Diver rescued after six hours - Queensland, Australia

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DandyDon

Umbraphile
ScubaBoard Supporter
Messages
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Location
One kilometer high on the Texas Central Plains
# of dives
500 - 999
The dive canister for my PLB came from Australia. I wonder if he thought about buying a unit in the 5 hours he floated...??

Diver found safe and well
A 27 year old diver who spent nearly 5 hours missing in deep waters 30 nautical miles off Bundaberg has been found safe and well. The man was aboard a Bundaberg Aqua Scuba diving exhibition to Althea Wreck when he got caught in a current below the surface just after 1pm yesterday afternoon. The RACQ rescue Careflight helicopter was tasked to the scene alongside Hervey Bay Water Police and Volunteer Marine Rescue. Hervey Bay Water Police and Volunteer Marine Rescue found the man about four hours after he was first reported missing and arrangements were made to return him to shore.
 
oh boy...glad this turned out well.....
 
'That's a wrap on old Jakey': Diver records what he thought were final moments

A scuba diver who spent more than six hours drifting off the south-east Queensland coast after becoming separated from his group will not let the experience keep him out of the water.

Jacob Childs was the subject of an extensive air and sea search off the coast of Bundaberg on Tuesday afternoon.

The 30-year-old, who considers himself a "relatively experienced diver", was in the water at the Althea Wreck, approximately 30 nautical miles north-east of Bundaberg, when he became separated from his crew and began to drift about midday.

He had the presence of mind to film himself, capturing his thoughts late in the day as daylight and hope were beginning to fade when search crews had failed to spot him in the water.

"So that's it. The sun goes down they won't do nothing. That's a wrap on old Jakey," he said in the video.


Photo: Jacob Childs tried to get the attention of a search aircraft as the sun went down. (Photo: Jacob Childs)

He was eventually rescued about 6:00pm, just after sunset.

"It's a long time to spend by yourself," he told the ABC a day after being rescued.

Mr Childs said he could see and hear helicopters around him but they were unable to spot him.

"Then apparently there were a lot of boats out there but I didn't see any of those ... all I had seen and heard was a trawler which I tried swimming towards," he said.

About 5:30pm, a plane spotted Mr Childs and Water Police were able to reach him.

"I was nice and warm in my wetsuit ... I wasn't overly tired as I was floating," he said.

"I just wanted a drink of water and a cup of tea."

He said the thought of having to spend the night at sea did not worry him.

"I think it's just one of those things ... if you've got to do it, you've got to do it," he said.

The experience has not turned him off scuba diving either.

"I'll be in the water tomorrow probably," he said.

'He didn't panic and did all the right things'
Mr Childs said he drifted away after missing the chance to grab the boat's tagline.

"We took a while to anchor up ... which left us [with] several people in different states of readiness. I was one of the first to hop in [to the water]," he said.

"It was then 15 minutes before the last people hopped in ... in which time we were fighting the current the whole way.

"Then we started to descend down the line. One person was up the top, so I went to swap hands and I missed the rope ... so I surfaced alongside to the boat.

"There was no tagline out the back for me to grab on to ... by the time the skipper had thrown it out I was already past it."

The officer in charge of the search operation, Sergeant Rob Jorna, said Mr Childs' experience with the sea helped aircraft locate him.

"He knew what to do, and his level headedness at the time, and he didn't panic and he did all the right things, and activated his safety equipment which alerted the air observer**," Sergeant Jorna said.

(** I assume this 'equipment' is his SMB...)
 
Great news that he was rescued ! Must be well experienced at diving to keep his cool while drifting so far from the coast. Drifting offshore at night could not have been something to look forward to...I am glad he is OK.
 
"There was no tagline out the back for me to grab on to ... by the time the skipper had thrown it out I was already past it."
I think I'd learn to not go in until the crew had put out the tagline.

"He knew what to do, and his level headedness at the time, and he didn't panic and he did all the right things, and activated his safety equipment which alerted the air observer**," Sergeant Jorna said.

(** I assume this 'equipment' is his SMB...)
I suppose so. My PLB cost me $200 after rebate, but the regular cost of $250, good for 5 years of standby, is cheap. I never leave the house without it - to the farms, to badlands to hike, wherever. My dive canister was an extra $100, but if $350 can prevent you from having to spend a night floating at sea, lost in the wilds, upside down in a car wreck, etc. - great insurace investment.
 
A very interesting article with a linked video about a diver who missed holding onto the anchor line when he swapped hands when descending onto a wreck. He surfaced next to the boat, no mermaid/Jesus line, and drifted away. Not clear if the boat driver saw him, but if he did he should have buoyed the wreck and went after him rather than wait for the other divers to finish their dive. Looks like he did everything right once he drifted away.
'That's a wrap on old Jakey': Diver records what he thought were final moments
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/swift/

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