Hi
@boulderjohn
I'm with
@dumpsterDiver, also not a technical diver, but very familiar with wreck dives in the area, especially Boynton Beach. We follow the same ascent procedure, the last diver or team unhooks the down line prior to starting ascent. On these, much simpler, mostly recreational dives, the unhooking procedure is always explicitly discussed with responsibility assigned. In over 110 of these dives, the line has never not been unhooked. On two occasions, an overzealous fellow diver has unhooked before I completed my dive. In both instances, the guilty parties simply and incorrectly assumed I was not still down as I had exceeded their bottom time. Of course, this is not difficult to deal with by shooting and ascending on your SMB. Without the deco, the drift distances are considerably shorter.
It's very difficult for me to understand how this protocol would not be explicitly discussed and responsibility assigned prior to a more complicated technical dive. In many ways, it seems like the task would be easy, as the dive teams are separated and have dictated bottom times. The bottom times are not so predictable in recreational diving. The failure to discuss this issue would appear as a major breach in the expected behavior of technical divers.
We've all dived in rough conditions and, at times, when conditions have significantly deteriorated while we were down. One operator I use in Jupiter has Christmas tree ladders on both their boats. This does make it easier in rough seas, when calm, you still have the option of removing your fins. You did not mention this in your post, but when conditions are rough, the operators I use throw out a trailing line for divers to hold onto. This allows divers to stay together and also facilitates fin removal and securing them on your wrists. You can then attempt your final approach to the ladder at the most opportune time. Holding on to a wildly bucking boat ladder is a frightening thought to me.
I appreciate your post, as with many incidents, it allows us all to think about our diving practices and become safer divers.
Good diving, Craig