silent running
Contributor
kimmymore:Thanks Andy, for the wonderful tips again. I am just worried about the currents as I've heard they can be pretty strong. But RIPPING....gosh....how STRONG is THAT!! ???
I didnt know anything about GT Air, thanks for your warning. Now I know better how to book my return flight back to SG.
Hmm...wonder if anyone has horror stories to tell about the currents...
Hi Kim, the currents can be very strong, but you will notice that an experienced diver/DM will know how to handle it, at least they should. Just watch what they do and go with it. Don't fight it any longer than you need to to get in position. Then just hold on and watch the show. Believe it or not, it is not that hard to manage, people do it all the time. I had many of my best dives this way-hanging on and watching Grey Reef sharks and Giant Trevally feeding in a stiff late afternoon current. It's a good idea to get familiar with diving in current if you like seeing fish and travel to wild places to do it. Also, it might be a good idea to have one of the crew jump in and check which way the current is going before you all get in. I find diving in places where there is no current, like most of the Carribbean, to be less stimulating. Less current=less fish, generally speaking.
Make sure you get your weighting well sorted out. Too much weight and you will be adding/dumping your BC a lot which is not very helpful in a current. The less air in your BC the better, you will have more control this way.
The other thing to remember is that if you get caught in current that is going somewhere you don't want to go -like down- stay calm and try to swim 90 degrees/perpendicular to the direction of the current. This usually gets you out of it fastest.
Also a safety sausage/SMB(surface marker buoy) is very important to have. If you get blown off a site, deploy it and the boat can follow you as you drift. It's a good idea to practice deploying one at the end of an easy dive, so it becomes routine. It's not necessarily a bad thing to get blown of a bommie, that's the only time I've seen a Black Marlin, a big one driffting in the blue in Baja Mexico...
You'll be fine! -Andy