First off let me say since I voted during the first couple of pages I have only skimmed over the rest. This thread seems to be on the verge of getting out of control.
Now I was most likely the first YES vote and I still stand by it. (#16) Dandy, I didnt do it to cause any problems but expressed my views on it.
(#15) Tonka, I dont think your buddy is the most dangerous creature you will ever encounter. In all my years I have found the diver himself, not the buddy is the most dangerous.
Im not picking on you two or anyone else for that matter so please, dont take it that way. But I feel that just because a buddy says they WILL share air if needed doesnt mean they will when the flies hit the Westinghouse.
People talk a lot about what they will do in this or that but when things go south will they actually do what they say they will. Im in a business where talk is cheap. We interview people, do backgrounds, criminal checks and spend thousands on their training. Everything goes well in training but when they hit the real world a large percentage do not make the grade. They just can not live up to those flapping jaws when things go to crap and real evil is staring them in the face.
I was the first or second one to vote yes on this thread. My reason was not to cause problems but to say people should not totally rely on a buddy to save their bacon. There is one person responsible for your safety and that is the person thinking their buddy will get them out of trouble.
Every diver on every dive should look at it as a solo dive even if a buddy or a group of buddies are there with them. People need to be a bit more self sufficient in their thinking.
Quite a few years ago we dealt with two divers that had limited experience. Each one thought the other would get them out of trouble should they ever get into any. The investigation showed the two did almost everything by the book, had good operating gear, good air low but good quality and were within their dive plan. But something happened on the bottom that we will never know for sure that caused them to expire within just a few feet of each other.
When we recovered them both octos were out of their custom fit color coded holders. Were they practicing air swaps at 70 or did one go for the others air causing a problem? We will never know but what ever it was they both needlessly expired.
Even at police academys they teach LEOs to work as a team BUT you are responsible for your own safety. You may have plenty of help or buddies there to help but each one is responsible for their own safety. If you totally rely on someone else to save you there are going to be careless mistakes made. The responsibility needs to rest with the diver himself. If there is a buddy that can and will offer help great. But if there isnt for some reason one just needs to be able to take care of themselves.
Gary D.
