We all know about driving defensively, but one must dive
defensively as well. You see, other divers in the water can sometimes
be hazards. To learn what kind of dangers they can pose,
we asked our subscribers via e-mail to describe any experiences
they had when divers may have personally caused them risk.
Perhaps most surprising were the number of cases involving
trip leaders, divemasters and instructors who didn’t do their
jobs properly. They show we can’t always trust our leaders.
Dominic Sansone (Charlotte, NC) says his life was put in
danger by a dive shop owner giving him training. “He decided
that for my openwater drysuit dives, I didn’t need to wear the
‘rock boots’ that go over the footies in the poorly-fitted dry
suit I rented.” At 60 feet, Sansone’s fin straps slipped off the
back of his ankles. The air in his suit immediately went to
his feet and he began an uncontrolled ascent. Due to poor
visibility, the instructor had no idea where he had gone and
searched the bottom for a few minutes before surfacing to find
Sansone floating and luckily unharmed. “I later found out
my drysuit had an emergency dump valve to vent air immediately.
I wish I had known that beforehand.” The dive shop is
no longer in business.
Michael Hofman (San Francisco, CA) didn’t feel appreciated
on his dive trip in Cuba when the boat crew gave him and
his dive buddy, a novice, too-challenging dives. “The divemaster
wanted to take us through a chimney at 90 feet. My buddy kept
following the divemaster down and down. When we got below
100 feet, I started trying to catch up to them.” Finally at 165
feet, Francisco got ahold of his buddy and pointed to his depth
gauge. They then rose slowly and did the safety stops. “The
divemaster didn’t say anything. We really had the feeling they
were trying to get rid of two Americans.”
Robert Clarke (St. Albert, Alberta) also had a Cuban horror
story while on board the Halcyon off the island’s west coast. “On one dive, I was at six feet, videotaping the sharks doing
lazy circles around us. All of a sudden, they became excited.”
One shark struck him in the back of the head, then another
struck the right video light of his camera and carried off the
reflector. A large shark clamped its jaws over his video camera
and tried to pull it away but when Clarke held onto it and
hit the shark’s nose with his other hand, the shark let go and
swam away. More sharks were coming so he dropped to 20 feet.
“When I looked up, I saw pieces of fish floating in the water
near where I had been moments before. When I returned to the
boat, I discovered the trip leader had thrown fish in the water
just behind my head, hoping this would give better closeups of
the sharks. It sure did -- the videocamera was still rolling when
the shark bit it so I have some very scary footage of the inside
of a shark’s mouth.”
Diane Gedymin (Brooklyn, NY) was diving at a popular
Grand Cayman resort that had a policy of all divers descending
and ascending simultaneously. “We all descended and I
immediately saw a photo shot and patiently waited for a small
critter to reemerge from the coral. We must have been down for
10 minutes when the divemaster, also the manager of the dive
operation, yanked my regulator out of my mouth with no warning.
I was doing nothing wrong and did not anticipate such an
early ascent so of course I wasn’t looking at the group from the
back of my head.” Gedymin swallowed some water but calmly
used her octopus before she could retrieve her primary second
stage from the out-of-control divemaster. “Apparently, he had
acted similarly to other divers so when I surfaced, there was
close to a riot on board. And for no reason because there was
no emergency.”
Carl Schulz (St. Louis, MO) was in the Western Caribbean
with a dive buddy who had new camera gear, and their divemaster
was trying to find photo ops for him. “On one dive,
we had some ripping current. Suddenly, I realized that I was alone. My buddy and the divemaster had stopped behind a
coral head to take some pictures and by the time I realized they
had stopped, I had traveled some distance.” Schulz tried to get
back to them but the current was hard to fight and he started
breathing heavily. He finally grabbed rocks on the bottom,
made it over to them, then hung onto a rock and concentrated
on getting his breathing and heart rate back to normal. “The
most surprising thing was that neither of them had looked up
the entire time it took me to get back to where they were, about
50 yards and almost 15 minutes. I was already at 500 dpi but when I gave them the up signal, they both looked at me like
I was crazy.” The safety stop was also a challenge because of
the current, but Schulz’s buddy and the divemaster aborted
it and went straight up to the boat, once again leaving him in
the water alone. “That’s when I decided that on my next dive
I would make sure there was at least one other person diving
who wasn’t a photographer.”
Of course, this last case is an example of a diver rightfully
expecting that his group leader will be there for him when he
needs it, but that’s often not the case. Schultz is right to recognize that photographers and divemasters working for
them are the worst buddies. But if a diver gets buddied up in
that situation, he’s got to take responsibility to hang close by
since the photographer’s subject is obviously far more important
than other divers in the water.
We also received word of several incidents where a diver
tried to help another diver in distress, resulting in a serious
increase in risk. One case came from Watt Hinson (Bay City,
TX) during a dive at Cozumel’s Las Palmas reef. At 55 feet,
he saw another diver’s tank slipping out of her BC bands. She
removed her BC and in doing so dropped a small, cheap camera
that floated down current. The diver then dumped her regulator
and swam for the camera but because her BC was weight
integrated, she immediately became positively buoyant. “I was able to grab her fin and pass her my primary second stage.
Because she was so buoyant, I was unable to hold her on the
bottom so we both made an uncontrolled ascent. Fortunately,
we didn’t sustain injury.”
Finally, Paul Gmelch (Amelia Island, FL), though not at
risk himself, told us of a dive buddy who was the proverbial
accident waiting to happen. “On a recent dive trip, he stopped
taking his blood pressure medication, and dove with a dead
battery on his wireless transmitter, hence no pressure gauge.
On the next dive, he hit his tank on the boat deck while entering
and became an inattentive diver with a new camera in his
hand. Lastly, while getting out of the water, he gave his fins and
camera to the boathand, then fell back in. Enough?” So divers,
if there’s one lesson to be learned here, it’s to dive defensively.