Mark
Evans, if you didn’t know, is the editor of Sport Diver Magazine, the official
PADI publication in the U.K and in December's issue he uses his Editor’s letter
column to relate some disturbing incidents that he and his team witnessed
whilst on a trip to Malta and Gozo. Here are the relevant (verbatim) bits from
Mark’s missive.
Our trip was sadly marred by bad weather, namely strong winds
which rendered many sites off limits, yet I was shocked that some independent
groups of divers were still attempting to get in, or had got in, at sites that
experienced centres had deemed unfit. At one location, I saw three well-known
centres rock up in their vans; the instructors surveyed the conditions, and then
called the dive, heading off to find more-suitable surroundings for their
divers. Yet there were a group of obviously fairly inexperienced divers who
were being badgered and cajoled by their group leader that “it was fine” and
“this is what we are trained for”, Christ, these were pleasure divers, it
wasn’t a Special Forces drill!
At
another site, I saw a couple who were clearly novices, and they had a bit of a
battle getting out of the water due to the swell washing up and down the
ironshore. Their instructor was stood up above them on the shoreline helpfully
telling them to hurry up but not offering them any assistance!
So
please, whether you are diving in Malta and Gozo, right here in the U.K., or
anywhere else for that matter, make your own mind up about the conditions and
whether you want to dive. Do not feel pressured to get into the water – any
instructor or dive leader worth their salt would not make you do anything you
didn’t want to do. And remember if you do go in despite your reservations and
it all goes horribly pear-shaped, the odds are that the person who ends up in
serious trouble will be you, not your instructor.
Oh
Mark, you’ve made us so happy we want to have your children! Finally someone
associated with PADI has spotted what we, and many likes us, have been banging
on about for what seems an eternity. Namely, that the world of diving is
stuffed to the rafters with Brads; those moronic, badge wearing, hyper-egos who
equate being a dive team leader/instructor with being a member of an elite commando
unit and consequently tend to get people injured or killed due to their habit
of being controlled by their testicles and not their brains. And Mark, we are also delighted that you
have brought to a wider audience our own little piece of advice that we have
regularly exhorted on these pages, which is: your safety is, at the end of the
day, your own responsibility. There are just a couple of things we like to
raise however. We are not sure what you mean by “independent groups” but by the
way you highlighted this we assume that they were not PADI registered which,
again we assume, means that you are trying to distance the PADI organisation
from such events. This would be unwise Mark and a little naive. Just take a
peek around the web for diving deaths/incidents and you’ll find that, from
Australia to Belize, an awful lot of divers who’ve lost their lives were in
fact under the care of PADI registered centres/operations. Brad is everywhere
Mark, everywhere!
Then
there is something that we found rather disappointing, both your advice and our
own requires the “novices” to do something that is often quite difficult, which
is to challenge the diver leader/instructor. A lot of people Mark, don’t like
confrontation and those who are very inexperienced have no reference point,
they are being told to do something by someone who is covered in badges and is
“supposed” to be experienced and subsequently “knows what they are doing”. Now
we, and you Mark, know that isn’t always true but here’s a thing. You Mark are
the editor of Sport Diver, you were with the Sport Diver team and yet you
didn’t seem able to challenge those independent instructors either! Could you
not have intervened Mark? Could you not have wandered over with your cohorts,
flashed your own badges and told those novices that they didn’t have to do
anything they didn’t want to? Because Mark, it is a very bad thing for those
who are supposed to be the experts to lead those without experience into
dangerous situations but it is just as bad, if not worse, for those who are
experienced, those who realise that it is just a pleasure dive and not a
Special Forces Drill as you say, to just stand there on the sidelines like a
bunch of gormless rubberneckers at the scene of a car crash. We would have
challenged Mark, we would have said something; in fact we would have ridiculed
the instructor mercilessly and deflated their ego very quickly. We hope the
next time you see something similar that you and all the other experienced
divers out there will do the same. Because in truth Mark, the safety of novice
divers is not just the instructors’ responsibility it’s everyone’s
responsibility. So next time, don’t just stand there thinking this will
make a good few column inches Mark - do something!
No comments:
Post a Comment
All comments are moderated.