TTSkipper:
I have never dove anywhere with a down current and I was wondering what the proper procedure is for getting out of one?
I've watched people swear about the best way, but as usual, it all depends. In this case, it depends on the conditions that caused the current.
In Coz, there is sometimes a phenomenon where currents cut across the shallower, flat reef, and when that water reaches the edge of the reef (the dropoff), the current "falls" downward. This means the current is now pushing divers down, rather than horizontal along the reef ledge. Bummer.
One way to get out of that is to get away from the ledge. By moving some distance away from the reef, the strength of the down current dissipates. Problem: you are now out over blue water, where the bottom might be 3000+ feet. OK, not a problem if you are psychologically prepared for a blue water dive.
A second way is to get closer to the ledge. By becoming one with the reef, the spilling current will move across (over) you, as it moves across the reef itself. This requires the diver to get very close to the reef itself - meander 4-5' away from the edge of the reef, and you are right smack in the middle of the strongest part of the current.
A third way involves waiting. Some of these currents are quite transitory. Hold on, and wait a minute or three and they shift, and the diver can go on his or her merry way.
The "climb up the reef method" mentioned in a reply above will also work, but at some point, the diver reaches the top of the ledge, and once again faces the current that is cutting across that reef. But the climbing technique can at least get one away from the deep water and up the the reef top, which means you're part way home. But then you still have to pick one of the three metrhods above.
These methods all relate to the downcurrent caused by the current splilling across the flat reff, with water plunging toward depth. Other reasons for the downcurrent may have other solutions.