After reading the postmortems of diving accidents in the
August 2002 issue, I felt the need to share my experience.
After becoming open-water certified in the chilly waters
of Monterey Bay, California, my partner and I booked a tenday
dive trip to Moorea Island in Tahiti. After diving several
days with groups of three or four, we went out with eight.
Since they allowed only one buddy-pair to precheck and
enter the water at a time, my buddy and I, being the first
ones in, had a bit of a wait. There was a little chop, so as we
floated on inflated BCs we used our snorkels. My concern
with my video camera managed to occupy the time. Finally
we got the word to descend.
I hoisted the BC valve above my head, exhaled deeply
through my mouthpiece and shoved under. At eight feet I
had exhausted the last bit of air in the BC, and in my lungs,
so I let go of the valve and took a great drag on the mouthpiece—
of my snorkel, which I still had in my mouth.
Fortunately, my throat closed faster than I could think, so I
didn’t choke.
As I went to jam the regulator mouthpiece into my face, I
realized that I didn’t have any air left in my lungs. I couldn’t
clear the water. And I was still going down. It was then that
all the training kicked in. Stop! Think!
Even though there wasn’t an ounce of air in my lungs, I
still had time to run through a list of things I could do,
several of which would have worked, including using the
purge valve on the regulator to clear the mouthpiece. I did
this, and with a huge gulp of dry air the crisis ended before I
became another statistic.
It sounds damnably simple sitting here writing this. It
probably does to you, too, reading this. I can tell you,
though, it was not my first impulse. It did not seem quite so
simple when I was fifteen feet underwater and drifting
deeper, with completely exhaled lungs. There is always time
to stop and think — preferably before you do something
foolish as I did—even if it’s in the middle of what seems like
your last breath. I know.
Edward Waldorph
Spanish Fort, AL