This is the last in our three-part series based on actual
2004 cases from the Divers Alert Network (DAN). By presenting
them, we hope to show the bad mistakes divers
often make so you can avoid making them yourself.
Apart from divers who die of heart attacks, divers in
nearly every fatal accident have one or more opportunities
to make a live-saving decision. Instead, a bad decision
or an error in judgment is fatal. As the cases listed below show, both experienced and novice divers make
fatal errors. In its report of U.S. injuries and fatalities
in 2004, DAN found that 45 percent of dead divers had
been certified for a year or less. However, a quarter of
them had been certified for a decade or more.
Even experienced solo divers can find
themselves in these too-tight situations |
Rising too fast and embolizing is often the cause of
death and too often the rapid ascent is unavoidable.
Consider the case of a 42-year-old male who had been
certified for 20 years and made a solo dive from a boat
to go spear fishing. His computer showed that he rose
from 89 feet much too rapidly, embolized and drowned.
While we will never know why he rose so rapidly that day,
we do know that this diver habitually made rapid ascents,
a habit that even divers fresh out of certification courses
should know is asking for trouble.
Solo diving
If you’ve been on a liveaboard or at a serious dive
resort, you know that solo diving is commonplace and
that skilled solo divers are self-sufficient and cautious —
because they have no one to turn to if things go wrong.
DAN estimates that 10 percent of 2004 fatalities were
solo divers, and another 10 percent were divers with a
group or another buddy who decided to part ways. When
their buddies couldn’t keep up, either due to problems
at descent or low oxygen at depth, these divers made the
fatal mistake of going on alone. Throw in a mix of more
advanced diving situations, and they should have thought
twice.
A 40-year-old experienced male diver made a boat
dive with Nitrox. He was with three other divers but
essentially made a solo dive. He was found unconscious
on the bottom and could not be resuscitated. According to his dive computer, this diver made a rapid descent to
55 feet, spent 30 minutes on the bottom and then rapidly
ascended to 4 feet before heading back to the bottom,
but his tank was nearly empty. He drowned, apparently
after embolizing.
Of course, cave diving seems to be a stimulus for
bad decisions, one reason that a diver who hasn’t been
trained as a cave diver needs to avoid the impulse to
enter. Khrester Encanto, a 27-year-old Navy sailor who
had completed his initial open-water certification just two
weeks earlier, had no business entering an underwater
cave system in the Crystal River north of Tampa. He was
diving from a boat with a married couple, but the trio
surfaced after the husband had equipment problems. He
aborted his dive, so Encanto and the woman then dove
again. The pair resurfaced and the woman boarded the
boat, but Encanto decided to return to depth alone with
only 1,000 psi in his tank—and did not return. Later that
day, police divers found his body 35 feet below the surface,
wedged into a tight hole. Encanto apparently had
removed his BC and weight belt in an attempt to either
enter the passage or get out of it.
Ten percent of DAN’s 2004 fatal cases involved cave
diving, and four of the dead divers were trained and
experienced in cave diving. Two of them, a 37-year-old
male and a 53-year-old male, were a buddy pair entering
a cave system with another two divers. Visibility was poor
and they made a wrong turn. The other two divers made
it out, but this pair ended up sharing air and eventually
died in the cave when their breathing gas was exhausted.
Their bodies were recovered 250 feet from the exit.
The other two fatalities were John Robinson, Jr., age
37 and Craig Simon, age 44, both experienced technical
divers with cave diving certifications, who met their
end at the famous Eagle’s Nest underwater caves near St.
Petersburg, Florida. The two were frequent dive buddies
and entered the complex cave system using mixed gas
that would allow them 2.5 hours of air. A search started
when they didn’t exit the water at the expected time.
Robinson’s body was found the next day about 1,300 feet
inside a cave, with both tanks out of oxygen. Authorities
believe he became lost and disoriented by blinding silt
as he tried unsuccessfully to navigate his way out of the
caves. Simon’s body wasn’t found until three days later at
286 feet, entangled in his own line and empty gas tanks.
Even experienced solo divers can find themselves in
these too-tight situations. A 45-year-old male with technical
and cave diving certifications completed his first dive of the day with a group without incident, but he decided
to go back down alone while the others were filling their
tanks. He entered a cave system without a light or line,
using a single tank. He got trapped and ran out of air.
When the other divers went down to look for him, they
found his body outside the cave entrance, and his regulator
and empty tank inside the cave.
Strong currents can get rough
Shore diving has its own challenges, including strong
currents and riptides. Divers trained in California or
other areas with a rugged coast often get instruction on
handling entries and exits, but divers trained in more
placid waters often miscalculate the power of waves and
the strength of currents or don’t bother to look for slackwater
entries and exits. Of the 2004 fatalities, 40 percent
were shore divers. Again, solo diving and rough currents
can be a bad mix—nearly half of those divers went solo,
and strong currents or rough seas were present in 30 percent
of shore-diving fatalities.
A 48-year-old male open-water diver with 50 lifetime
dives made a solo, shore entry dive into a river, but the current was so strong that he quickly decided to abort the
dive. Too late. He was found dead of drowning only seven
feet from shore. His fins were missing, either because
he tried to remove them to swim ashore or because they
were simply lost in the rough current.
Heavy gear is also a key factor when trying to swim
against a tide. An experienced 47-year-old male was solo
diving for fossils in a river with strong currents and nearzero
visibility. He was also weighed down by the heavy
equipment he used for his task. His body was found in 30
feet of water four days later. Entrapment on the bottom
may have been a factor in his drowning.
Rough seas call for good judgment. Two divers, age 41
and 53, both with little diving experience, made a shore
entry with another diver into rough seas from a rocky
area. The rough water tossed them against the rocks,
essentially bludgeoning them, and both drowned.
Know your gear
Ill-fitting or improper gear annually plays a role in
diver deaths, and there are always those divers who try
to improve on equipment design, unwittingly creating a fatal configuration. An inexperienced 48-year-old diver
made a solo, shore entry dive using a homemade harness
to distribute the weights he wore. He surfaced and was
heard to comment about his regulator. He dropped his
weight belt but did not inflate his BC. After several tries to
submerge, he finally went under and did not come back
up. It appears his regulator got caught in his homemade
harness and caused him to drown.
A 53-year-old female who had been certified for two
years was two minutes into her dive when at 117 feet,
she had difficulty using her regulator and drowned. It
was later discovered that the regulator was missing a diaphragm
seal. The woman owned the regulator, but it’s
unclear if she had used it for diving since the last routine
maintenance.
This death illustrates what many divers have discovered:
the most likely time a regulator will fail is during
the first dive after maintenance, thanks to improper servicing.
The first dive after any regulator servicing needs
to be a cautious dive. And before you leave a shop with
a serviced regulator, slap it on a tank, see if it freeflows,
and take a few breaths. It still may not work properly at
depth, but take the precaution.
Drinking, drugs and diving don’t mix
And there are always those divers who discount the
effect of alcohol or drugs, and think their diving skill will
stand up to their impaired brains. A 53-year-old male had
been certified more than 10 years ago but only had 5 or 6
lifetime dives. He entered the water alone, using surfacesupplied
air to retrieve something that had gone over the
side of his boat in 10 feet of water. He returned to the
boat shortly after to adjust a leaking regulator and then
descended again, overweighted and not wearing fins. His
body was recovered later that day. Why would he enter
the water ill equipped? How could he drown at such a
shallow depth? The medical examiner found a load of
cocaine in his system.
Brian Tinsdale was with three friends at 2 a.m. in a
boat at Ginnie Springs near Gainesville, Florida, drinking
beer before and between dives. The 24-year-old had been
certified for two years, and made three short excursions
of five to 10 minutes each into the 60-foot depth of Devil’s
Ear cave. He didn’t surface after the fourth, and a rescue
diver recovered his body from the cave an hour later. His
tank was also empty, since he had used it for all four dives
and began the last one with only 500 psi remaining. He
had a blood alcohol level of .11, while .08 is considered
too intoxicated to drive in most states.