George, find a group to dive with and stop making excuses. Also, you dive professionals are supposed to be able to teach people things. By the way, I generally don't miss any wrecks no matter what is happening to my buddy whom I stay side by side with. I drop down slowly and find it. If it is not there, I surface and do it again until I do get on it. This is no excuse . As I told somebody else today, one of the discoveries of commercial diving is that too rapid compression is a major problem in the joints and bones. Anyone can get on a wreck with me , anyone can complete a good dive with me, and anyone can do it without an abortion with me. Figure out why that is. It is called "being a good buddy", and not stressing out your partner. Sure , put me with JJ and we can work magic, but put me with anyone and it gets done safely and effectively. The only reason that is not true for everyone else is the excuse list. Don't worry about what is wrong with everyone else, worry about what is right with you. -----Original Message----- From: g.wentland [mailto:wentland@no*.ed*] Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2001 7:58 AM To: Tech Diver List; Trey Subject: Re: Dead Diver Hi George: After experiencing lots of diving down here as a divemaster doing recreational charters, I know where Mike is coming from. I got so that I found diving more relaxing and safer diving solo than with a buddy picked at random from the dive boat. A lot of times I would end up diving with the least skilled of the bunch. I would get to repeatedly save their butt, do to things like not being weighted properly, losing a tank, not watching their air supply, or a host of other barn yard stupid things that can be expected if one dives a couple times a year. These kind of people/tourists are the bread & butter of most dive boats in S. Florida. In my mind one is safer diving alone and one has more of a worry free dive when you don't have to worry about your buddy attacking you to get at your air supply or rushing to the surface in a state of panic after seeing a nurse shark. I saw Mike dive with people like this repeatedly and I can say that this sort of thing gets old. It starts to take the fun out of diving. Your nerves start to frazzle and you wonder how people can take such risks with their and your life, and you wonder who the hell trained this guy or girl. It can get pretty frustrating as there seems to be an endless supply of these twice a year, poorly trained divers out there. I found that if I dive as a divemaster solo, I can make the rounds and save more barnyard stupid new divers from themselves. It is a great thing to always have a good buddy to dive with, but someone needs to look out for the newbies of diving or the death toll & insurance rates will sky rocket. Due to these continual experiences I find diving much more relaxing solo too. I have jumped countless wrecks solo. I will admit that it is not the safest act in the world, but it gets the job done. No one wants to go for a sand dive. Most buddies can not keep up with me going down. If your buddy stops because he can't clear his ears, that is the end of the dive, maybe for the whole boat. Grappling is a good idea as long as you do not grapple debris off the side of the wreck somewhere, or the grapple does not unhook. Remember recreational divers don't carry lift bags. If they did it would be a nightmare. I guess I'm done ramblin' on for the moment. This is the reactive mentality that both I and Mike became used to. George, I would bet that you have been in our shoes at one time. You know, where it is safer to dive by yourself than with the people on the boat? Have a great day & Good Diving, Bye, George -- Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'. Send subscribe/unsubscribe requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.
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