On a recent trip to Jamaica, my
husband and I went diving with
Resort Divers, based in the Jack Tarat Montego Bay. Our first dive was
uneventful and we returned to the
shop for our surface interval. For
the second dive, it was the divemaster
and boat captain, my husband
and me. There was a current that was not present on the first
dive. Once in the water, we tried to let the boat know that we
would not be returning to it, that this was going to be a drift
dive, but we could not get the captain’s attention. While it
was my gut feeling to scrap the dive, the divemaster assured
us the boat would pick us up. When we surfaced, the boat
was not within any reasonable distance for us to make contact.
We had whistles and safety sausages; we waved our
brightly colored fins. No luck. The boat captain was asleep!
The current swiftly carried us down the coast, past the airport,
away from land. When we neared a navigational bell
that I suggested we try to reach, the current was too strong.
Land was fairly close. Do we ditch our equipment and swim
for shore? Or float a while longer and hope for a passerby?
Thank God for the little old fisherman passing by in his little
rickety boat. As we were waving to get his attention, he waved
back, then realized we needed his help. He picked us up and
brought us to the dive shop. Ninety minutes had passed
since we first entered the water. The boat could be seen from
shore at the dive shop and it had never moved. The captain
had to be radioed to be wakened from his little nap.
The dive shop was not too grateful to the fisherman for
saving our asses and gave him no compensation. He wanted
nothing from me but I made it worth his while. I asked for a
refund for the rest of our diving, which they gave me reluctantly. The owner of the operation called me the next morning
at my hotel, apologizing profusely and told me they fired
the captain on the spot and anything that I wished to do the
rest of the week was complimentary.
In hindsight, I should have trusted my gut and not continued
the dive. Luckily, we were experienced divers and did
not panic.
Tim and Lori Mattozzi, Griffith, Indiana.