condor13090
New member
Please be aware while diving away from your local dive buddies as I had a close call last week. The site was the Wreck of the Rhone located in Tortola which is north of St Martin and just east of St. Thomas. There were five divers and one dive leader and one the owner who manned the boat. The weather was perfect, 80 degree's, sunny, a slight breeze and light waves. Visability about 80 feet...and the wreck at 85 ft. Sounds like a dive made in heaven right...
We were told to keep informing the dive leader of our air levels at 1500 psi...and especially at 1000 psi, but the group was so spread out the leader seemed to be either not paying attention or too far away when needed. We were'nt assigned dive buddies which is just plain wrong so you were on your own.
At 1200 psi. I was concerned that it was time to head back so I headed for the dive leader and informed her...she seemed unconcerned. Within 5 min. I was at 700 psi. and quite concerned and she motioned me to follow towards the rope...but I knew I should start my climb to the surface right now as the rope was 100 yards away. So at that time my mind struggled with thought of either surfacing or trusting her judgement...as I knew it would be a close call. I made it to the rope at about 100 lbs. at 85 ft. and was pretty upset...and felt like she should accompany me to the surface but she just swam away. At the 15 ft. stop I was a little relieved but the air ran out within one minute...so I surfaced with no air to use in my b.c. but the boat was right there. A dive buddy would have been just the ticket in this situation. Can you imagine running out of air at 85 ft.? This is unaccepable to me. Then on the next dive this same girl was sleeping on the bow when I returned to the boat so I had no assistance getting into the boat and I was the one who ended up helping the other divers back on board.
What would you have done differently?
By the way the wreck was awesome with large lobsters and lots to see and I would love to do it again with some different rules.
We were told to keep informing the dive leader of our air levels at 1500 psi...and especially at 1000 psi, but the group was so spread out the leader seemed to be either not paying attention or too far away when needed. We were'nt assigned dive buddies which is just plain wrong so you were on your own.
At 1200 psi. I was concerned that it was time to head back so I headed for the dive leader and informed her...she seemed unconcerned. Within 5 min. I was at 700 psi. and quite concerned and she motioned me to follow towards the rope...but I knew I should start my climb to the surface right now as the rope was 100 yards away. So at that time my mind struggled with thought of either surfacing or trusting her judgement...as I knew it would be a close call. I made it to the rope at about 100 lbs. at 85 ft. and was pretty upset...and felt like she should accompany me to the surface but she just swam away. At the 15 ft. stop I was a little relieved but the air ran out within one minute...so I surfaced with no air to use in my b.c. but the boat was right there. A dive buddy would have been just the ticket in this situation. Can you imagine running out of air at 85 ft.? This is unaccepable to me. Then on the next dive this same girl was sleeping on the bow when I returned to the boat so I had no assistance getting into the boat and I was the one who ended up helping the other divers back on board.
What would you have done differently?
By the way the wreck was awesome with large lobsters and lots to see and I would love to do it again with some different rules.