sun glasses, hats, dive skins, wetsuits or tee shirts all contribute to reef damage because they all aid divers in protecting themselves and thereby allowing them to dive more safely and more comfortably?
BTW, I do NOT routinely dive with a skin or wetsuit (warm water diver). I started diving when I was 7 years old as a skin diver with my father. I have continued to skindive for all these years. I learned at a very young age what fire coral was and to simply never let my unprotected body touch it. Everytime I did touch it I got a lesson for the teminally clumsy.
I would suggest that learning to scuba dive with no skin protection at all in warm water would make all divers very careful about their bouyancy and unplanned reef contact. Of course that must sound downright silly as a training exercise...who would knowingly expose themselves to all these nasty stings bites and cuts. So....let's blame the gloves...that really logical!
Finally, I know it sounds silly but I even wear gloves when treating people...it's true...they have some rather nasty germs and contain blood. Gloves are considered a form of human protection from injury and disease. Logical, resonable humans will consider protection a good thing. It is one of the reasons we have succeeded as a species. I can only hope that some form of "Natural Selection" will take hold and eliminate the non-gloved divers from the oceans of the world before they multiply.
Zing....again.
Talk later. Gotta buy booties.
Laurence Stein, DDS