Cayman Island diving has gotten off to a bad start in
2007, with five dead divers in just four months. Two of them
were staying at Little Cayman Beach Resort and diving with
Reef Divers. It’s a sharp contrast to 2006, when only three
dive-related deaths happened during the entire year.
The first fatality on January 24 involved a 54-year-old
man diving near Sunset House. Two divers died within a
week of each other – a 71-year-old male diver at East End
on March 4 and a 57-year-old male diver in Smith’s Cove on
March 11.
The two Little Cayman Beach Resort divers were both
at Bloody Bay Wall when they went missing in separate
incidents. On February 11, Heidi Theresa Carson, 43, disappeared
during a dive, but police found nothing to indicate
foul play and suspect it was a suicide. On April 15, a 59-yearold
male was reported missing after he failed to return to
the dive boat. At the start of the dive at 20 feet, the man, an
experienced diver, indicated to his buddy that he was having
ear problems and was going back to the boat but never emerged. Search teams looked for both divers but found no
trace, and they are presumed dead.
With dive-related deaths worldwide going into triple
digits every year, the chance that two of them will happen at
the same resort is perhaps one in millions, especially in such
a short period. Nicholas Wilson, manager of Little Cayman
Beach Resort, told Undercurrent it’s a fluke. “It wasn’t a
matter of safety regulations; we have state-of-the-art equipment
with underwater recall devices, defibrillators onboard,
experienced divemasters, the works. It was just a case of two
unfortunate incidents happening in a short period of time.
That hasn’t happened in Little Cayman in a long time.”
After the deaths in March, one dive operator told the
Cayman Net News that singling out specific incidents was
unfair and that most of the deaths were probably due to
preexisting conditions rather than the activity itself. After
reviewing the 2006 fatalities, dive operators said last January
that they were generally satisfied with the Caymans’ safety
standards and that the comparatively small number of
deaths was a fact of life.