Search and Recovery Ka-ching!

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Sometimes you have a *very* good idea where to start the search...

I had just finished taking Rescue with a good buddy of mine, and we threw in a Search & Recovery course while we were at it (since we got to be taught by a couple seasoned public safety divers who certainly knew their stuff). Anyway, skip forward about a week and there we were out on a little boat in Toledo Bend. (My buddies' dad, Mr. John (to me), wanted to see what it was like.)

I had a brand new flashlight-sized handheld depth finder gadget that I was trying out to see how useful it would be for me in my canoe. Wouldn't you know it, when I went to put it down, it slipped out of my hand and bounced right off the back of the boat. (Isn't it always the brand new gear that gets lost?) I shrugged and said, "No worries; it floats." At the same time, Mr. John, who was already in the water, pikes over and starts chasing it down.

I looked at my buddy and said, "Well, the manual says it floats..."

A minute later Mr. John pops back to the surface and says that he chased it but lost sight of it as it plunged to the bottom. (Apparently, one little clip is enough to make it negative.) About that point, I'd basically written it off, as I didn't want to ruin their dive, but Mr. John turns to the two of us and says, "Well, didn't you just do search and recovery?" I looked at my buddy, and we just shrugged a "Well, why not?" to each other.

We dropped down toward the bottom and found a conveniently leaning tree trunk on which to leave Mr. John, and I handed off my spool to my buddy, took the free end, and started a simple search pattern. On about the third sweep, I saw a bit of not-tree, not-silt at the limit of visibility. Indeed, it was the device... floating a few inches above the clip, which was buried in the silt.

I grabbed it up, clipped it off, and returned along the line to my waiting divers, and from there, we made an enjoyable dive. (Although Mr. John would say it had no visibility and was positively freezing, he suffers from Cozumelitis.) Needless to say, I was quite happy that I had not lost a brand new device on first use, and my buddy and I were entertained by the ease by which we'd applied what we'd learned in S&R (although we didn't have nearly so many tree bits in class).
 
I used to teach basic search and recovery classes to Police Departments and Fire Department diving teams. Over the years the vast majority of the class dives were pretty mundane. I'd paddle out into the middle of one of the local coves and toss a couple of cinder blocks tied together and painted red out into the middle of the sandy bottom, paddle to shore and basically tell them to go get them.

Every so often they'd bring up a weight belt along with the blocks or maybe a lost dive knife. Nothing special. The best one was a Johnson Outboard Motor, though. They found it, secured it, lifted it and got it out of the surf just like I'd actually taught them something! We checked for lost and/or stolen boat motors for about 2 weeks and never did come up with an owner for it! Last I heard before I lost touch with them was that a couple of the guys were cleaning it all up and hoped to use it!
 
You are gentle on the ka-ching. Work adds a wopping (which I are one :D) $.50 an hour to the pay check. Away from work it's $60.00 an hour including travel time both ways. That adds up to Ka-Chunk and we're to be had cheap. ;)

Gary D.
 
I was out at Stiltsville for a big party. I was helping to ferry people from the marina to the party, and back.

After a lot of drinking people were jumping off of the roof of the house into teh water. When it came time for people to leave there were a lot of people discovering that they had lost their car keys while jumping in the water. We're talking 12' - 15' deep water in Florida Bay.

I charged $20.00 per set of keys recovered. I recovered 18 sets of keys that afternoon in 5 minutes on snorkel. I was already being paid to ferry the people, so it made for a nice afternoon.
 
When I was a DM a friend called me in a near panic. Seems that as his boat was approaching the dock he leaned to secure a line and his keys fell out of his shirt pocket.

Well, when I arrived he promised to cover costs and buy me lunch. Fair enough, so I asked him to show me approximately where he dropped them on the approach.

I tossed out my float/flag's weighted line to mark my location and got in. I then tighted up the line to give me a nice vertical to the bottom and start my search pattern. The viz was a dismal 2 feet too.

Well, when I descended the line, there next to the weight was a set of keys with the fob floating above them. He was pretty good in his description. That is truly the exception to the rule.

I could have surfaced then, but thought I might get more lucky. Didn't find anything else for the next 15 minutes of hunting, but figured I already had the item I was looking for.

That made for a nice lunch and a dive to satisfy my curiosity of what lie beneath the docks at that lake.

Steve
 
No ka-ching but it was interesting. Was doing the rescue diver course. I was the rescuer so I had to remove the victims BCD and tank.

So I remove it, thought I put some air and pushed it away. I tow the victim back to shore doing the rescue breaths and all, get the nod from the instrctor and we turn around and ... no BCD and tank.

I immediately shot a compass heading. Everyone gets in and I keep saying "The compass heading is 245 degrees" and no one pays attention. They all start searching.

I submerge, follow the heading and wouldn't you know it, about 5 kicks out, there it is. I pop some air into it and bring it up. Mean while the "experienced" folks are halfway out of the cove heading for the lake.

As soon as they come up to do a status check I show them the rig. A few red faces.

Mike
 
Just doing a little fun diving out at the lake, we found a $5 bill and 2 $1 bills on the first dive of the day.

We went back out along the same point on dive #4, and found another dollar. They had been there for a while - there were zebra mussles growing on them!
 
My daughters swim coach said he and a buddy used to dive the popular party rivers around San Marcus, Tx. on Mondays after the weekends.
Said they found all kinds of ka ching dropped by the partiers.
Spencer
 
...I had a roadhouse-style tavern w/ C&W entertainment

...My main act came to me one day, says he lost his bro's expensive fishin' rod

...Offered a free weekends entertaining if I found it

...3 tanks, 4 hrs. later I'm on my last sweep, decided to trail my hands in the muck for luck

...Right hand went right over the grip of the rod & I swooped er' up

...And the band played on.

If you wish, I could dig up my u/w UFO recovery dive posted here moons ago.

Till then,

Best,
DSD
 
The Dive captain and I were out doing a fun dive one weekend at a local bridge where fishing is popular. While we were swiming at about 25ft I saw something laying across a bed of starfish. when I reached out to grab it, my buddy grabbed it first and lifted it up very victoriously. He then showed me that it was a very expensive fishing rod. It barely had any barnacles or anything. It was kind of funny watching him dive around for about another hour with a fishing rod in his hands. Makes me wish I was a little quicker in touching it first.
 

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