Mask Flooding Panic

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I read Walter's article as well. Very nice indeed. My problem with any sort of mask flooding was that I would get a brain freeze as well as having the 'I must breathe through my nose'- panic. Practice was the ultimate trainer. A really simplistic way to think of it is also approach the water like you would chopping onions. You 'breathe through your mouth and not your nose' (regulator/snorkel) and you can always blow out your nose at any time (assisting in purging the mask).
 
Some great ideas to help folks get through a skill that many find challenging. I've also had folks practice in the shower. Room mates and family may think you're odd but I have had some success! Take your mask with you in the shower put a little water in at a time to get used to the water around your nose. Exhaling though the nose also helps some folks. Once used to the water in the mask practice clearing by looking up and exhaling though your nose. At any time you can take off the mask. Try again.

I had a student do this and next class they were clearing like a pro!
 
theskull:
Perhaps you should consider bicycle riding as your recreation. A SCUBA diver on the verge of panic over a little water in the mask is an accident looking hard for a place to happen. Please warn your potential dive buddies before endangering them.

theskull

My most humble apologies! I truly had no idea that there were so many of you who had such a terrible time with this skill initially. This may be the best thing I've learned from participating on this forum. I promise to be more sensitive from now on . . . BAD skull. (Serious . . . none of my usual sarcasm in this message.)

theskull
 
This was probably the hardest skill in my OW certification class for me also. In the first confined water class, I realized that it was going to be a problem for me. My solution was to practice flooding & clearing my mask many times while snorkeling at a local spring the next day. That helped me get through the certification process. However, I still wasn't truly comfortable with a flooded mask.

I think that beyond "don't hold your breathe" & "don't ascend too fast", that mask clearing is one of the most important skills you learn in Open Water. More specifically, I think that it is important that all OW students become comfortable breathing without a mask. It is entirely possible for a diver to find themselves without a mask OR a regulator. It is obvious that the regulator is most important, so the mask (or mask clearing) needs to take a back seat at that point.

I practice mask flooding & clearing, mask removal & replacement, & even hand off my mask to my buddy for a while on a regular basis. I had some serious issues with this skill when I first started diving, & I am just glad that I didn't have a serious emergency requiring me to function without my mask in cold water in a stressful situation, because I would have absolutely flipped out.

Work with this skill until it is old hat, & then keep up with it by testing yourself at least every other dive. Others have posted here with many good pointers, my point is to use their advice & master this skill, then keep in practice.

Hey skull, not to worry. While I tend to agreee with some other's assesment of your original post, I could see from that post that your heart is in the right place.
 
scubafool:
Hey skull, not to worry. While I tend to agreee with some other's assesment of your original post, I could see from that post that your heart is in the right place.

I second that, Skull good to see you came back to the table and explained yourself. It's tough sometimes to figure out where someone is coming from on the net. I thought it was prudent to defend the new diver. I myself am a fairly new diver. It's important I think to boost a new divers confidence at the early stages. After they get in several hundred dives and do something really dumb then we can rip 'em up :11:
 
Trust me.
It is possible to do something really dumb even after a few thousand dives. :eyebrow:
 

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