Rob Palmer was not a novice diver. He was one of
Britain's leading technical and cave divers, best
known for his exploration and writing on the Blue
Holes in the Bahamas. He was a fellow of the
Royal Geographical Society and well known in the
U.S. But something went wrong on his last dive.
While in Hurghada, Egypt, for a technical
diving conference, Rob and his companions, suited
with doubles, along with a sling tank of Nitrox for
the planned deco stop, went over the side of the
boat into the Red Sea to do a deep wall dive.
Once in the water, instead of swimming over
to the wall, Palmer was seen headed straight down
into the blue. One companion raced after him but
gave up at 210 feet. Two other divers continued
the chase to around 325 feet. Unsure if he was out
of control or not, they reached a depth where they
had to stop and watch Palmer disappear below
them. According to reports, because of luggage
lost in transit to Egypt, Palmer was using borrowed
equipment, but because he had used the same
equipment the previous day and because of his
diving experience, it's considered unlikely that he
would have been unable to control his buoyancy.
The more plausible theory is that Palmer experienced
a medical problem such as a heart attack
once he had entered the water.
J. Q