Rick Brohammer (Ft. Lauderdale, FL) has
logged well over 2,700 dives, so you wouldn't expect
him to make a rookie mistake. But now he's
embroiled in a hassle over the loss of his regulator
and BCD at the end of a dive off Costa Rica's Ocotal
Beach Resort last November.
The incident occurred on the second dive of
the day at Bat Island. Things had gone differently
than on the first dive. First, only one divemaster,
Eric, had joined the second dive. The other,
Carlitos, stayed on board Ocotal's dive boat. At the
end of the dive in choppy water, Eric boarded the
boat first rather than waiting for the guests to climb
out as he had previously.
Then, Brohammer says, he followed established
procedure by approaching the stern, keeping his
weight-integrated BCD inflated, and turning his
back so a crew member could pull his rig off his
shoulders. Brohammer maintains that once the
crew member had his BCD, he began climbing onto
the dive platform when he saw his rig drifting away.
The crew member never alerted anyone or tried to
retrieve it, so Brohammer went after it himself. With
18 pounds of integrated weights, the BCD began
slowly sinking and Brohammer, in a wet suit, was too
buoyant to dive for it.
Meanwhile, Dave Beadle (Carlsbad, CA) was
having similar problems. Beadle told Undercurrent he
handed his camera, weight belt, and then his BCD
to Carlitos, "ensuring he had a good hold of it
before I released my grip." When Beadle began to
remove his fins, he saw Brohammer underwater,
with his BCD slowly sinking. Then Beadle saw his
own scuba unit float by. He grabbed it.
Greg Galland, the Ft. Lauderdale travel agent
who had put the trip together, had similar problems.
"I handed my weight belt to the crew member," he
told Undercurrent, "then removed my BCD assuming
that the crew member had a hold of it as had been
done previously." But the crew member didn't have
With four divers in the water, the crew had mishandled
three exchanges. The crew had a discussion
in Spanish, and Eric grabbed a spent tank and
went after Brohammer's gear. He later told
Brohammer that he'd reached 90 feet before running
low on air, and had seen the rig on the bottom
20 feet below, but was unable to reach it. Why Eric
made this attempt instead of Carlitos, who had
made only one dive that day, and why Eric used a
nearly empty tank when there were full tanks on
board, is anybody's guess.
Brohammer and his three companions were
taking a land tour the next day, but the crew members
said they would retrieve the gear. Brohammer
was concerned that another boat diving the area
might get there first. The following morning, Eric
dove to look for the gear but said he couldn't find it.
After returning home, Brohammer sent a complaint
to Rick Wallace, manager of the Ocotal Beach
Resort. Wallace took the position that Brohammer's
BCD had not been inflated and was never handed
to the crew member, so the loss was due to diver
error. But Brohammer urged Wallace to contact the
other divers, who agreed that Brohammer's BCD
was inflated. Otherwise, it would have sunk like a
stone. Rita Balogh (Ft. Lauderdale), who sat out that
dive, reported that she'd heard the crew state in
Spanish that they had dropped the gear. Galland
and Beadle confirmed that their gear had been mishandled,
as well.
Even in the face of these eyewitness reports,
Wallace still denies that his crew dropped the gear
and accepts no responsibility. Given that
Brohammer's group includes travel professionals
and seasoned divers, it seems that Wallace's decision
might have implications far beyond just replacing a
diver's lost gear.
And inquiring minds have to wonder: Was
someone who went diving at Bat Island that afternoon
disappointed because he retrieved only one
set of gear?