Whale Whacks Couple Around. Protecting her calf, a
40-ton Atlantic humpback whale unleashed her fury on
snorkelers who came too close and broke one man’s leg
with her tail. Randy and Gwen Thornton, a couple from
Utah, boarded the Turks & Caicos Aggressor in March
for a whale-watching expedition at the Dominican
Republic site of Silver Banks. Snorkelers are allowed
within feet of the whales, which give birth in these
waters every spring, but a current moved the Thorntons
closer than intended, pushing them right into a mother
and calf sleeping in the shallows. The pair spooked, and
the mother flipped her tail twice. One flip hit Gwen
in the back and sent her sailing 20 feet, the other gave
Randy a broken leg. The nearest hospital was a grueling nine-hour boat ride away but Randy was later interviewed
on Good Morning America vowing to dive again.
Golf Hazard. If you’re playing golf in Florida and
your ball lands in a water hazard, leave it where it is.
Alligators often lurk in those water hazards, and they’ve
attacked divers hired to retrieve lost golf balls. Vernon
Messier, 57, was standing waist-deep in a golf-course lake
in Tampa, when a seven-foot alligator bit his left foot.
He gouged at the gator’s eyes, pried its jaws apart and
got away with minor injuries. Same thing happened last
year to ball-seeking diver Stephen Martinez, 43, at a
Boynton Beach course. He was retrieving balls in cloudy
water when an alligator grabbed his tank and dragged him to the bottom. Martinez was able to
reach his dive knife and after a struggle,
escaped with a light bite to his arm. Both
men are keeping their day jobs.
Watch Your Head. One of divers’
worst fears: being hit and run over by
a boat. It happened to a 41-year-old
Australian male diver who surfaced
from a morning dive off Shelley Beach
in New South Wales and hit his dive
boat’s propeller. He suffered a fractured
skull and had to be airlifted to Sydney
for emergency surgery. Two weeks later
near Miami, Florida, the propellers of a
76-foot yacht killed a diver and chewed
up the flippers of another who survived
unscathed. The two men in their thirties
were freediving from a nearby boat, and
authorities are still determining how far
they were from their boat, and why, when
they were struck. Lesson learned: Look
straight up before you reach the surface.
Scuba Instructor vs. The Sheraton. Hawaii’s Supreme Court ruled against
a dive instructor appealing the case she
filed against the Sheraton Maui Resort.
After leading students on a night dive
near Black Rock, Letizia Thompson, a
freelance instructor for Pacific Dive in
Lahaina, fell and hit her head after stepping
in a pothole on an unlit path to the hotel’s garage where everyone’s cars
were parked. She sued the Sheraton for
premises liability negligence. The hotel’s
defense was that Thompson would not
have been on hotel grounds if she hadn’t
been taking students diving for her
direct financial benefit. Its lawyers cited
Hawaii’s recreational use statute, which
gives landowners immunity from negligence
liability from any person who is
neither a houseguest nor a paying guest
who is injured on the land while using it
for recreational purposes. The verdict:
Because Thompson was only using the
hotel for access to the beach but no
other services, she was a recreational
user and had no claim.
Snorkeling and the Bends. Snorkeling
doesn’t cause decompression sickness,
but it doesn’t help if you’re already suffering
from it and refuse medical treatment.
Soren Mikkelsen, a 57-year-old
Dane, died while snorkeling off Siquijor
Island in the Philippines. He had been
hospitalized several days earlier after
he got the bends diving in Panglao.
Unwilling to postpone his vacation, he
left the next day against his doctor’s
advice. He thought he would not complicate
matters if he only snorkeled on the
water’s surface, but he was wrong.