so where were we...
oh yeah...we had our 2 dives in the Cayman Islands (which today is getting pounded by Hurricane Dean). For me that was the crowning achievement of our 7-day vacation aboard the
Mariner of the Seas.
We also went snorkeling in Labadee, Haiti and Cozumel, and tubing on the White River in Jamaica. Great cruise, great ship, great excursions, great food, great company. I look forward to another one next year. Maybe the Eastern Caribbean or Panama Canal.
So now it's August and I'm itching to dive again. We have done nothing since our return at the end of May except for 2 or 3 trips to the pool at Sea Hunt. Work is starting to kick my ass, and the pressure of being at home with 2 boys for an entire summer, plus work and college is really starting to kick Alison's ass.
I thought about maybe renting a couple of tanks from Sea Hunt and just sitting at the bottom of my swimming pool for a day or so, but that ultimately was more of the same. So we decided to go to the Florida Keys.
We had been discussing this off and on for several years, and finally decided to do it. So we rented a minivan (we have 2 boys ages 6 and 14, so 3-row seating for the 8 hour drive was a must,) dropped our dog Lindsay off at the Pet Paradise, and off we went.
Our destination was Hawk's Cay Resort at Duck Key. Nice place. Really nice place.
We scheduled a 2-tank trip with
Tilden's Scuba Center for the next day.
So the next morning we sailed out of the marina aboard the diveboat
Seafari. Our first destination was a reef in 50 feet of water known as the Channels. We were going to try and find some lobsters, but visibility was working against us. The max depth we reached was 49', and the viz was around 15'. Not very good. I was sticking my tickle stick into the reef poking around for lobsters and suddenly was about three feet away from a very large, very green Moray Eel.
I backed off, grabbed Cameron by the arm and showed him the eel. We then proceeded up and down the reef for a few more minutes searching for bugs, but there were none to be found. We went back to the eel several times before starting our trek back to the boat.
That's when things got interesting.
Prior to getting into the water, our divemaster Bob had given us instructions for getting to the reef and getting back to the boat.
A line was run from the back of the boat to a float, which in turn had a line run down to the anchor point. From there, it was about a 20 yard swim along the bottom to the reef. Bob recommended that we run a hand along the bottom as we swam from the anchor to the reef. I was busy concentrating on clearing my mask to prevent another squeeze as I descended and forgot until I was about 15 or 20 feet from the anchor. Then I started dragging the tickle stick in the sand until we reached the reef. There, I made a big X in the sand, and also made a note on my slate that our marker was a big piece of fire coral. Our instructions were to make it to the safety stop (15 feet for 3 minutes) with 900 PSI of air left in the tank. We were to be back on the boat with no less than 500 PSI.
So, thirty minutes later I checked my miniguage and saw that I was down to about 1200 PSI. I signalled to Cameron and we headed back towards the fire coral, passing our friend the moray eel in the process. Made it back to our marker with no problem, and then set out towards the anchor, and the line to the boat. Our so we thought.
I had thought nothing about not marking the first 15 or so feet from the anchor to the reef. I followed my line in the sand until it ended, and continued in the same direction. While we were on the bottom the current had picked up and visibility had gotten worse. Maybe 10' at best. We must have swam right past the anchor. I spotted what I thought was the anchor a couple of feet later, but it was just a ruined lobster trap.
What to do?
I checked air, and I was down to 1,000 lbs. Time to go up. Regardless of where we were.
I signalled Cameron to circle up. We needed to make sure we didn't come up under the boat. We also needed to look around for any sign of the boat. Slow ascents are the rule when scuba diving. It took maybe 2 minutes to come up to 15'. Long minutes. I was trying hard not to panic, and trying even harder not to show my growing concern to Cameron. At 15' I circled looking for any sign of the boat.
Nothing. I don't remember the name of the movie where the 2 divers are left at sea, and haven't seen it. I remember Curtis telling us during our Open Water course that there was no way a diver would ever be left at sea by a diveboat. Bill (the
Seafari's captain that day) and Bob had briefed us on the emergency recall procedures prior to leaving the boat. There were multiple signals used to recall the divers to the boat in the event of an emergency. The most important was if we heard the boat's motor revving 3 times we were to ascend to 15' for 3 minutes, and then surface, inflate our BCs and find the boat.
I had heard nothing. Had they left us?
Cameron was frantically scribbling something on his slate. He swam over to me and held up his right arm (where the slate was strapped.)
"Where is the boat?"
I checked my watch with one hand, and grabbed the pencil from his hand with my free hand. It was 0956. We had started the safety stop at around 0952. I wrote on his slate:
"I don't know."
While I was writing this I began to descend. I had Cameron by the arm and was pulling him down with me. When I finished we were at 25'. He read it and looked at me. I gave him a thumbs up.
Not to signal that things were okay. A thumbs up to a diver means get to the surface.
It was time to surface. I kicked three times and popped right to the surface. Cameron did too. When we broached we were about 50 yards southeast of the boat. We had started the dive by swimming northwest to the reef.
I signalled Captain Bob that we were okay, and we inflated our BC's and started kicking to the boat. Within a couple of minutes we were at the stern, and climbing aboard. We were the first ones back. Bob helped us climb aboard, we pulled off our gear and we drank water. I honestly don't remember if we said anything to each other about what had happened or not.
So what did I learn? For starters, I'm going to invest in a compass before my next dive trip.
I dove 5 more times while we were in the Keys without one, but not a single one was deeper than 30', and the viz was 50' plus on each trip.
On each trip, however, I came to the surface every 15 minutes to find the boat.
More on those dives later.
So what were the lessons learned?
The safety stop is required/encouraged to prevent decompression sickness when you dive deeper than 1 bar of atmosphere (33 feet). On this dive the safety stop also allowed Cameron and I to communicate with each other what we thought was going on, and it helped me maintain my composure. This wasn't a crisis of severe proportions, but the safety stop forced me to concentrate on what I had learned in my training, namely maintaining neutral buoyancy and remaining calm.
My dive instructor Curtis Deyo's' words were also a source of calm to me. He drummed into our heads during training that we had to stay calm when we were in the water. The skills exercises we had practiced at Ginnie were not only to train us on important emergency tasks, but also to help us remain calm if we found ourselves in a bad situation. Again, this wasn't a severe crisis, but it could have become one.
So that's that. We finished off the day with another dive at a place called The Day After. Nice, relaxing 29' dive. Lots of grunts, yellowtail snapper, parrotfish and hogfish. No lobster. Again. But it was a beautiful reef with lots of structure. No current, and the beautiful keel of the
Seafari was visible from the bottom. For 43 minutes. I know. I never let it out of my sight.
There was an incident on the 2nd dive as well. While hanging on the line waiting to get back onto the boat I was removing my fins and dropped the tickle stick. Oh well.
Specifics for the 2 dives on August 7, 2007:
- Location #1 - The Channels
- Time In - 0915
- Time Out - 1000
- Exposure - 3mm full wetsuit with booties
- Weights - 16 lbs
- Air In - 3000 lbs
- Air Out - 450 lbs
- Location #2 - The Day After
- Time In - 1020
- Time Out - 1105
- Exposure - 3mm full wetsuit with booties
- Weights - 16 lbs
- Air In - 3000 lbs
- Air Out - 1500 lbs
August 16, 2007. 13 dives. 442 minutes of bottom time