The more I see of this the more upset I get. I had no problem with her going off on her own. None. Until I found out that, to put it bluntly, she had little idea as to what she was doing with her gear. Or seemed to. A tropical wing with say 18lbs of lift. Wearing 26 lbs of weight, plus a steel tank that even empty is a bit negative. Even with a dry suit the min wing size should have been 30lbs or so. I'm surmising that she was wearing a weight belt as well. Maybe with the weights threaded on instead of in pockets. So not easy to ditch. Easy for an experienced dry suit diver but for a newbie? And in that dry suit she was a newbie. That she had not dialed in her weight and realized at the same time that her wing was the wrong one for the dive says that.
Had she practiced more or perhaps gotten competent instruction in dry suit use, emergency procedures, and proper weighting with the suit instead of trying to work it out herself she might not have had the problems she was having. When I dive cold water with a heavy steel LP 95 I wear a total of 26 lbs with a heavy undergarment. Ten of that is ditchable. Four of that ten is easily dropped as I just have to remove a couple two pound weights from my weight pockets on my weight belt. That is all I need to drop to start getting positive if the wing or suit fails. If both fail and I still have air I'll deploy the 50 lb lift bag and use it. And if I'm diving single back gas I will still have air even if that fails as I always sling a 40 or 30 in cold water.
I see this from time to time with experienced divers and other instructors using new gear. They seem to have this idea that they can adapt and master any new piece of equipment on their own. And some of it they can. But they also need to be humble enough to realize when the time comes that getting some help is not going to diminish them in anyone's eyes save their own. I don't know if she got any drysuit training or what kind. Or if she at least got some in water mentoring from experienced people. If not she should have.
One thing I try to do is take a course or class every season from someone I respect and know has the knowledge I want. This past season it was a Sidemount class with Doppler. I have been slinging bottles for a few years now. And even got a few SM dives in before the class. And did ok. And maybe could have spent the rest of the summer tweaking and adjusting on my own by reading and watching videos. Or I could also spend a few bucks and get real instruction from an expert on the subject.
As a result a few changes were made to my rig. And I was offered the opportunity to sling a third bottle during the class after he saw me in the water. Was I flattered? Damn right. But I am also a realist. That pisses some people off I know when it comes to talking about training today, but I am also very real with myself. So what if I've slung a couple 40's and an 80 while in doubles? This was/is a new animal and I know in my heart that while I could do it, I want to do it properly and at the proper time. That time has not come yet. It will. Next season I have no doubt. But the point is I know that it may even take another mini session with Steve or someone else to make the transition to a third and even 4th bottle. Until that time trying to work that out on my own could be foolish and dangerous.
We all can possibly take the lesson from this that there are times that no matter how many dives, how many certs, or that we are "pro's" that we still need to step back and say trying to do this on my own is horse crap. I need some help from someone who knows more than me. Had that happened here, the end might have been and likely would have been much different if it was not a medical event.
---------- Post added October 11th, 2013 at 04:46 PM ----------
Thanks. Now you have me curious. I believe you but I'm going to have to try it in the pool. Will be awhile,though. I'm still on crutches from my last surgery.[/QUOTE/]
Tracy, chest/neck deep? No air is getting in, pressure differential is too great. Water is too dense and much heavier. Waist deep you may feel some relief. Ankle deep or on shore? Body parts will be happy.