I honestly hope more light gets shed on this story. I think it would do the diving community some good to see what can go wrong during dives and how these issues can be prevented. I can't stress enough how important it is to remain calm and not panic. The guy I pulled from the bottom of the lake was necessarily in any imminent danger, but had I not been bubble watching he could've been down there a while and as much of a panic state as he was in I don't have the full confidence that he would've taken it upon himself to figure out how to get to the surface. And he was breathing down that AL80 pretty damn quick! So if you take nothing else away from this thread and these posts, remember to keep calm. As long as you have a reg in your mouth and air in your tank, chances are pretty good you can solve any other issue under water and keep an incident from becoming an accident.
Hi Shortbus.
I agree with what you wrote. I would like to ad that "slow is fast". In the sticky situations that I have been in I have always done the best when I stop, I breathe, and then I act on a logical plan. And I don't mean scuba diving. I mean all sticky situations.
Stop, breathe, act, formulate plan b while working on plan a.
I have been tangled in kelp and fishing line while scuba diving. I was tangled in oil boom while trying to free it from the propeller of the boom boat while free swimming (under the boat--obviously I did not breathe in that instance, but you know...) . Stop, breathe, act.
I was at Monterey and got tangled in kelp. I could not see the kelp that entangled me. I was snagged in multiple places. I had dealt with kelp before, but never like that. I stopped, I breathed, and then rolled over and started snapping all kelp that seems to be strained. I got free except for my fin strap was still tangled. Stop, breathe, act.
If you are hopelessly tangled can you free yourself better by ditching your BC? My BC/tank/reg seems to get tangled most followed by my fins.
Stop, breathe, act. It has worked for me in more than scuba diving. I was up on roof and cut myself with a skilsaw. I stopped, I breathed, and then I acted.
Slow is fast.
My condolences, it could happen to any of us.
markm