Well I am writing this to everyone to let you all know about my
learning experience with tides, rip currents, and bobbing. I made
some foolish mistakes yesterday while diving that made a lot of people
worried here in the Solomons. I was diving for fun on a day off and
jumped in on a gorgeous reef, that had a strong current. I had a
great dive, and saw lots of sharks, eagle rays, and a school of 10
Mantas. As the dive finished I came up and my safety stop, then
surfaced at 1:10pm. I surfaced about 500 M from the island the boat
was on, so I took off one of my yellow fins and waved it to the boat.
The boat then started driving towards me, but I was wrong they had not
seen me.
At this point I was stuck in a strong current going out to sea. And
still thought the boat had seen me, it took about 20 min to realize
they never saw me and by this time I was out in the middle of the S.
Pacific. I knew going back to where I dove was against the current
and I wouldn't be able to do, So I started swimming accross the
current, towards the next set of islands, probably about 4 km across
Ferguson Passage. This is important because JFK PT 109 Sunk in
Ferguson Passage and he swam to Plum Pudding Island. Well Plum
Pudding or now Kennedy was really far away so I set my sights on
making it to Naru Island. So for the next 4.5 hours I swam as hard as
I could to make it to an Island before dark. It was tiring but I knew
If i could make it to the reef line and through the surf, I could rest
on the reef, then swim to Naru where I knew there was a house with a
radio. As I was swimming I could start to hear the surf break, and
that helped me push further. I made it to the surf and used my dive
gear as a buffer for when I had to dive under the waves and hold the
reef. I made it through then walked up on the reef just in time to
see a boat!
A boat from a resort here Fatboys was out searching along with about 8
other boats. So I then had to swim back through the surf, exactly
what I wanted to do, and get on the boat. I got on the boat and drank
lots and lots of water and went to Fatboys where the response was, Ya
Your alive. Everyone was told the good news and the party was then at
Fatboys. Its not nearly as bad as people thought I am a strong
swimmer and knew I was not going to be seen out there, and so I took
it into my own hands, or legs and swam.
So now to get to my mistakes:
- I didn't stay near the reef
- I was diving alone
- I didn't get confirmation from the boat that they had seen me
- It was the one time I was to lazy to bring my Surface marker (A
large orange float that stands 4 feet tall)
- I underestimated the currents
So just to let you all know how well the rescue was organized
- They had two cop boats out
- All three of our boats
- 3 other boats
- 4 divers in the water looking for me
- 4 snorkelers looking at the surface
- A plane was being routed to run a search grid
Everything went great, and the only flaw was, the US consulate here
just now returned the call of a missing persons here. I guess they
should mention there emergency line for US citizens in Honiara is a 24
hr turn around.
I am fine just sore legs from swimming minor cuts from the reef, and
some sunburn (my shorts were chaffing badly so I swam naked for a bit
haha), and never panicked, and learned alot from my mistakes, and I
hope you all do not get too worried about this, but just though I
should let everyone know so that if I bring it up I don't have to
explain it 20 times :)
1 comment:
Crazy story!! I would have pissed my wetsuit if I were you. Promise me you are now carring that 4ft tall orange marker thing. What a brillant invention for those who bring it with them! soooo glad to hear you survived the ordeal. The world would be amiss without ol' luke stegall.
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