johndiver999
Contributor
This is the problem with the diving industry as a whole. People are taken on dives that they should not be diving but for the most part survive which then the dive operators believe the dive is safe, Normalization of Deviance.
The wreck is in 140', all divers on that boat should be trained, equipped and ready to do a 140' deep wreck dive. Anything else is merely a "trust me" dive. And this clearly was a "trust me" dive since the report is that the dive master was leading the dive and signaled for them to surface.
I wonder how many of the divers (including the DM) on that day had the proper gas and equipment to conduct a 140' deep wreck dive?
For all we know it was a medical emergency, but it does not change that facts that taking divers on deep wrecks that are not properly trained and equipped for the max depth is a receipt for disaster.
Just because a person makes use of a dive master on a wreck dive does not necessarily convince me that they are incompetent or ill equipped for the dive. I also think that demanding everyone have a gas that is good to 140 feet for a planned dive to 100 or so, is not going to be a popular or a necessarily practical protocol to follow.
Also, people claiming they would never lose a buddy (or a wife) on a wreck dive is hard to swallow as well. If you don't know the conditions, the visibility, the current or even the mindset of the buddy, making that kind of assertion that "I would never make a mistake" is hard for me to believe.
If they know exactly where she was last seen, it seems like there would be a good chance to recover the body. Perhaps she shot towards the surface without anyone realizing, and then drifted off?