grey2112
Contributor
With 37 dives under my belt, and feeling confident in my abilities (as well as having been trained by an incredible instructor and diving with him numerous times as friends) I thought I was better than this.
But I'm also frugal, and like to get the most out of my dives. Me and a buddy were diving off my boat and I neglected to use the marker buoy to mark the wreck - I thought I dropped anchor in a perfect spot, but after swimming around for 15-20 minutes we couldn't find it - we surfaced and saw the boat quite a ways away - looking at my air I saw 1600 psi - enough for a decent dive - and I didn't want to waste it going back down and swimming back to the boat. So I decided we'd just swim on the surface with our snorkels. Well, the current was faster than we thought, and it seemed to take forever to get back to the boat, and I was getting exhausted fighting the current.
So - lessons learned - always use a marker buoy, if you go down and can't see your intended target then come up, get back on the boat, and find it again. Last but not least, it is far easier to swim back at depth after shooting a bearing with your compass (you DO have a compass and know how to use it, right?) than to do it on the surface - better to have less air when you get back than not make it back because you are too exhausted to swim against current.
But I'm also frugal, and like to get the most out of my dives. Me and a buddy were diving off my boat and I neglected to use the marker buoy to mark the wreck - I thought I dropped anchor in a perfect spot, but after swimming around for 15-20 minutes we couldn't find it - we surfaced and saw the boat quite a ways away - looking at my air I saw 1600 psi - enough for a decent dive - and I didn't want to waste it going back down and swimming back to the boat. So I decided we'd just swim on the surface with our snorkels. Well, the current was faster than we thought, and it seemed to take forever to get back to the boat, and I was getting exhausted fighting the current.
So - lessons learned - always use a marker buoy, if you go down and can't see your intended target then come up, get back on the boat, and find it again. Last but not least, it is far easier to swim back at depth after shooting a bearing with your compass (you DO have a compass and know how to use it, right?) than to do it on the surface - better to have less air when you get back than not make it back because you are too exhausted to swim against current.