We've written before about the dangers in
Discover Scuba Diving (DSD) experiences, in which
an instructor (typically just one) takes people with
no dive experience underwater. Last July, we wrote
about the death of a 23-year-old Englishwoman during
a DSD experience in Queensland, Australia. Two
more fatalities recently happened within a month of
each other.
A family from Mongolia vacationing on the
Hawaiian island of Oahu is currently feeling the
tragic loss of their 13-year-old son last month.
Temuulin Tsogt, who had no previous ocean or
diving experience, drowned on January 5 after an
alleged panic attack underwater during a DSD experience
in the open ocean with Island Divers Hawaii
of Waikiki. His lifeless body was recovered from
60 feet of water with poor visibility, roughly a mile
offshore from Maunalua Bay. DSDs are supposed to
be conducted in confined or shallow water, with a
one-to-one instructor/student ratio, but Tsogt was
one of 20 people in the group that day.
Island Divers has a poor history of diver safety.
Back in 2011, Matthew Curley, a 28-year-old doctor
from New York, was on a dive outing aboard the Sea Fox, owned by Island Divers, on the southeast side of Oahu. He was the first diver in the water and
was never seen again, nor was his body ever found.
A week later, Curley's equipment was found on the
ocean bottom within 25 yards of his entry point. A
lawsuit about his death was settled before trial.
A year later, Island Divers was involved in the
death of a diver off the Kahala coast of Hawaii. In
2017, a complaint was filed against the company
after two divers were temporarily left behind after
a dive. And just last August, a 27-year-old diver
suffered multiple injuries to her legs and feet after
being struck by the Sea Fox's propeller. Island
Divers looks like a company to avoid.
Over in Thailand, authorities are investigating
another DSD death on the island of Koh Tao. On
December 17, Rocío Gomez, a 39-year-old from
Argentina on vacation on Koh Tao, died during a
DSD course with Pura Via Diving. During her first
dive with Argentinian instructor Nahuel Martino
and two other tourists, Gomez appeared to have
problems with her regulator, so Martino ascended
with her. They then continued back underwater,
during which time Gomez disappeared from view.
Undercurrent has seen the statement Martino
made (translated from Spanish and condensed by us), in which he wrote, "Before we jumped into
the water, we did a buddy check and I went to the
water first. The first dive went without incident. I
spoke again with the three trainees, explaining how
to go underwater, highlighting buoyancy control
and then went diving. With regard to the second
dive (when the accident occurred), we did the same.
I checked everything, and then the trainees also
checked the team and went to the water."
"This diving was intended to be a 36-minute
dive. After 14 minutes Rocío signalled that she
wanted to go up. We were 13 feet deep. She told me
that she had caught a laugh attack and had the feeling
of having water in her mouth. I explained that
with the regulator in the mouth, one can laugh without
problems and that water will not enter. After
this, I asked if she wanted to continue diving. She answered that . . . she was having a great time and enjoying it a lot."
"We went back down and continued to dive 18
more minutes. Everything seemed normal. The maximum
depth was 30 feet. We were going back to the
boat when I asked the three if they were OK, and all
three signalled yes. I turned away to check the route
back to the boat. Five to seven seconds later, I found
Rocío had disappeared from view, so I asked the
two other trainees if they had seen her.
I started searching in the opposite direction, but
not finding her, I started the ascent with my other
two trainees, and when I got to the surface, I saw
Rocío was being dragged to the boat by another
instructor, who had found her, without regulator in
the mouth, on the bottom at about 20 feet. Her mask
was in place. By our calculations she may have been
there from three to five minutes."
Franco Ce, Gomez's partner, traveled to Thailand
when he heard the news, but complained on social
media that Arlet, the Spanish manager of Pura Vida
"started the conversation saying Rocío got lost, and
she didn't follow safety procedures, which says if someone get lost, she must search for a minute for
her fellow divers and go back to the surface to wait
for their instructor."
Why isn't the dive industry horrified enough
to do something about the unsafe way in which
many DSD experiences are conducted? Bret Gilliam,
founder of the dive training agency TDI/SDI, is one
veteran who doesn't understand why there's not
a crackdown. "The DSD program is dependent on
precise supervision and control of the student by
an instructor. There is no margin for error. These
are diving participants with no prior experience
and only bare minimums of skill demonstrations
before beginning the dives. In almost all fatalities,
the student becomes separated from the instructor,
and death occurs due to stressors provoking panic.
Sadly, there is an ongoing pattern of the same circumstances
leading to student deaths that should
prompt extensive review on standards and procedures
for such programs. Yet it does not happen,
and the cycle of deaths continue. It's time to wake
up."
-- John Bantin