In our August review of diving British Columbia
off the live-aboard Nautilus Explorer, our correspondent,
DL, detailed some problems he had as a new
dry suit diver. Specifically, he recounted the trial and
error process of adjusting his buoyancy and of keeping
warm under his crushed neoprene rental suit.
The article led two experienced dry suit divers to
offer their thoughts.
Hi Ben:
Just read the review on the Nautilus Explorer in
British Columbia. Clearly a five-star value.
If there were ever a message for being proficient
in using a dry suit before taking an advanced trip,
your writer is an example of what not to do -- a
quick course and off to do some current diving.
Having seen how safety conscious Mike Lever is, I am
not surprised the writer felt "clucked over." It has
been my experience (three trips) that Mike keeps an
eye on people and genuinely wants his customers to
have a good, safe experience.
It is too bad your writer was unsuccessful in the
quest to see a Giant Pacific Octopus. My last Nautilus trip, I saw five in 14 dives, ranging from 6 to 10 feet
across. Ya just gotta know where to look (not an easy
thing to do when you are fussing with a dry suit
though).
-- Ken Robertson
Calgary, Alberta
Ben,
Clearly DL needed more experience in his dry
suit before diving in challenging conditions. When I
was trained, we were told to dive within the limits of
our training and experience. DL did not do that,
and he should count his blessings.
I have more than 1,000 dry suit dives and would
like to offer some advice. First, add air to the suit for
buoyancy. This has a couple of the advantages of
lower task management -- only one air reservoir to
manage and the additional air might keep you a little
warmer. However, it is harder on the dry suit seals, makes it harder to dump air (as DL discovered), and
increases your resistance in the water (probably one
reason DL struggled to keep up with his buddy,
instead of the fin type used).
Add only enough air into the dry suit to avoid
squeeze; add air into your BC for buoyancy. This
requires a little more thought to manage two air
reservoirs, but makes air dump nearly the same as
wet suit diving, provides less resistance to impede
movement, and lets the dry suit seals last longer.
DL needed 34 pounds to dive! I currently weigh
200 lbs. and dive with a neoprene dry suit and 17
pounds. When I weighed 290, I only used 24 pounds.
I dive with a suit that fits right. The excess suit adds
lots of drag (another significant reason why DL could
not keep up with his buddy) and traps excess air. That
excess air is the reason for all the extra weight.
My first dry suit was a DUI, but their service was
lousy. I currently have a Baileys suit that is spectacular.
It wears like iron and requires minimal underwear to
keep me warm. My buddies rave about a crushed
neoprene model from Dive Rite. The secret of keeping
warm is underwear. Always wear a polypropylene
next to your body. It wicks away sweat or leakage.
Polartec is good over the poly in very cold water. DUI
makes blue stretchy underwear that is very good --
so do others. And I have never seen dry gloves that
stay reliably dry. Wet suit mitts are still the best way to
keep your hands warm.
-- Buzz Rosenberg
Dear Buzz and Ken
Our writers, me included, are experienced and
well traveled but not perfect and not always perfectly
smart. I've written about trips where I forgot to service
my equipment and paid for it and situations I
shouldn't have gotten into. When my writers are
going on a trip, I tell them to write the truth, and
when things don't go as well as they hoped -- well,
we all learn something. For this trip, DL went with
his eyes open, reported honestly -- which is what
Undercurrent is all about -- and says your advice is, in
retrospect, good advice.
-- Ben