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There's a dude out the front right now hunting crays
View attachment 811101
Now that's SOLO
YEAH LOVING IT!
This advice often doesn't seem to propagate beyond "solo divers," but IMO is essential for all divers. The "dive industry" appears to intentionally avoid acknowledging that a dive buddy may often be unable to assist (due to incompetence, training, availability, their issues, separation, low-air, etc). Even if that (insta-) buddy was able to assist 90% of the time (haha), that last 10% is awfully scary. The industry is often happy to recognize all other kinds of problems on the dive itself, including out-of-air, equipment issues, boat-traffic, entanglements, etc....realized that I was the only one I could depend on to save myself...
(1) That's a generalization, perhaps good enough for inexperienced divers, but isn't strictly true.(1) solo has some advantages over buddy diving, but safety isn’t one of them. Either people make bad buddies or have had bad experiences with buddies, but (2) two divers who understand and conduct themselves properly will always be better than one.
It’s true for all divers, you’re always safer with a competent buddy, something as simple as bad cramp can render a solo diver helpless, any kind of illness could be fatal for a solo diver, fatigued and unable to make it ashore or back onto the boat. A competent buddy pair will do multiple times more work than a diver on their own. Faster, more efficient and safer. Too heads are always better than one to foresee a problem and come up with a solution. A competent buddy pair are not dependent on one another they’re an asset to one another. Poor training is what has brought the buddy system into disrepute. Solo diving is no big deal for any competent diver.) That's a generalization, perhaps good enough for inexperienced divers, but isn't strictly true.