Diver rescued at Mukilteo

General banter about diving and why we love it.
Post Reply
User avatar
Nwbrewer
I've Got Gills
Posts: 4620
Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 10:59 am

Diver rescued at Mukilteo

Post by Nwbrewer »

"Screw "annual" service,... I get them serviced when they break." - CaptnJack (paraphrased)


"you do realize you're supposed to mix the :koolaid: with water and drink it, not snort the powder directly from the packet, right? :smt064 " - Spatman
User avatar
Boarderguy
Frequent Bubbler
Posts: 43
Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2022 11:54 am

Re: Diver rescued at Mukilteo

Post by Boarderguy »

Headline news reporting at its finest right there. 1 diver rescued, was he solo? If not, where is his buddy? The good news is that he made it topside.
- Jacob -
User avatar
Norris
NWDC Moderator
NWDC Moderator
Posts: 4702
Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2008 2:31 pm

Re: Diver rescued at Mukilteo

Post by Norris »

How much air did they have in their tank?
Did they have a long hose?
What color was their snorkel?
Blade or split fins?
What gradient factor?
Did they have redundant air?

How the hell are we expected to learn from these?????
**Pinch it, don't stick your finger through. You're just pinching a bigger hole.
CAPTNJACK - 2012**
User avatar
pgtdvr
Just Settling In
Posts: 24
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 7:44 pm

Re: Diver rescued at Mukilteo

Post by pgtdvr »

Was a solo diver. He was well beyond the buoy at the boat. He said he was fussing around with a ghost crab trap and ran short of air to return underwater. Aside from those issues, he surfaced in the ferry lane.
I suspect that he decided to surface, lost orientation while in the water column, swam the wrong way (north) and ended up waaaay out.
All credit to the Washington State Ferry crews for keeping this just an interesting story and not much more.
But seriously, Folks :norris:
User avatar
eh.haole
Avid Diver
Posts: 94
Joined: Mon Jul 02, 2018 11:18 pm

Re: Diver rescued at Mukilteo

Post by eh.haole »

I think most of us could imagine this happening under sufficiently curious, distracted, or narc'ed conditions. A good reminder that according to every training organization(?), any time a direct ascent to the surface is not a safe option is a tech, wreck or cave type of dive.

There are a lot of 'recreational' dive sites around here like this. Gas planning and awareness, abundant redundant gases, oh sh!t plans, DSMB deployment prior to any unplanned ascent or surfacing in open water, surface signaling devices, navigational aids, site knowledge, tide/current awareness, effective compass usage
Post Reply