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#1 |
Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Perth, Wild West, Australia
Posts: 65
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I have not scuba dived for more than 20 years but 150 feet seems deep for beginners, a sad case.
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#2 |
Work Sucks!
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: San Diego
Posts: 559
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Open Water certification is only good for 60'. Or it was when I did the PADI program in Okinawa back in '03. I've found myself down to 100' but 150' is much, much different.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Clairemont
Posts: 116
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Bummer... I wondered what those non-familiar Lifeguard vehicles and cameras on the beach were on the web-cam were earlier.
Condolences... |
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#4 |
I eats what I kills
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: San Diego
Posts: 393
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RIP.
I hit 136 in the canyon and that gripped me.
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Please release bill-fish. |
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Canyon Country, Ca.
Posts: 116
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Used to dive alot in the last century, sounds like not enough deep openwater beginner trips...RIP
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mellow yellow malibu eXtreme |
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#6 |
Maggie
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Nunya
Posts: 126
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Very sad story, my condolences to the family.
Here's an update from the Union... Man dies on first certified dive John Sonsteng, of Poway, and his 19-year-old son were diving for the first time after receiving their certification at a depth of about 150 feet at 9 a.m. when Sonsteng ran out of air, San Diego lifeguard Lt. John Greenhalgh said. ![]() Search teams from the U.S. Coast Guard and lifeguard agencies around the county scoured the sea for hours before finding Sonsteng using a remote-controlled underwater vehicle about 2:30 p.m. When Sonsteng ran out of air, the two began “buddy breathing,” sharing the air supply from the son's tank as they tried to ascend to the surface, but they became separated. The son told authorities that he continued to ascend, but he too ran out of air at about 40 feet below the surface, Greenhalgh said. When he surfaced in front of the La Jolla Shores lifeguard station, about a quarter of a mile out to sea, he began waving his arms and caught the attention of a lifeguard. The teen was taken to UCSD Medical Center in Hillcrest as a precautionary measure because of his rapid ascent. He was listed in “stable but guarded condition” yesterday, a nursing supervisor said. It was unclear whether he was suffering from decompression sickness, in which gas bubbles form in the bloodstream. Rescuers launched an immediate search with dive teams, a helicopter and boats, but by 10 a.m. the mission was reclassified as a recovery effort, Greenhalgh said. Divers from the Coast Guard and other agencies later responded to aid in the search. Dive instructor Todd Young, with Aqua Tech Dive Center, said his group of student divers had just completed their first dive when lifeguards ordered all divers in the area out of the water. Young said novice recreational divers are taught not to exceed a depth of 60 feet unless they have more advanced training. Divers who breathe high-pressure gas at extreme depths can begin to feel as though they are drunk and judgment can be seriously impaired. “We preach that you should always be watching your gauges and compass,” Young said. ![]() Kristina Davis: (619) 542-4591; kristina.davis@uniontrib.com |
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: San Diego
Posts: 279
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A sad case of Diver error.
I hate to sound cold or cruel but this could have been avoided if they had stayed within their training. I was a PADI Instructor for many years on Guam and I assisted in a couple of searches. Almost all dive related accidents are the result of Diver error. Please let this be a wake up call for those of you who dive and those who wish to learn. You have 2 gauges, 1 for air and 1 for depth. Keep looking at them and know your limits. At least they found the body. It could have been much worse. I assisted on a search for one guy who went out alone at night 2 weeks after getting certified. We never found him. My thoughts a prayers go out to the family. Be safe.
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