A ScubaBoard Staff Message...
I just saw this on the Cozumel Insider - Cozumel News - Local Island News in English Updated Weekly - Cozumel Insider website news page.
[TD="class: TitleBand"] "Port Authorities Now Reviewing Documents [/TD]
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
A ScubaBoard Staff Message...
I just saw this on the Cozumel Insider - Cozumel News - Local Island News in English Updated Weekly - Cozumel Insider website news page.
[TD="class: TitleBand"] "Port Authorities Now Reviewing Documents [/TD]
If anything on the ground occurs, that will be newsworthy and I will start a new thread to discuss it. Perhaps some of the local ops can chime in here and/or start a new thread on boat safety regulation in Cozumel to make the information more easily found.
A ScubaBoard Staff Message...
...and NEVER expect that just because a friendly Mexican says no problem...that it is safe to go with them!
or American or Canadian....French... German even....
In the summer of 2010 and with a trip to Coz coming up in August I started following the Cozumel forum very closely to see who all would be going during that time. One of the people I encountered was DandyDon. He has long been a proponent of CO testing and has done more to encourage it and support the concept than anyone I have EVER run across!
Now to the good part!... When we got to Coz Don had decided that he would like to try ScubaMau. (I have no idea who was filling their tanks for them!.. So don't ask!) Daily we both check our tanks with both analyzers. That is, until a gust of wind blew his overboard and soaked it! Consistently we were both getting readings in the 8 to 10 ppm of CO!
We expressed our concerns and the DM's kept discounting them and telling us they thought we weren't testing correctly or that they weren't calibrated properly.
The final day of diving we checked virtually all of the tanks on board the boat. Without exception they were all in the 16 to 17 ppm range! We had planned to do Devils Throat that day, but basically we told the DM that we refused to go that deep on air that tested that badly! We ended up doing a much more shallow dive.