Key Largo’s Aqua-Nuts dive
operation left two California
divers in the water overnight on
February 22. When the couple
surfaced at the Elbow dive site
about six miles from shore near
John Pennekamp Coral Reef
State Park, they discovered
Aqua-Nuts’ 42' boat, two crew
members, and 23 other divers
had already left. Despite 25-
knot winds, four-foot waves, and
water temperatures in the 60s,
the couple managed to swim to
a 36' light tower marking the
reef and spent Tuesday night
and most of Wednesday atop its
platform. A passing sailboat
spotted the wetsuit-clad pair
late Wednesday afternoon and
called the marine patrol. Aqua-
Nuts' Ricky Thaler said his shop
has a clean safety record and
has never made such a “stupid”
mistake in its eight years of
operation. He refused to discuss
whether a head count had been
taken.
The episode followed on
the heels of another incident
when three Floridians out spearfishing
off a private boat were
left adrift for hours on Super
Bowl Sunday (although they’d
left in the early afternoon
January 30 expecting to be
home in time for kickoff). The
three divers entered the water
after attaching themselves to a
float, leaving their 34-foot boat
in the hands of a friend. While
she went below deck to retrieve
her cigarettes, the boat drifted
out of sight. She panicked, drove
around in zigzags searching, and
eventually disappeared from
their view. Fortunately, she ran
into a commercial fishing boat
and relayed her tale. They called
Left at Sea — Again and Again
it's serious, and it's time it stopped
the Coast Guard, which dispatched
a plane that located the
trio. They were in good health
except for cramps, minor
hypothermia, and numerous
jellyfish stings.
Given the fact that lost
divers are becoming a regular
occurrence, perhaps it’s time to
make mandatory a procedure such as reader Joyce Huber’s
“Cards on Board” program we
wrote about last month, which
suggests that each diver leave
his or her c-card (or some
other form of ID if divers are
uncomfortable leaving their ccards)
in a central location on
board the boat before entering the water and that the captain
be forbidden to leave the area
without first verifying that each
card had been picked up. It
may not solve the abandoned
diver problem, but it’s a good
place to start. Let’s insist on
not being left at sea.
— John Q. Trigger