It's often been stated in Undercurrent that the most
dangerous thing you are likely to encounter while
scuba diving is your own boat. We've had reports of
people losing fingers to a dive ladder hinging in a
swell, but the most hazardous situation is a turning propeller.
If a vessel were to put into gear and back up to
a diver making his way to the stern, he could easily be
drawn into those revolving blades.
Even the unprotected propeller of a small outboard
motor could kill you, so imagine the horror of being
in the water near the massive propeller of a freighter
when it unexpectedly starts to turn.
Old footage reappeared on a newspaper website in late November of amateur divers casually inspecting
the underside of a ship that had evidently gone
aground near Miami. Two divers make the mistake of
thinking that since the vessel was tied up to a bridge, it
wasn't going anywhere. Wrong!
One of the divers, Phil Jaynes, uploaded the clip to
YouTube, saying: "We made the assumption that if the
ship was tied up, it wouldn't turn on the propellers"
and recently responded to comments by saying, "If
anyone is still wondering, I'm alive, and yes, we were
stupid for being there; kids, don't do what we did."
www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/562565/scuba-
horrific-deep-sea-mistake-underwater-panic-video