If you just can’t imagine another scenario for divers drifting at
sea, consider this incident in early August.
When 16 divers, including one American, surfaced from a dive
25 miles off Malaysia’s Kuantan coast, their liveaboard was nowhere in
sight. A fire had damaged the engine and generators and the current
took it far away. The ten men and six women discarded their weight
belts and tied themselves together with a floating mooring line they
found. They tried to attract the attention of passing ships with
airhorns and safety sausages, but without luck.
Then, however, they spotted their disabled dive boat. Two instructors
made a grueling 2 1/2 hour swim to reach it as darkness
approached. On board, they came up with an ingenious way to navigate
the boat back to the divers. When the current was in their favor,
they lifted anchor. When it was in the opposite direction, they lowered
the anchor to stop it from moving. They reached the others, who
were swimming toward the boat, in less than an hour, but more than
ten hours after they first surfaced.
They couldn’t use the boat’s communications gear and were too
far from shore for cell phones to work. The boat was taking on water
and so they spent the night bailing. The next morning, they burned
rubbish and fired flares to attract the attention of passing trawlers,
which ignored them. Finally, a cargo ship spotted the boat and alerted
the port control, which sent helicopters. No one was the worse for wear.
The New Paper, Singapore Press