dumpsterDiver
Banned
- Messages
- 9,003
- Reaction score
- 4,660
- # of dives
- 2500 - 4999
Actually... my one and only true underwater rescue involved a victim who repeatedly refused my regulator, she just was thrashing around, I was her DM on a dive to 80, first diver after cert and we were sinking down on a drift dive. She was about 10 feet below me and seemed to be doing fine on descent.............................. When we got to 60-65 feet maybe, I saw her move her head side to side in a searching type motion. We had only one other dive in our group. So when I saw her looking, I immediately swam to her and touched her shoulder, within a few seconds... she turned looked at me and just spit her reg out in my face. I was completely confused, but since his was the initial descent and I was just sinking negatively, butt first, I was totally rested...................... I immediately just stuck my primary to her mouth. Instantly, instinctively and without any thought..... she spit it... and started thrashing. I repeated with the same result one or two more times, as we continued to sink. I was completely baffled and now freaked out....................... I had no idea what to do, so I went on instinct. I grabbed the back of her head with one hand, and forcibly held the reg to her lips with the other, a just floored the purge button...and started kicking like hell for the surface....I could not see her face, I had no idea if she was breathing... just a huge stream of bubbles in her face........................ After a while of hard swimming, it was then that I realized a mistake...I was holding MY breath. I was so concerned with her, that I never thought to put my octopus in and I guess my freediving instincts took over. I was reminded of my error by an over full feeling in my lungs and some discomfort, so I exhaled, and very quickly shoved a reg in my mouth and kept swimming hard. We reached the surface quickly and the boat came right back. When we got to the surface, I hit her inflator button and NOTHING, she was now still, but seemed conscious.... The sea conditions werwe rough 4-6, choppy............... As we loaded her onto the platform, I turned on her tank valve.. it had been completely off!.. She said she was descending and it got hard to breath then nothing and she never signaled and just thought that it was her imagination, because all the gear was brand new...so she did nothing until she was in full panic mode..unable to accept a regulator......not everyone who really needs it will grab a regulator... even well trained people with tons of experience who should have a regulator in their mouth may not grab one in an emergency.. (e.g.. me)!!!I think so too ... even a panicked diver will accept a reg shoved in their face if they need air badly enough. The problem with a diver who has full lungs and isn't exhaling is that their need to breathe hasn't kicked in yet, and so getting to the surface is their ultimate priority. Panic is an instinctive response ... so is breathing. If the need to breathe is the priority, they'll do whatever it takes to satisfy the need. Make the "whatever it takes" as visible and easy as possible.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
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