^^^ Don't forget who gaffed and brought the Doria Bell onto his boat two summers ago... :trophy:
And I used the wrong term. "Shooting" a porthole means sending it up on a bag. "Blowing" a porthole means using Primacord and a blasting cap to detach one... :naughty:
Let's see: Loss of buoyancy. Don't let it happen to you. Two means of making things positive is plenty, or so it seems. Drysuit and Rig, Rig and Wings, Drysuit and Wings, and when you have Drysuit, Rig, and Wings you ought to be roses.
I'd be damned if I'd climb a small diameter line that I'd shot to the surface with a bag. I'd be pretty unhappy climbing the anchor line, never mind a small diameter line. I'd be hanging on my bag with it clipped off to me before I did that.
Doria et-al emergency plans: We don't dive when the current is so fast that we cannot shoot a tied-off bag and hang on it. Yes... things change mid-dive at times, it's a tidally influenced area, but we time the dives if we can, bearing in mind the daylight available. The boat is securely moored to the wreck, so having it cut loose to chase a lost diver is a REAL emergency. We do keep a RIB boat in the water and ready to chase down wayward divers, but that's an emergency too: Sending a guy out 100 miles offshore in an 11 foot rubber boat with a 6 HP engine on it is a life threatening thing for the boat driver, never mind the divers. The chase boat has GPS (handheld) and a VHF radio (also handheld), the fear being fog, which comes on out there in a matter of a few minutes at times. The Zodiac is large enough to pick up two divers. Not their gear. You need the chase boat... you lose your rig. We might tie it off or try to tow it, but it's not coming aboard. So if you need to be chased down... you are really desperate. The divers are briefed on this, and the importance of making it back to the anchor line. We treat the mooring like a cave-entrance: It is an overhead environment in a dfferent sort of way. You WILL come back up the anchor line. The boat is tied to it. That's where the food will be served. Want dinner? Get back to the line.
With that said, and I cannot speak for all others-just me: I carry a Salvo (nee Light Monkey) exploring reel, one of the huge ones that you would use to lay gold-line in a cave, it being basically the same as your Halcyon or Salvo or Light Monkey cave reel only about 3X larger. Normally these have about 1000 feet of cave line on them. I use much larger diameter non-stretch line and have about 350 feet on it. I also carry the crack-bottle RADAR reflective Custom Divers SMB that I put the link up earlier for. The plan for lost-mooring (which would be because the boat broke out of the wreck, not because I got lost) would be to shoot the bag, tie it off, and hang on the line. The diameter of the line is adequate to use a Jon-Line on if needed. You need something large enough to hold with a gloved hand, and large enough to hook Jon-Line clip to.
Final emergency plan is just to drift-hang under the bag. That is an absolute emergency. That's what the RADAR reflective SMB is all about, plus the 406 Mhz PLB, and the GPS/VHF radio in a waterproof can. Plus the sea-dye marker, and the lights, and the velcro on the hood to slap a strobe onto (learned from the way the Navy Pilots have their helmets set up), etc. Plus the briefing to everyone to tell the USCG helo guys that I will be sweeping the horizon with my light every fifteen minutes once night falls to make it easy for crews with night vision goggles to find me, etc.
I had a very good friend spend a day and a night and most of the next day floating and floating and floating..... with sharks bumping him in the middle of the night... not good. He was picked up about 75 miles from the wreck by a commercial fishing boat. I think I'll find the anchor line, thank you kindly.
Dave
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