Death, like pressure and
speed, is a constant companion
for the few who engage in no limits
free diving. Divers take a single
deep breath, then submerge on
weighted sleds mounted on
cables, plummeting hundreds of
feet in a minute. When they
reach their goal, the weight is
dropped and they race to surface
like a bullet. There's no need to
decompress. They haven't
breathed.
"Free diving is getting in
touch with yourself. It's a quiet
and peaceful feeling, and you get
to understand your body,'' said
Carlos Serra, president of the
Miami-based International
Association of Free Divers
(IAFD). "You need to know what
your body is telling you and when
you need to go to the surface
and breathe," Serra told an
Associated Press reporter.
But the October 12 death of a
world-record holder, 28-year-old Audrey Mestre, has sparked
intense debate about safety and
who's in charge. Mestre, the wife
of record free diver Pipin Ferreras,
drowned while trying to break
her husband's IAFD record of
531.5 feet.
Free divers can hold their
breath for up to three minutes.
No-limits divers can regulate their
heart to twenty beats per minute.
They flush their sinuses and ears
with water to combat the fierce
effects of pressure. "They put
their bodies in a mode of trying
to ... learn to control the urge to
breathe,'' Serra said, however
shallow water blackout can cause
the diver to pass out and possibly
drown.
IAFD's Serra is partners with
Pipin Ferreras, who was present
at his wife's death. A dive to 561
feet that should have taken just
three minutes lasted more than 8
1/2 minutes. Mestre's body was
limp when Pippin brought her to the surface. She had reached her
target depth of 561 feet, but experienced
problems on her way up. The
IAFD has posthumously recognized
a dive to 558 feet completed by
Mestre October 9 in practice as a
world record.
Serra and Ferreras have been
inundated with criticism on Internet
forums and from fellow free divers.
They were blamed for failing to have
adequate safety divers and medical
staff and for covering up any mistakes
that were made. Serra vehemently
denies such criticism.
Ricardo Hernandez, who began
his own free diving school after
being fired from the IAFD two years
ago, says Serra and Ferreras are
hiding information. They have not
released a video made during the
dive using a camera attached to the
sled, and failed to disclose information
from computerized depth
gauges secured to Mestre's body
during the dive, Hernandez said. He
also questions why Ferreras had to dive in to save his wife when
there were supposedly plenty of
safety personnel in the water.
"There is a general outcry and
an uproar in the diving community,''
Hernandez said. "The video
has always been shown to public
after each successful record. The
video will be proof of how many
divers were there.
"Audrey's death became a
tragedy and it's becoming a tragicomedy
perhaps because there
are so many facts people don't
know a month after she died,'' he
said. "Carlos and Pipin have a
complete conflict of interest and
their lack of disclosure is a total
mockery.''
Ferreras has declined interview
requests, only speaking to
the press during a memorial
service. But Serra insists there
were enough safety divers and
emergency medical personnel
present. He says Hernandez is a disgruntled former employee
who is seeking notoriety through
"sickening'' personal attacks.
He says that little information
has been released out of respect
to Mestre's parents and Ferreras,
who need time to grieve. "The
investigation continues. There is
no cover-up. We have to understand
the painful process of healing,''
Serra said.
Serra has acknowledged that
the sled malfunctioned and
stopped while Mestre was at 530
feet. A safety diver stationed near
the bottom of the line saw that
Mestre had fainted and began
taking her to the surface. Ferreras
eventually dove in with an air
tank to bring his wife up.
While Mestre's death has been
felt throughout the diving community,
participants say such danger
is ever-present and must be
accepted. "The ocean is more
powerful than you. You have to make a major peace with the ocean
and realize every time you go out
you can die,'' said Briseno, whose
husband, Matthew, was working as a
safety diver during Mestre's fatal
dive. "Yes, death is always possible.
But that is the way I would choose
to die. It is acceptable to me that I
would die free diving.''
Ferreras said at his wife's funeral
that he plans to reach her record
depth of 558 feet. "I can't retire
right now. If I stop doing what I've
been doing, everything she worked
for would be worthless,'' Ferreras
said.
Briseno and many others say the
main challenge for the sport now is
establishing a centralized governing
body that can standardize safety
practices and records. "The different
bodies that organize the sport
need to get together on safety
procedures,'' Briseno said. "The
training, the safety and the records:
They need to agree on the basics."