Dear Ben,
Because my husband and I dive around the world in remote
places, I always am interested in your articles pertaining to rescue.
Thankfully, we have never needed to be rescued. However, we have
always tried to prepare ourselves as well as possible for that “worst
case scenario.”
In your recent article, “Rescue Devices for Saving Your Bacon,”
you mention several well-known devices. The yellow flag on a tall
pole that is strapped to a diver’s tank is interesting. But I wonder
why you didn’t mention the fluorescent dye markers that come in a
vial about three inches long? I read an article awhile back about a
lost diver who was rescued. He believed that a dye marker enabled
the planes to see him. Furthermore, he said he would never dive without
one again. I immediately ordered dye markers for my husband
and me. Would you please address the fluorescent dye marker as a
help in rescue?
- - Patty Turbeville (Bradenton, FL)
Patty, we asked the “Rescue Devices” article author,
John Bantin, to respond to your question.
“Dye markers are useful for making a person in the
water a bigger visual target for an air search. However, they
are only effective when the sea is calm, as the dye soon gets
dispersed. Assuming that a diver has left a boat with the
crew’s knowledge, and should the sea be calm enough for
a dye marker to work, the crew should also be able to spot
the head of a diver (or other visual marker device) at the
surface. Just as flares are only usefully applied to draw the
attention of those known to be searching, a dye marker has
a limited application for divers. We need a marker that is
not obscured by waves and rough seas, and that is why dye
markers were not mentioned.
“It is when divers surface away from the reef or where
the boat crews do not expect them to be (in the open
sea, for example) that they become cause for concern.
Therefore, divers should carry a rescue device that works in
any type of weather or water.”