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Puffer Fish:
Don't know what was taught in rescue class, but I know what works. Your presence was, more than likely, the real calming aspect of this whole event. The bolting person is just one tiny step from where you were at. Your calming effect was the key aspect of this.

I did a checkout dive with a new diver from the Midwest in the pacific off Panama, and while I was going through a quick check of his skills, and letting him get adjusted to his first ocean dive, a 12 - 15 ft tiger shark swam directly at us, from behind me. The guy bolted and I tried to hold on - never been kicked, clawed, elbowed so much in my life. When we got to the surface, I discovered that a bolting diver is actually trying to get out of the water, not just to the surface. He attempted to use me as some sort of raft. Removed my reg, my mask, and perched on top of me. I will never again do a checkout of a new person with myself being directly in front of them.

Two minutes later, you would not have known anything happened.

I learned to stay on their right side - makes giving them back a reg really easy and allows you to move behind if needed.

I was a lifeguard (pool, waterpark, openwater) and swim instructor for 6 years. Nothing beats having a 200lb guy try and sit on your head in a class after asking him to put his face in the water and lift his feet off the ground, or having someone go over the top of the rescue tube and try to use you for flotation.
Sounds like you did real awesome!!! Good job.
 
ScubaJackie:
I was a lifeguard (pool, waterpark, openwater) and swim instructor for 6 years. Nothing beats having a 200lb guy try and sit on your head in a class after asking him to put his face in the water and lift his feet off the ground, or having someone go over the top of the rescue tube and try to use you for flotation.
Sounds like you did real awesome!!! Good job.
this all sounds so funny, though i know it is not a laughing matter, i will in fact remember and put to use some great advice from this thread and thanks to all who replied!!!
 
Puffer Fish:
Nice to see everything worked out OK. Also hope that is the worst situation you have to go thru. Scary moments like that help when something bigger happens.

Oh, by the way, an instructor.DM can hold a bolting diver down safely, just make sure you are not infront of them. Never had it happen in a class, but have when helping another instructor out, and with checkout dives for "experienced" divers.

Might suggest, if you can, that you talk to that diver after a couple of months, sometimes that sort of thing can have a long term effect.
i just talked to the student diver and he SO FAR is doing well and has completed several more dives, so far so good
 
jim ernst:
i just talked to the student diver and he SO FAR is doing well and has completed several more dives, so far so good


Glad to hear that. If he made a couple more dives, that original experience is now long gone. Hope he is has a long and happy dive life, and you have more fun that that was.
 
ScubaJackie:
I was a lifeguard (pool, waterpark, openwater) and swim instructor for 6 years. Nothing beats having a 200lb guy try and sit on your head in a class after asking him to put his face in the water and lift his feet off the ground, or having someone go over the top of the rescue tube and try to use you for flotation.
Sounds like you did real awesome!!! Good job.


Like Jim, the trick is to come out of it more or less intact and without a lot of physical or emotional scars. I have made sure I was never in that position again. As I am sure you know, people make really rotten flotation devices
 

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