AfterDark
Contributor
A person trained and equiped for solo diving is not, as far as I can see, at any greater risk than a person with a buddy.
I think the guys I was night diving with years ago would disput that concept. One guy swam into a gill net one night with less than 1000psi air. He was alone and out front at the time. When we caught up with him it took both me and a second diver to cut him out and I almost got entangled while helping.
There are situations where you could die without outside assistance. I am not solo certified so I don't know if they mention it during the solo class but any solo diver faces the same possibility, that is getting into a jam where only a second set of hands are enough to get you out. There are other situations where having a buddy may not mean a thing at all. If a diver has a heart attack lets say post dive but the buddy doesn't know CPR well other than calling 911 what good is the buddy?
Solo hiking has similar hazards, falling and breaking a leg miles away from anything in the cold without a cell phone or some means to summon help you could become worm food.
No man is an island onto himself; but we do like to dive alone sometimes.

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