MikeFerrara:
Well...we generally define OW recreational diving as diving where we have direct access to the surface. A CESA is one way of getting to the surface. Most of us have done one or more of them at least in training or practice so we know that it can work.
I guess a valid question to ask ouselves is...at what depth or under what conditions do we start to lose confidence in our access to the surface? FredT and Captain told some stories but, and they can correct me if I'm wrong, I think they were trained such that a much greater priority was placed on watermenship skills (ie. the idea was to be able to survive with or without your equipment) than what we have today. Now days you don't even need to know how to swim to get the agency blessing. Dive training is much the same as it was then only without all that hard watermenship training that might hurt sales.
Now what happens? We do a few dives and the next thing you know we are at 100 ft realizing that the buddy we are with isn't much of a buddy and the surface is starting to look pretty far away. Is this sort of like an overhead environment?...almost kind-a-sort-of? We see in the recent threads that a lot of divers opt for a pony and now we're going back and forth about CESA.
The problem I see is that many divers don't have those "grab the bull by the horns" watermenship skills (that might functionally give them access to the surface) and they don't have the training/experience/equipment for overhead environments (that would functionally make them independant of the surface). Personally, I don't think either a pony bottle or practicing deeper ESA's are very good answers. At least I know that's not what did it for me. Maybe I'm wrong but I think that's more or less in line with what soggy and some others have been getting at. I know I've said this a million times but there was a time when I started to think that I needed a pony...the surface was starting to look pretty far away and my confidence in my ability to get there was getting shaky. Looking back, I know that I was doing dives that I wasn't really ready for. Now, I said "I" and not "you" so don't go gttin on my back. LOL
LOL Never meant to get on your back, Mike. All valid points above. Also, no question that if you found yourself in a situation where your last resort was CESA, you know how to do it. You've done plenty.
I also hear ya on the watermanship skills. I got my SSI cert back in 1987. Watermanship was not lax. I was a competative swimmer, and my dive instructor was also one of my swimming coaches. In 87, we did have octos, but buddy breathing was still a required skill, as was in-water rescue breathing and lots of other stuff that has been dropped since then. We were trained on Navy tables doing 60 fpm ascents with no safety stop, and the golden rule was 50 ft/50 min.
Watermanship has not escaped me since. When I did my watermanship exam for DM a few months ago, I was still swimming 400 yards in a little over 7 min. I already had my a passing score before I even did a tired diver push. I am vigilant about monitoring my and my buddy's gas supply, and while I know I have lots to learn, I pick up all I can get my hands on.
Like I said, I just always like to know that even if Armagedon strikes, I have at least one last resort option at my disposal.
Some of Soggy's and others' comments have given the impression that CESA isn't a last option, it is a
nonoption. That is the only point I really take exception to. I agree that OOA should
never happen, and it never has to me or anyone I dive with. I would like to think more than luck is involved in that.....