This is a critical issue from my perspective for those that are discounting panic or a medical issue in favor of other causes. As an instructor she would know that if she was out of air that she could breath off her wing, hold her breath for at least a minute all enough time to get out of her gear/drop her weights and swim to the surface. As an experienced instructor she has take gear on and put it on underwater many many times in demonstration to students. She has done gear exchanges underwater. I am sure she would know that she could do this IF SHE WAS ABLE TO THINK STRAIGHT AND CALMLY.
Obviously she was not able to think straight at the time which could easily be a result of panic or a medical issue.
It is easy for someone to say they can keep calm in a panic situation but completely another to actually be in a panic situation and experience it first hand. I have when I ran OOA at 100ft and my buddies secondary had a hole in the diaphram.
I only knew Marcia via conversation on the froums and from others I often travel and dive with in Thailand. She was too experienced as a diver and instructor and comfortable in the water under much more severe conditions for the above two issues not to be considered highly.
John
Not necessarily in a new drysuit that she was obviously having issues with.
We didn't know if she tried to ditch the gear and if so did she remember to unhook the drysuit hose?
Seems like she did not try to ditch.
There is also the matter of just how task overloaded was she.
Instructor or no with even thousands of dives she was in a new type of exposure suit from what she was used to. Over weighted (perhaps even grossly so), too small of a wing, carrying a camera, with a seemingly faulty gauge, and based on her lack of use of buddy skills, highly distracted.
With all this going on she might as well have been a new OW diver out of a weekend or two weekend course where you are not expecting anything to go wrong.
And something then did and the SHTF. And when it did, even in only ten feet of water, it was apparently too much.
I know we are trying to keep things a little more toned down since this was one of our own. But how would you react to a post about a stranger who did all of these things and had the same outcome?
This was a cluster f#*< largely due to diver error. Plain and simple. Many of us would want to tear up the c card of one of our students if we heard of them doing half of these things.
We need to remember that any glossing over of these mistakes and errors in judgment would set a bad example for any new diver.
Anyone of these alone could have killed someone.
Taken together it would have been amazing that they didn't result in at least someone getting the crap scared out of them, likely hurt in some way, or just what happened here.
Like Dr Tracy I am kinda pissed at all of these things being done by a person who should have known better and never gone that far with them.
I expect to catch flak for this post but too many things have happened and I have spent too much time and effort writing, speaking, and teaching to try and see that stuff like this does not have to.