![]() |
Or Search ScubaToys.com for Gear! |
|
|||||||
| Scuba Stories, Comments & Questions that don't fit elsewhere! Looking around the forum and don't know where to post? This is the place! |
|
Welcome to the Scuba Forum - Scuba Diving Forums and Discussion Board. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 (permalink) |
|
Grouper
|
Blog Post-- Day at the Beach
Since my recent blog post talks about diving, I may as well share, out of lack of something better to say. Like it? Want to see more? Go to A Thousand Miles From Nowhere...
*********************************************** Yesterday I went to Old Club Reef, down in Mesaaid, to dive. It was a total nightmare. After diving once, I intended to sit in my chair and watch the free entertainment of the day, being provided courtesy of the dive club. Temps were right, at maybe 32C or so, and the winter wind wasn't blowing. Instead, I spent my afternoon hoofing it up and down the beach, Baywatch-style, with either a first-aid or oxygen kit in hand. I treated an unconscious diver, an over-oxygenated diver, two kids who got bit by a shark, a stonefish wound, and 4 young burn victims. I helped perform CPR on a victim with no pulse, packed divers and kit from shallow water to the beach, loaded people into ambulance vehicles, rode crouched in the back of the ambulance vehicle while administering CPR and first aid, and had a great time doing all of this. Huh? What kind of people are these folk, you wonder. How could she have had such a good time, on her day off at the beach, helping to take care of the injured? Well, the dive club, DSAC, was teaching its annual Practical Rescue Management course. This course teaches divers to manage rescue scenarios. It does not necessarily mean that the students in the course are doing the actual rescuing, but merely learning to delegate tasks and handle emergency situations. I, then, wasn't a delegating student, but a delegatee. In the dive brief, I (foolishly?) raised my hand twice--- once to signal I was qualified to give oxygen, and once to signal that I had first-aid training. I've done PADI Rescue, so I've also had rescue work training. Part of the certification for this is first aid, and I chose to do O2 admin. As I had raised my hand, and I was sitting in a chair on the beach, hoping to watch the free entertainment, guess who was one of those who got asked to help in each emergency. This is what we call participatory theatre, I suppose. It was good review, though. In a way, I got a free Rescue refresher course, and also heard good information being given to the PRM students. I suppose I could said 'no', but part of having training is using it when called upon. And here I was, thinking 'oh, I just did Rescue, and I remember how intense it was. I don't want to do it again very badly.' Well, as it turns out, I kind of did. I was quite tired after my relaxing day at the beach, and my legs are sore today. It takes quite a bit to lift people, and it's not something I do on a daily basis. I was asleep last night by 9 pm. It was kind of funny. There was a busload of workers at the beach, enjoying the day off too. The scenarios attracted a crowd. What was really funny, though, was one particular scene. There were a couple of Japanese tourists walking on the beach, and behind the beach you can see an oil refinery-- you know, the dramatic part where the flame is shooting out of the smoke stack. Well, Japanese Tourist #1 decided he wanted his photo taken with him in front of the oil stack. Meanwhile, in the background, they're dragging Unconscious Diver #1 out of the water so they can administer O2. So, from my viewpoint in the green chair, here's the tourist having his photo taken while behind him they're dragging some guy out of the water. It's one of those things you had to see, but it was quite amusing to me and another diver. Until we got called on to help with the entertainment. |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 (permalink) | |
|
Grouper
|
Quote:
__________________
*Insert Witty Comment Here* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4 (permalink) |
|
Grouper
|
Me too. Me too. I was just about to hike on over to enquire if I could have a copy (making up some cockamamie excuse about BSAC's site or whatever), but then I got called into the action. But go to any popular beach and watch the Japanese tourists snapping photos left and right, and then imagine this rescue going on in the back, and you'll get the picture. Not literally, but you can then imagine what was happening.
If I would have had my own camera... Wait a tick. They were taking photos... I'll enquire at the club tomorrow if someone happened to get it on film. If they did, I'll share. |
|
|
|
![]() |
||
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Bad day?? | Anne Eastwell | Fun and Games! | 12 | 11-19-2007 05:16 PM |
| 10th post ... about hitting my 10th post. Ironic ? | MyPC8MyBrain | Job Well Done! | 11 | 10-26-2007 06:04 PM |
| Good Day All! | MANTAMAN5093 | Welcome to our Scuba Forum! Introduce Yourself! | 6 | 09-21-2007 08:32 PM |
| Who has the most posts per day? | thor | Scuba Stories, Comments & Questions that don't fit elsewhere! | 30 | 08-16-2007 02:01 AM |
| Picture of the Day... | JahJahwarrior | Surface Interval | 44 | 07-25-2007 01:24 PM |