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Okay, I'm speculating too but not having facts leaves one open to thinking along those lines...
It seems that the 3 family members were accustomed to solo ascents, first one LOA goes up first, etc. I certainly like a tight buddy pair ascent but as a air hog myself I have been sent up alone many times while my bud remained below - tagging along with a group usually. In their case, it sounds like dad went up first LOA, then Matthew/the injured diver started ascent, not too concerned about staying with his brother who reportedly has more challenges equalizing so like to ascend slower. THEN, Matthew lost control of his runaway ascent. I've seen it many times, happened to me once on my first post-cert dive; how common is it for some divers to get the inflate and defalte buttons confused?
We do not know here how much air he had on the surface? If he had a few hundred pounds, it may have helped to go back to 15 ft until he exhausted that? That's what I did when I had mine, and I've seen DMs take divers back down for 5 minutes in such cases.
Matthew was reportedly swimming to the boat when his brother surfaced. I always like to incorporate what Dr.Deco calls the hidden saftey stop - just floating, relaxed on the surface for a minute or two. He may have felt frustrated about his runaway ascent, swam to the boat vigorously, climbed up the ladder aggressively, all bad actions after a deep dive. Don't know if this is really what happened but then I am not attempting to lay blame; for those reading to possibly learn, I thot I'd mention those points.
I'm still curious about the claim "that he should have used 20 minutes to ascend"...? A casual statement, or was he in deco?
It seems that the 3 family members were accustomed to solo ascents, first one LOA goes up first, etc. I certainly like a tight buddy pair ascent but as a air hog myself I have been sent up alone many times while my bud remained below - tagging along with a group usually. In their case, it sounds like dad went up first LOA, then Matthew/the injured diver started ascent, not too concerned about staying with his brother who reportedly has more challenges equalizing so like to ascend slower. THEN, Matthew lost control of his runaway ascent. I've seen it many times, happened to me once on my first post-cert dive; how common is it for some divers to get the inflate and defalte buttons confused?
We do not know here how much air he had on the surface? If he had a few hundred pounds, it may have helped to go back to 15 ft until he exhausted that? That's what I did when I had mine, and I've seen DMs take divers back down for 5 minutes in such cases.
Matthew was reportedly swimming to the boat when his brother surfaced. I always like to incorporate what Dr.Deco calls the hidden saftey stop - just floating, relaxed on the surface for a minute or two. He may have felt frustrated about his runaway ascent, swam to the boat vigorously, climbed up the ladder aggressively, all bad actions after a deep dive. Don't know if this is really what happened but then I am not attempting to lay blame; for those reading to possibly learn, I thot I'd mention those points.
I'm still curious about the claim "that he should have used 20 minutes to ascend"...? A casual statement, or was he in deco?