While completing a certification
class in the Caribbean
makes learning to dive easy, it
does not mean one is trained
to dive everywhere. Learning
in clear, calm, warm water,
does little to make a diver ready to brave the waters of the Atlantic, Pacific
or Great Lakes. Here is a case in point:
Last year, a 19-year-old female diver completed her PADI classwork in
Ontario and her check out divers in the Caribbean. In January, she took
her first cold-water dive ever, joining a Victoria, British Columbia dive operation .
Diving in a wetsuit, she was wearing 40 lbs. of lead. She was buddying
with her best friend, who was at the same level of experience. Upon free
descent toward a planned level of 50 feet, she lost control almost immediately, plummeting to 200 feet, with her best friend grasping her hand the
entire way.
Other divers in the water saw them sinking, and an experienced diver
followed their bubbles down. When they plummeted past 110 feet, he surfaced
to get help. The buddy was unable to lift the diver, who seemed
unconscious by that time, off the bottom. She then surfaced to get help.
At 200 feet, the diver was too deep for the recreational divers who
arrived from nearby dive boats to attempt a rescue. Currents prevented
expert attempts at recovery later that afternoon, and she remained lost at
sea .
Too much weight? Panic? Over confidence because she now carries a
PADI card certifying her as on open-water diver? An unskilled buddy? A
cumbersome wet suit? Poor shop supervision? No self-rescue skills? Failure
to drop a weight belt? Narcosis? There is no end to the factors that contributed
to this tragic death.