- Messages
- 54,199
- Reaction score
- 8,321
- # of dives
- 500 - 999
That explains your posting history in various threads, and no problem at all. Such involvement with family members in discussion can tend to affect the tone of the discussions, but it's so common for anyone interested to do a "google search" with quotes around names and find articles and discussions anywhere in the world - it happens. For example in totally unrelated threads I have wanted to emphasis how idiotic and stupid a diver had been to become severely injured or dead, for the benefit of us wanting to learn from Accident discussions, only to see the victim's parent posting. It really discourages at times.I'm Gabes dad.
Yeah, I've been on boats with a few Freshwater trained Rescue Divers and Dive Masters, even Instructors, like that. I like to ask them where all they have dived and how many ocean dives they have, then tell them I will let them know if I need their particular assistance.I just wanted to comment on the Rescue Diver certification and what it might mean.
Years ago, when I was myself just a typical AOW diver, I was on a boat heading out to a dive site in Cozumel when one of the other divers made it known that he could help us out if we got into trouble, because he was a Rescue Diver. He was quite proud of it. He was diving with his new wife, who had just gotten her OW certification and was on her first five trip.
She turned out to be a much more skilled diver than he was. The DM pretty much had to hold his hand (literally) throughout the dive. He was one of the least skilled divers I have ever seen. I have no idea what kind of instruction that guy went through that got him Rescue Diver certification--perhaps it had been a decade earlier and he had lost it all.
Similarly, I have no idea whatsoever how skilled a diver Watson was, but I know that you really can't tell from the words on a card.
My intent here is not to criticize anyone as I certainly do not know enough about anyone's involvements to sit in judgment - only discuss for the sake of discussion and possible education to my own diving.
From what I read in some articles I understand that Gabe and not been in the ocean in 4 years nor Tina at all. When members post like that for future trips, I always suggest hiring a private DM for the first day, sometimes more. Presuming this was indeed an accident, they were both good candidates for boat dive training - not qualified for this dive.
I have never been thru what Gabe has been thru, and I know that the horrible stress of the time must have affected some judgments, but I would find it very, very difficult to plead guilty to manslaughter over being a poor dive buddy as suggested. Diving is a potentially dangerous sport, every diver needs to accept that going in, and accidents happen - making dive insurance like DAN's better plans or similar essential.
And I like to drill on getting positive, even dropping weights, on the first dive of any trip. Sinking should only happen intentionally.