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Background:
I’m signed up for a course that requires rescue diver as a pre-requisite. Problem. Early in my dive training, I passed up recreational “Scuba Rescue Diver” for a PSD (Public Safety Diver) search and rescue / recovery course. Good choice at the time, but instead of trying to substitute the PSD course, I decided “suck it up” and find an “interesting” sport rescue course.
Looked at PADI, NAUI and IANTD, but I chose SEI for this one. First, I am a firm believer in moving around in both agencies and instructors for my training. Second, I make it a point to support what I want to see more of, and SEI (formerly YMCA) really checks to see if you can swim in addition to being able to complete the SCUBA rescue requirements. I like the idea of having a card that implies that I can swim to the most basic ‘Y’ standards.
The Course:
I signed up with Jim Lapenta then prepared myself for an "over the top" experience. Big surprise, entirely different flavor. The training style was not at all "over the top", not even close. Personal, realistic, intimidating, and attainable are how I would describe the two days of training. Perfect for me! I did not use the word "intense" because it just does not apply to any of the training. Goal-oriented would be a much better description. Each skill was clearly explained, demonstrated, and then practiced until Jim was satisfied that each student "got it" as opposed to “faked it”. Lots of discussion and re-trys. Perfect class size, no rush, nobody moved on to the next skill until everyone was up to speed on the current skill. Great class, very cool people. Instructor, DM, two “victims” and their own personal safety divers vs. six students. 1:1 ratio in my book. Nobody was ever left alone on top, bottom, or water column. The safety divers were two teenage daughters of one of the “victims”. Talk about moxie (look it up), they accompanied the victim in their care without getting in the way of the rescue and spent a lot of time in zero visibility just hanging out waiting for their victim to be found. Two totally impressive (and delightful) divers!
This training was held in a fairly shallow, mostly unused, back quarry that presented some very challenging conditions. Loose vegetation started about two and a half feet from a bottom that was mostly dark silt. Entanglement was assured, but easy to break free from. Not all was bad, the fingerling bass were friendly.
Why subject myself to this? First, it builds real, core confidence by pushing the little panic demons further and further away. The first time I was in blackwater, I found the experience very unsettling. Now, it is nothing more than a quick switch from visual input to tactile input. No biggie.
My dive buddy:
Emergency room type. Really getting to appreciate this mentality, trained with several like her in the past. I learned so much about being a real buddy in this course! First time down to get the unresponsive diver, we couldn’t find anything and quickly realized that we didn’t know what we were doing because we couldn’t communicate. Surfaced, made up a dive plan. Descended in constant touch contact, agreed on touch signals for “thumb the dive”, “found the victim”, and how to position ourselves so our inflators were on the proper side. None of this means very much in clear water, however, it is critical in zero visibility. My victim was too negative to lift, so I handed my inflator to my bud, she felt it and knew just what was needed and what to do because she asked how my inflator worked when she saw it on the surface. Situational awareness at its best! Back to my negative victim, I didn’t dare risk leaving the victim’s back to adjust my own buoyancy as the rules were that a victim’s hand on either my reg or mask meant a failed rescue and a re-try. Thanks to my bud, team success!
OK, I showed up in full NE Atlantic gear, “train as you dive”. Feeling kind of guilty when the exhausted diver tow was announced. At least I felt that way until my dive bud towed me across the quarry faster than I usually swim underwater, a most humbling experience.
Also learned to start doffing my gear on the swim to shore during a rescue. I wasted too much time wrestling out of my tech gear in the weeds. Wasn’t at all pretty or professional.
Extractions were interesting, -muddy slope through weeds. This course’s extractions were not “float the victim to the side of the pool and slide him onto the floor”. We tried both tow straps (per the SEI book) and brute force. Found a few really good real-world extraction tricks and what works best. –take the course and find out for yourself…
This particular rescue course develops the rescuer’s core strengths and confidence in real world conditions. I should have taken this course long ago!
Thanks Jim,
Well done!
-lowviz
View attachment 100158
I’m signed up for a course that requires rescue diver as a pre-requisite. Problem. Early in my dive training, I passed up recreational “Scuba Rescue Diver” for a PSD (Public Safety Diver) search and rescue / recovery course. Good choice at the time, but instead of trying to substitute the PSD course, I decided “suck it up” and find an “interesting” sport rescue course.
Looked at PADI, NAUI and IANTD, but I chose SEI for this one. First, I am a firm believer in moving around in both agencies and instructors for my training. Second, I make it a point to support what I want to see more of, and SEI (formerly YMCA) really checks to see if you can swim in addition to being able to complete the SCUBA rescue requirements. I like the idea of having a card that implies that I can swim to the most basic ‘Y’ standards.
The Course:
I signed up with Jim Lapenta then prepared myself for an "over the top" experience. Big surprise, entirely different flavor. The training style was not at all "over the top", not even close. Personal, realistic, intimidating, and attainable are how I would describe the two days of training. Perfect for me! I did not use the word "intense" because it just does not apply to any of the training. Goal-oriented would be a much better description. Each skill was clearly explained, demonstrated, and then practiced until Jim was satisfied that each student "got it" as opposed to “faked it”. Lots of discussion and re-trys. Perfect class size, no rush, nobody moved on to the next skill until everyone was up to speed on the current skill. Great class, very cool people. Instructor, DM, two “victims” and their own personal safety divers vs. six students. 1:1 ratio in my book. Nobody was ever left alone on top, bottom, or water column. The safety divers were two teenage daughters of one of the “victims”. Talk about moxie (look it up), they accompanied the victim in their care without getting in the way of the rescue and spent a lot of time in zero visibility just hanging out waiting for their victim to be found. Two totally impressive (and delightful) divers!
This training was held in a fairly shallow, mostly unused, back quarry that presented some very challenging conditions. Loose vegetation started about two and a half feet from a bottom that was mostly dark silt. Entanglement was assured, but easy to break free from. Not all was bad, the fingerling bass were friendly.
Why subject myself to this? First, it builds real, core confidence by pushing the little panic demons further and further away. The first time I was in blackwater, I found the experience very unsettling. Now, it is nothing more than a quick switch from visual input to tactile input. No biggie.
My dive buddy:
Emergency room type. Really getting to appreciate this mentality, trained with several like her in the past. I learned so much about being a real buddy in this course! First time down to get the unresponsive diver, we couldn’t find anything and quickly realized that we didn’t know what we were doing because we couldn’t communicate. Surfaced, made up a dive plan. Descended in constant touch contact, agreed on touch signals for “thumb the dive”, “found the victim”, and how to position ourselves so our inflators were on the proper side. None of this means very much in clear water, however, it is critical in zero visibility. My victim was too negative to lift, so I handed my inflator to my bud, she felt it and knew just what was needed and what to do because she asked how my inflator worked when she saw it on the surface. Situational awareness at its best! Back to my negative victim, I didn’t dare risk leaving the victim’s back to adjust my own buoyancy as the rules were that a victim’s hand on either my reg or mask meant a failed rescue and a re-try. Thanks to my bud, team success!
OK, I showed up in full NE Atlantic gear, “train as you dive”. Feeling kind of guilty when the exhausted diver tow was announced. At least I felt that way until my dive bud towed me across the quarry faster than I usually swim underwater, a most humbling experience.
Also learned to start doffing my gear on the swim to shore during a rescue. I wasted too much time wrestling out of my tech gear in the weeds. Wasn’t at all pretty or professional.
Extractions were interesting, -muddy slope through weeds. This course’s extractions were not “float the victim to the side of the pool and slide him onto the floor”. We tried both tow straps (per the SEI book) and brute force. Found a few really good real-world extraction tricks and what works best. –take the course and find out for yourself…
This particular rescue course develops the rescuer’s core strengths and confidence in real world conditions. I should have taken this course long ago!
Thanks Jim,
Well done!
-lowviz
View attachment 100158