Beiji
Contributor
I'm well familiar with the St. Lawrence. Those statements are heading toward this being a "trust me" dive....
I don't think we can make that leap with the information that's available.
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I'm well familiar with the St. Lawrence. Those statements are heading toward this being a "trust me" dive....
but what is your perspective of the lake if we take away 190-490 of your dives?
Police said Finch was unresponsive before reaching the surface, and was recovered by the two divers and brought to shore.Yes, it could. He could also have reached the surface, been conscious briefly, and then passed out.
Police said Finch was unresponsive before reaching the surface, and was recovered by the two divers and brought to shore.
The two divers said Finch was rapidly swimming toward the surface from about 60 feet below. Police said Finch was unresponsive before reaching the surface, and was recovered by the two divers and brought to shore.
Had exactly the same problem happen with an instabuddy on her first post cert dive.
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Mouth pieces coming off is a common problem that students should have stressed more. I know I had one come off in the first 20 dives I did.
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Yes, they did. I had to go back to find the quote:
But you have to wonder about the accuracy of that statement. How do they know it was true?
The only way I can think they could possibly know would be if the divers who were with him overtook his panicked ascent rate and got to him before he reached the surface and found him unresponsive then. It is still possible that a cerebral arterial gas embolism (CAGE) could have killed him by that time. A CAGE can act like a very bad stroke and act almost instantly.
All true, but then typical of what we have to discuss here. Accidents happen, we get questionable news stories about them, we discuss the what-ifs and speculations - all to learn from the possibilities. It helps, even tho it's official.As one trained in accident investigation, I have to say that all the speculation here is just that, and it is based on the poorest of information--two newspaper articles. Until competant people have evaluated the equipment, and an autopsy has been conducted, there is almost nothing to base any conclusions on. The facts, depth, three divers, one dies, etc. do not point to any specific cause. While it is good to know about the death of this diver, we really do not have enough here to make anything other than a few guesses about what may have happened.
SeaRat