Tragedy at Bushman's Cave (Boesmansgat)

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

ShoalDiverSA

Contributor
Messages
795
Reaction score
8
Location
Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
# of dives
50 - 99
From iafrica.com:

Police said on Saturday afternoon there was little chance of an Australian diver returning from the depths of the world's third deepest freshwater cave, where an operation to recover the remains of another diver has been called off.

When asked if there was a chance of Dave Shaw resurfacing from the depths of Boesmansgat, police diver Inspector Theo van Eeden shook his head and said: "Hy's weg." ("He's gone.")

Van Eeden had been waiting for Deon Dreyer's body to be passed up to him at 20m.

Shaw disappeared at 270m where he was supposed to secure the body and relay it past fellow divers to get it to the surface.

When he failed to return to his team mate Don Shirley, waiting at 220m, Shirley descended to 250m to look for him.

He communicated to the surface through messages written on slates passed up a rope that Shaw's light had disappeared.

Vomiting and disorientated — symptoms of decompression illness — Shirley was forced to start a slow ascent on Saturday afternoon. He is expected to reach the surface at around 4pm when he will immediately be placed in a recompression chamber.

By mid-afternoon Shirley was the only one of eight divers remaining in the water.

On October 28 last year, Shaw found Dreyer's remains at a depth of almost 270m.

He was unable to take the body to the surface as Dreyer's cylinders were stuck in the mud.

In the past week, the diving team staged a "dress rehearsal" at the cave for Saturday's body recovery attempt.

This follows four weeks of preparing for what Don Shirley, the team''s technical coordinator, described as a "small military operation".

First diving accident

Meanwhile Van Eeden said that in his 36 years as a diver, this was the first diving accident he had been associated with.

Speaking of Shaw, he said: "He is such a nice ou (chap)".

Shaw, an airline pilot for Cathay Pacific, has a wife and two children in Australia.

"I said from the beginning that you can't do work at that depth. This is a terrible story. It feels like I am dreaming," Van Eeden said.

When asked for a possible explanation for Shaw's disappearance, Van Eeden shook his head and said: "His rebreather should have packed up...only he will know."

Rebreathers allow divers to stay under water for longer periods.

Technical divers

The divers involved are all "technical divers" and members of the International Association of Nitrox and Technical Divers.

Technical diving is an advanced form of scuba diving and uses special methods and equipment to explore environments and perform tasks beyond the range of recreational diving.

Shaw and his team of divers were equipped with closed-circuit rebreathers as opposed to traditional scuba equipment.

Back in 1994, Dreyer blacked out and drowned in the cave while diving with his father. He was 20-years-old.

The plan was that his body would be brought to the surface, sealed in a green body bag, when his parents, Marie her husband Theo and their church minister, would be granted a few minutes to conduct a small service at the water's edge.

On Saturday afternoon the Dreyer parents were unwilling to talk to the media.

More at news24.com

More about the recovery diver and his record dive on this thread.

Andrew
 
Fokkit, maar dit is diep.............sad story.
 
I read about the recovery in the saturday newspapers, and how confident the divers seemed to be. I am stunned to read in the sunday papers that he actually died during the attempt. Rest in peace Dave Shaw.
 
OK, I have a question. I am an AOW diver with no knowledge of cave or technical diving. Am I reading correctly that this dive was to a depth of 270 meters? Over 700 feet?

Daly
 
Daly:
OK, I have a question. I am an AOW diver with no knowledge of cave or technical diving. Am I reading correctly that this dive was to a depth of 270 meters? Over 700 feet?

Daly

270 meter = 885.8267717 feet. Now that is deep and yes you are reading it right. What a tragedy
 
Daly:
OK, I have a question. I am an AOW diver with no knowledge of cave or technical diving. Am I reading correctly that this dive was to a depth of 270 meters? Over 700 feet?

Daly

Yes. actually more like 900 feet

Ok so dryglove types faster than me !
 

Back
Top Bottom