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A Journey to 308m or 1010 feet.
Long
regarded as the four-minute mile of open circuit scuba diving the depth
of 305m (or 1,000feet) marks the goal of those in the deep diving
community striving to go deeper than anyone before. These divers fall
into their own category for although many divers have been deeper
before (in fact those that use submersible bells, surface supplied gas
and other commercial rigs regularly dive and work at deeper depths)
those on open circuit face infinitely greater risks; it’s no
exaggeration to say that they are working at the very limits of
physiological knowledge.
In
the world of open circuit many world record depth attempts are made in
fresh water sinks. The relatively ‘ideal’ conditions of these
environments make the staging of tanks and logistics that much easier
than those who face the more uncertain conditions of open waters.
Unpredictable currents, surface conditions and a massive difference in
surface and bottom temperatures are just some of the environmental
factors taken into consideration.
John
Bennett is the director of technical diving at Atlantis Tech in the
Philippines where provides state of the art deep diver training through
a variety of agencies. He is no stranger to the logistics, stress and
hazards involved in pushing depth limits; on June 4, 2000 John made a
solo dive to 254m/838feet (that stood as the world record for depth on
open circuit scuba in the open ocean until this dive) in the beautiful
waters off Puerto Galera on the island of Mindoro in the Philippines.
John
knew at the time he could go deeper and soon started making plans to
break the 1, 000 foot mark; for John, the ultimate dive lay ahead.
Once
the decision had been made to do the dive the hard work begun, months
of planning and training preceded the dive itself. The equipment
configuration alone caused a delay of two months and even with all the
team assembled in September the dive was put back to November. The
original quad pack on John’s back had been awkward and restricted
movement, he opted for a more flexible set up that consisted of a
triple pack of OMS low-pressure 20liter tanks required to carry the
huge amounts of bottom gas he would consume (over 620 liters per minute
on the bottom; that’s a regular scuba tank every four minutes). John
also strapped a forth 5.5 liter tank behind the triple set for dry-suit
inflation. OMS also provided a specially constructed canister light
that was placed between the left hand tanks. Two side slung 11.1-liter
tanks made up the last part of the tank rig – these would be used for
the first two gas switches in 150m/500feet and 90m/300feet of water;
from there on up John would rely on the support divers to supply
decompression gas. Other essential pieces of equipment that John would
test to the limits included Apeks regulators, Otto Dry-suits and backup
lights supplied by Princeton Tec.
John’s tough physical
regime over the months preceeding the dive was aimed at maintaining a
very high level of aerobic, cardio-vascular and muscular fitness and
consisted of ten workouts each week, five aerobic and five muscular.
Diet wss also important and John supported his training by eating four
times each day, keeping the carbohydrates high, proteins moderate and
fats low.
Puerto Galera, Philippines was again the location chosen for the 1,000
foot dive; not only did John feel more comfortable and rested working
from home but the easy access to deep water and ample supplies of gas,
warm surface water and relatively good surface conditions made it a
good all round choice. The great choice of diving and conditions is
another reason why many people choose to take their technical diver
training from at Atlantis Tech.
John’s June 2000 dive had gone very smoothly and as a result the team
incorporated many of the techniques employed then, one of which was the
use of a specially built free floating decompression platform that
allows a vertical decent line to be employed with a four bar trapezium
assembled in shallow water for the longest decompression stops. The
unique design allows the platform to be cut free if necessary and drift
with the current while keeping essential support mechanisms in place.
The
team of divers that support John are another key part of any successful
dive and the November team remained almost unchanged from the June 2000
dive: Mark Cox, Targa Man, Ron Loos, Axel Lechwald, Kfir Zorev and
Portuguese depth record holder Jorge Marques are all experienced deep
divers many of whom John trained personally. It’s no coincidence when
you find a group of dedicated people in one location – all specialists
in their fields – John has attracted a team around him that makes
Atlantis Tech stand out. Other experienced deep divers including Frank
Doyle and Jongin
Lee would join the team closer to the day itself and prove essential to
the dive’s success. Equally essential was Joe McLary, a veteran
paramedic who flew in from Hawaii to take care of contingency medical
procedures (although at one point it seemed uncertain whether he could
make it, the team’s decision to make some last minute calls and Joe’s
own decision to do little short of threaten to resign to get the time
off work proved invaluable on the day).
Their
work intensified the week before the dive, briefings and discussion
sessions were planned to ensure that each knew their role. This was a
long and complex process as John would be working from seven potential
profiles and even though an abort at relatively shallow depths would be
probably be easily handled and gas problems minimal, an abort at
200m/660feet or deeper could still lead to complex in water
situations. The warm relaxed setting of Atlantis Dive Resort did not
lessen the tension.
Depths were set for the support divers: 90m/300feet, 65m/215feet and
35m/120feet, then 21m/70feet and the shallow stops. Arguments
regarding the deep stop persisted: John had asked for no one to be
deeper than 90m/300feet to reduce the risk to members of the support
team (in other attempts support divers have perished) but the fact that
no one would know what was going on until this depth was of great
concern along with psychological effects on John. The end compromise
was a series of tanks clipped to the line at depths below 90m/300feet.
The deeper support divers also needed support and contingency planning,
the plans got ever more complex. These divers would send a slate to
the surface to indicate the start times and profiles the support divers
would be working to but everyone had to calculate gas mixes and
consumptions to account for a variety of situations.
There
were practical considerations: Axel worked tirelessly to assemble he
platform and layout, tag and measure the line, Mark, Kfir and Frank
spent hours blending gases, Jongin prepared the camera, Targa prepared
profiles, laminated them and took care of much of the logistics with
Tony Gower who joined the team from Hong Kong and took on the role of
coordinator. Food and drink had to be prepared, boats organized as
well as the numerous extra tanks, clips, slates and equipment to make
the dive work. Joe assembled the emergency kit, contacted the
recompression chamber (who kindly agreed to postpone a major overhaul)
and made evacuation plans. There were practice sessions with the
platform and John’s equipment exchange. In addition the team dove, ran
and trained to stay ready. The big day drew closer.
Although John had originally planned a series of dives over the week it
became apparent from the amount of work going on that this would not be
practical, but before this became an issue John let the team know he
had decided some time before that it would Tuesday or nothing.
The
final meeting was subdued as the final arrangements were confirmed and
Joe ran through the medical contingencies for everyone involved.
Tables were ‘cut’ for this special dive using Abyss software and
despite a bottom time of just a few minutes his total dive time would
be over nine and half hours. The dive incorporated six different
trimix blends and although his use of large amounts of helium at all
stages of the dive is somewhat experimental in dives to date he has
made the decompression ‘cleaner’, cut back on CO2 problems and
increased the ease of breathing. Even normal air breaks have been
replaced with switches back to trimix aimed at buffering the oxygen
clock (protecting against oxygen toxicity), reversing vassal
constriction (caused by breathing high PO2’s), reversing pulmonary
edema (caused by breathing high PO2’s) and cutting back on the amounts
of CO2 retained.
Even
though he hadn’t managed much sleep John woke feeling good on Tuesday
November 6th. He knew that this would be the day, the day
to go to 1,000 feet. He said goodbye to his family who were still
sleeping and made his way to the dive shop… it was 7.30am.
The
team had assembled at 4am, equipment had been moved to the boats and
the platform was being towed out, last minute checks were being done
and final adjustments made. Everyone on the team knew that if it was
going to happen this was going to be the day, as John walked in to the
organized chaos the team tried not to let the mounting tension show.
It was now that the extent of the dive store collaboration became
apparent; local competitors Atlantis, Lalaguna Beach Club, Asia Divers,
Action Divers, Captain Gregg’s, South Sea and others had given much and
asked for little or nothing in return.
By
8am everyone was on the move, although from a daylight perspective it
would have been better to start earlier the tide changes meant there
was little chance of John entering the water before 9am.
John
traveled out on the medical chase boat, accompanied by a couple of the
support team he begun to focus on the job in hand. The site was about
fifteen minutes from the beach and on arrival John was transferred to
the MV Galera where he could begin gearing up. As he did so two slates
were prepared and signed by Atlantis Dive Resort General Manager and
PADI Course Director Andy Pope and IANTD Franchise holder Alex Santos.
One was clipped to the bottom of the line and sent of the edge attached
to over 320m of chain and rope, just below the incredible camera that
would capture the morning’s events. The other was given to John
leaving him the choice either clipping on or pulling off to verify the
depth he reached.
Things were running relatively smoothly, the depth had been verified
with a sounder, conditions were calm and despite a couple of hitches
the line was now out. John checked his equipment set up, it was, he
believed the best available. The words of Tony Gower, who had become a
pillar of strength within the team, echoed as John stepped over the
side: “ John you just do the dive and leave the rest to us”. It was
now or never.
At
9.10am John begun his descent, initially much slower than he had
wanted; he reached the 90m/300feet switches after 3minutes 45 and it
was only after 120m/400feet that he begun to speed up. The
130m/430feet spare-tank passed and the darkness came, with the darkness
came the cold. This was his seventh time below 155m/510feet, so the
transformation was not such a shock and the descent continued
uneventfully. He focused in on his position in the water column, his
remaining gas supply and monitored for signs of HPNS. As John
approached the 250m/820 ft marker an ominous tremor ran through him, it
was well within the critical point of helium (this is the point where
the body will lose heat faster than it can produce it - normally this
is countered by commercial divers by heating the breathing mix, this
luxury was not possible on scuba). At this point the water temperature
was 4 degrees, it had been since 200m/656ft, John Womacks Otto
“Extreme” dry-suit was working well, it also helped in managing another
potential problem. Stopping at the bottom.
On
the surface the 90m/300fet support divers had already descended and
many of the others were already in the water preparing, a short run
time would not give them much time to prepare. As the minutes ticked
by Andy Pope and Tony Gower who had been left to run things realized
that either John was close to the 1, 000 foot mark… or that he wasn’t
coming back.
John
had reached the 275m/905feet marker and was still going down, the
tremor had become more pronounced and his vision was blurred. He knew
it was HPNS, but was within manageable limits, the Apeks TX 100’s were
still breathing superbly each with no increase in resistance. John
shone the OMS light down, nothing, just the light disappearing into
black. Slowly the lights of the camera (Jongin Lee had made the camera
casing in one day and much to National Geographic’s amazement it
worked) appeared as a distant glow and gave John a target. He hit the
inflator mechanism but the line kept slipping through his hand.
In
what seemed like eternity the OMS 100lb wings filled, he inflated the
dry-suit as well the light was getting closer, he knew that if he hit
the end of the line too fast he would just fall off the end. The
camera was on him and although still negative he could stop. On
checking his gas there was 100bar left plus 180bar in the single OMS
20L. He unclipped the slate and wedged it into a knot, after a quick
glimpse into the darkness he was on his way back up.
The
minutes ran over John’s longest possible run time to reach 90m/300feet,
Andy and Tony begun to fear the worse… still no balloon. Then a yellow
mark on the surface was spotted and there was a mad rush… but it was
nothing more than a plastic bag.
John
was ascending slowly, he passed the 200m/660foot tank and slowed to
15m/50 feet per minute pausing for 20 seconds first, he repeated this
at 175m/580feet. He made his first gas switch at 150m/500feet and
extended the stop time to a full minute. As he turned the valve of the
tank it free flowed wildly, sending a cloud of bubbles to the surface.
After quickly taking a breath he shut down the valve and only opened it
to take a breath. He reached the 130m/430foot spare tank and breathed
a sigh of relief and continued up. Ron and Mark were waiting at 100m
and John indicated which profile he was on, the balloon was sent to the
surface.
Meanwhile Axel had been put in the water by Andy & Tony and prepped to
go to 90m/300feet… a move they knew would throw out other support roles
later in the dive but there were no other options left… they were now
looking at last resorts… shouts went up as the balloon hit the surface
and Axel was stopped just seconds from his descent. After a highly
emotional few minutes the team re established roles as they confirmed
the profile everyone would work to for the next nine hours.
Frank
Doyle and fellow Atlantis instructor Kfir Zorev met John at 66m/220feet
and although everything appeared to be going well as John left the stop
he was hit by a wave of vertigo and he spent the next 10minutes
vomiting violently, he didn’t know which way was up. As he settled he
checked his gauge and noted he had burned through his mix quickly. He
looked at Frank and felt comfort from the calm eyes that came with
years of dealing with problems underwater. They resumed the job in
hand and continued ascending. Frank extended his long hose when John
reached 50bar, the contingency planning had ensured that all of the
team was breathing John’s mix at their time of support; he remained on
his decompression schedule. Targa Man and Axel Lechward along with
paramedic Joe Mclary replaced Frank and Kfir who were left to ascend.
Joe
immediately begun running neurological checks on John and although he
knew John was not suffering from DCI there was confusion about what was
causing the vomiting and what at the time appeared to be micro
sleeping. Bouts of nausea, vertigo and violent vomiting continued to
plague John; the prospects of another eight hours to go did not look
good. But, the equipment exchange at 36m went well and although
grateful that it had done its job, John was glad to be rid of the huge
OMS low-pressure 20liter triple pack.
On
the surface news spread that John had reached the 305m/1,000foot mark
but the work was far from done and as the team realized John still had
major problems to overcome plans were made to get extra gas and divers
from friendly stores; it was going to be a long day. Joe had stayed in
the water far longer than planned and although cold and fatigued he was
to spend much longer in the water before the day was up. He and Andy
decided that evacuation plans had to be put into place; boats were made
ready and ambulance put on standby. There were long telephone calls
with dive doctors as they planned for the worse case scenarios. The
weather had also turned and stormy showers made it difficult for the
support team to stay warm.
John
has said since that as he very literally “toughed it out” he just kept
reminding himself that no one had asked him to do this dive, he was
there of his own choice. The hours went by slowly as the team rotated
round keeping at least two divers with John at all times. The good
news was that John appeared to be recovering and became more aware as
the time went by and a fellow tech diver had also arrived to ensure
that the decompression schedule was adhered to.
John
was amazed at the faces that appeared before him; other Puerto Galera
Instructors had come to see if they could help, none asked for anything
in return, some spent several hours in the water. Every 15 minutes he
switched back to a trimix 16/44 for 5 to 8 minutes. This was done at
the 21m, 12m and 6m stops. This eased the damaging effects of
breathing high PPO2’s for to long.
He
reached 6m, just 20 feet from the surface but it would take another
hour and half before John would be on the boat. Night had fallen and
the team rigged a series of torches.
Nine
hours and thirty-seven minutes after leaving John surfaced surrounded
by familiar smiling faces, fatigued but jubilant. He was quickly taken
back to the resort under the watchful eye of Joe and put on a drip to
replace lost fluids. Friends monitored him throughout the night.
It
was resolved that the vertigo and vomiting were caused by an inner ear
baratrauma. John was back managing Atlantis Tech the following day and
returned to training, diving and teaching two weeks later. Atlantis
Tech remains at the cutting edge of technical diving and John and his
team offer training from Advanced Nitrox through to full Trimix
training and diving, instructor crossovers and blending programs. He
and the team will take you as far as you can go, just drop him a line
on
john@atlantishotel.com.
WE
are sure John can go deeper but at the celebratory party he was forced
to sign a document ensuring he wouldn’t by his wife… it was quickly co
signed by the entire support team… anyway John has other challenges
ahead… the wreck of the Japanese warship Yamashiro is calling.
Footnotes: One of the major problems with this style of dive is actually verifying you have the depth. With no depth gauges a measured line is the only way. John used a free hanging line lowered under supervision. After it was lowered he was given a signed slate, which I had to clip off on the bottom. This was then raised after John transferred to the platform trapezium. It was then measured on dry not taking in to account “stretch factor” caused by over 70kg of weight attached to the bottom. John’s sincere thanks to the following companies and individuals… team work… works: In his latest venture, a company called John Bennett Deep Ocean Research International (JBDORI) he and his partners aim “To go beyond diver training and actively support individuals and groups that explore the underwater world and extend the boundaries of diving knowledge”. John can be contacted at john@atlantishotel.com or www.dive-technical.com John can be contacted at john@atlantishotel.com or www.dive-technical.com Other articles: Under Pressure (an account of the 254m dive in June 2000) |
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More articles about John: John Bennett Reaches 1000ft. For more information contact: John Bennett Andy Pope info@atlantishotel.com Phone: Fax:
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