gcarter
Contributor
Bell Island wrecks in Newfoundland. Tobermory. Victoria BC. Monterey CA. All great cold water dives. But there is just something about those high vis nearly naked by comparison warm water dives...
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Warm water dives are fine but somehow can't compete with a 3 masted schooner with the masts still up and the deck intact.Bell Island wrecks in Newfoundland. Tobermory. Victoria BC. Monterey CA. All great cold water dives. But there is just something about those high vis nearly naked by comparison warm water dives...
But they're WARM!!!!!!Warm water dives are fine but somehow can't compete with a 3 masted schooner with the masts still up and the deck intact.
By doing that I would have missed some of my favourite dives. Off to Greenland on Saturday, no hurricanes there.
Maybe when I get old I will appreciate that but right now I'm only 70.But they're WARM!!!!!!
And this I totally disagree with, but that's a whole other can of worms....Of the various options for redundancy, I have chosen the philosophy that my buddy provides my redundancy.
@DmitriC in recreational diving, your backup is your buddy. When in technical diving or diving solo, your buddy doesn't exist so you find alternate solutions.
tbone, you know that's not quite accurate, either. I mean, granted each diver has his own redundancy in the form of multiple tanks, multiple regs, etc. However, a buddy team using the rule of thirds has each buddy carrying enough reserve gas to get both him and his buddy out in the unlikely event the buddy has a total gas loss (e.g., the buddy loses use of both his first stages).
Anyway, properly trained and drilled, the buddy-for-redundancy method works at least as well as the alternatives.