Diving off live-aboards can get
extreme when the currents are
rolling. Undercurrent reader Lou
Radenhausen from Moriches, NY
wrote to us about a harrowing
experience while diving from the
Palau Aggressor in December. This
led us to further safety suggestions
for live-aboards, upon
which we followed up. Here’s
Lou’s story :
The afternoon
dive was
Peleliu Point,
which required
the use of reef
hooks, as the
currents tend
to be strong to
say the least. At 80 feet, my wife
Lisa, Tom, our 13-year-old junior
advanced son, and I hooked into
the dead part of the reef and
watched the sharks, turtles and
eagle rays pass our perch. Trying
to take pictures was impossible, as
bursts of current were strong
enough to bend my strobe arms
back. We hung in the current like
kites in the wind. It was really cool.
After watching these creatures
for 25 minutes, our divemasters
motioned us to come off our reef
hooks and fly over the reef. As we
drifted, our divemasters instructed
us to ascend as we passed over
the reef to avoid possible killer
downcurrents. People have been
lost here and never found. We
complied and eventually ascended
to our 15-foot safety stop while
the current swept us along.
No fresh water, sunset approaching, circling
sharks like silkies and oceanic white tips
made me angry that some simple back-up
plans were not in place. |
We surfaced in three groups,
one several hundred yards from
the others. Looking back toward
Peleliu Point we saw our skiff in
the distance but not headed our
way. The boat was going back and
forth over the area where we had
tied into the reef. We were now
over a mile away and heading out
quickly.
Safety sausages went up in all
three groups and air alerts were
sounded — all to no avail. The
skiff became smaller and the seas
became larger as we drifted quickly
toward The Philippines. We
managed to get down to two
groups, ditching our weights and
making jokes
about our situation.
A large
shark circling
our group didn’t upgrade
our situation,
so I took a
heroic step by
positioning myself within the middle
of our group to instill confidence
in the others. My son was
not amused and as time wore on
and the swells became larger, he
became frightened. Land was a
long way off and no boat was
c‘oming.
After 35 minutes of drifting,
our divemaster headed for shore
to get help. We all turned on our backs and slowly headed in the
direction of land, which at our
speed, loaded with gear, cameras
and taking turns pulling my son,
would have taken two hours,
landing on a very unforgiving
reef.
The divemaster in the second
group left them and headed in
the direction of the skiff to close
the gap between the boat and
their group. Now we were alone
in a very wild place. Thoughts of
no fresh water, sunset approaching,
circling sharks like silkies and
oceanic white tips made me
angry that some simple back-up
plans were not in place. It was not
much of a plan to supply divers
with safety sausages and air alerts.
With the winds blowing toward
us, the air alerts were silenced
after a short distance. The
sausages were effective for a half
mile and only at the top of a large
swell.
While slowly swimming toward
shore we talked about what could
be done to prevent divers from
getting lost. A smoke flare would
have been much more effective,
considering our distance and a
steady breeze. While divers can’t
bring them on airplanes, dive
operators could have them
shipped by container ship.
Another cheap backup we saw
used in Fiji and Cozumel were
floats towed by divemasters.
Following bubbles from the surface
doesn’t always work, and it’s
easier to follow a float on drift
dives.
The best back-up plan
requires the use of an Emergency
Position Indicating Radio Beacon
(EPIRB). A low- frequency system
will convey a diver’s location to a
skiff operator. The divemaster can
carry a tank-mounted transmitter
and the skiff operator has the
receiver.
After an hour adrift we had
cut the distance to land in half.
Then, far off we saw our skiff
headed in our direction and eventually
we were back on board. We
scrapped the remaining dives of
the day in favor of alcohol and
reflection. My son’s fear subsided
by the next day and he enjoyed
diving the rest of the week. I felt
bad for putting him at risk and
promised him I would do whatever
I could to make his diving experience
safer. It was awkward for the
divers and the crew. We had just
begun to feel a genuine friendship
between us and then circumstances
that really weren’t their
fault, let us down.
It is up to dive operators to
upgrade safety by providing equipment
and procedures that will significantly
reduce the chance of losing
divers. The cost is nothing
compared to the bad publicity and
possible lawsuits, which may occur
despite signed waivers.
* * * * *
Lou Radenhausen’s letter
prompted us to poll a few liveaboards
about whether they would
consider providing additional signaling
devices. Specifically, we
asked: “Would you be willing to
equip divers on your boats with: 1.
A smoke flare; 2. Highly visible
floats to be carried by divers or
divemasters; or 3. Emergency
Position Indicating Radio
Beacons (EPIRBs)?” Here is what
they told us:
Peter Hughes has begun providing
divers in Papua New
Guinea, Palau and the Galapagos
with the ACR Personal Diver
Distress and Rescue Beacons,
which clip to BCs and can send
signals to the boat from as far
away as 75 miles. Sue Hamilton,
director of marketing, said they
were purchasing flares for “locations
with high drifts or currents,
not necessarily on every boat or
on every dive. Currently, besides
safety sausages and dive alerts we
provide emergency light beacons
to each diver.”
Matthew Armand of the
Aggressor Fleet reported that operations
manager Wayne Hasson had
just ordered EPIRBs and accompanying
direction finders for the Palau Aggressor II and Galapagos Aggressors I & II. The units will be
available at no extra charge. No
other boats are scheduled to get
them. The Fiji, Truk and Okeanos
Aggressors supply dive alerts and
safety sausages as do the Galapagos and Palau Aggressors. Armand said
that right now there are no plans
for smoke flares or float devices.
Mike Ball, who operates liveaboards in Australia and Papua New
Guinea, was responsive enough to
discuss these questions with the crew
of the Supersport within days after we
contacted him. He reported that
smoke flares were problematic as for
keeping dry, and the float device is
already covered by the many different
safety sausages available. Ball said
that EPIRBs were probably the way
to go depending on cost and features.
He would check on what was
available .
Others were more circumspect in
their consideration of supplying such
gear. John Williams, co-owner of
Siam Dive n’ Sail, a firm that among
other things books for many liveaboards
and day-trip boats in
Thailand, responded with technical
and logistical concerns regarding
floats & EPIRBs. He did, however,
find the flare idea to have potential.
He went on to state, “I wonder who
would be paying for them. Don’t you
think that divers should have to buy
or rent these items? When you go
skiing, the resort does not give you
free sunglasses to protect your eyes.
Why should dive boats give away
these safety devices?”
Also reluctant was Undersea
Hunter owner Avi Klapfer. He told
Undercurrent, “Yes, we would be willing
to equip our divers with the
three devices. Whether we actually
would do it depends on many factors,
such as dependability and servi
ceability.” He didn’t suggest who
might perform such testing, and
expressed the same technical misgivings
about EPIRBs as did some of
the other operations. He said he
already equips divers with safety
sausages, storm whistles, and a small
flashlight, placed in a small mesh
bag that can be clipped to the BC.
All the people we spoke with did
assert that safety devices are no substitute
for competent and careful
divers and dive crew.
So, if having a live-aboard supply
you with signaling devices beyond
those customarily carried is important,
ask what they provide when you
are discussing a possible booking.
The more divers show concern for
their own safety, the more boat owners
will listen.