CAVE DIVER REACTS TO FATAL DIVE OF YURI LIPSKI

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  • Опубліковано 26 лис 2024
  • On April 28th, 2000, 22-year-old Russian-Israeli diving instructor Yuri Lipski went diving at the infamous "Divers Cemetery" in Egypt carrying a video camera that filmed his fatal dive.
    The video shows Yuri in an involuntary and uncontrolled descent, eventually landing on the sea floor at 115 meters where he panics, removes his regulator and tries to fill his buoyancy compensator but is unable to rise. At 115 m he would have been subject to severe nitrogen narcosis, which may have impaired his judgement, induced hallucinations and caused panic and confusion. Lipski had a single tank assumed to be air.
    Listen to more information about "Divers Cemetery" on Episode 30 of DIVE TALK: divetalkmedia....
    Original Video: • Fatal diving accident ...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,5 тис.

  • @MsLouisVee
    @MsLouisVee 3 роки тому +8837

    I know my limits ...water to the knee and then I turn around and come out

    • @devondetroit2529
      @devondetroit2529 3 роки тому +366

      I went and did scuba a couple times, I went to 10m and it freaked me out. Kinda cool tho

    • @frog382
      @frog382 3 роки тому +684

      I aloso know my limits.... Shower

    • @tehmassy
      @tehmassy 3 роки тому +47

      @@crazybongo5684 stop trying to swim ?

    • @Stephaniemickle
      @Stephaniemickle 3 роки тому +104

      @@tehmassy why not encourage him/her to LEARN how to swim rather than discouraging it completely. Cant save yourself from drowning if you can’t swim. Just sayin... lol

    • @tehmassy
      @tehmassy 3 роки тому +34

      @@Stephaniemickle no one was being serious Mrs.Mickle as you can see he replied

  • @blondie7740
    @blondie7740 3 роки тому +5097

    A sad fact is he went to local dive experts in this area, and he was told several times they would not take him down to the arch. They all told him he did not have enough experience or the correct equipment for this dive. They offered to help him get the training he needed, but he was too impatient to wait. It's sad and needless, he would have survived and taken the advice of the dive experts in the area.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +1243

      That's correct. But this is standard behavior on the Dive industry and more specifically Dive Pros...most dive pros think they know everything and they can do anything, this is why so many deaths are avoidable but instructors will continue to die needlessly unfortunately.

    • @hollystiener16
      @hollystiener16 3 роки тому +136

      He didn't have time for the course as he was leaving in 2 days and wanted to do it. I wonder who the guys diving with him were. hy have they not spoken out and why didn't they warn him?

    • @Chefteguh
      @Chefteguh 3 роки тому +196

      @@DIVETALK true, i work in a dive equipment store in Bali and so many instructor here dont really do their job or not educated properly. for example i had an instructor, a licensed instructor asked what the advantages of nitrox or whats the use of deco stop that hes been doing all the time. he just been told to do it by his instructor and not had been properly educated why.

    • @omegadivingacademy7937
      @omegadivingacademy7937 3 роки тому +103

      @@DIVETALK A combination of things, DAN put out some stats indicating instructors and up are the highest accident demographic in the dive industry because of the TARZAN mentality. The next issue is that there was a time (not the OLD SCHOOL was great nonsense) where a instructor candidate could actually fail his instructor course. Today the registration is completed even before the final adjudication to enable an awards ceremony at the end of the course. The level across agencies has slowly become weaker and weaker. WEAK instructors training the next round of weak instructors.( Too long a discussion to have on this platform)

    • @yoyoyooo4735
      @yoyoyooo4735 3 роки тому +7

      @Gal De Som How do you know he dived alone?

  • @snowgoon8955
    @snowgoon8955 2 роки тому +2731

    For anyone new to diving or who doesn't know, Yuri dove to 115+ meters (375 feet). Narcosis on regular air really starts to set in at about 30 meters (98 feet) and starts to significantly impede cognitive and motor function at about 40 meters (130 feet). This dude dove nearly 3 times the max depth for regular air.

    • @lenamonroe2961
      @lenamonroe2961 2 роки тому +184

      @SteveQ That's really scary. Glad you made it out safely!

    • @bizmonkey007
      @bizmonkey007 2 роки тому +143

      I almost wonder if this guy had a death wish. He was definitely experiencing nitrogen narcosis but you would think his survival instincts would have kicked in sooner and told him, “Go back. Go. Back.”

    • @mikeg6285
      @mikeg6285 2 роки тому +270

      @@bizmonkey007 unless he had a balloon or something to propel him up, at that depth with the weight of that gear he pretty much can't go back. When he realized his depth, he realized his death.

    • @fucksusan.fuckcensorship.874
      @fucksusan.fuckcensorship.874 2 роки тому +109

      @@bizmonkey007 why do drunk people do stupid shit? because they are impaired and aren't thinking straight. they compare nitrogen narcosis to a drunken state so obviously he's not going to be thinking properly. and the lower the depth the harder it is to come up. The video also doesn't account for knowledge of whether his gear was malfunctioning or not and if his boyancy device isn't working it won't matter whether he wants to come up or not. It's not that simple hence why professional divers only get taught depths of 40m. anything below that is extra certification. not to mention the lack of gear this guy had. he was reaching depths that shouldn't be made on a singe cylinder kit. you need a rebreather at lower depths.

    • @theperson2346
      @theperson2346 2 роки тому +13

      Did he not have anything to tell him he was going too far?

  • @sukai121
    @sukai121 3 роки тому +3712

    bottom line: don’t dive if multiple (certified!) people tell you NO. yuri’s death was 100% preventable. rest in peace

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +245

      True

    • @3_up_moon
      @3_up_moon 3 роки тому +36

      Sounds like this was a self harm mission, no? There were so many things he did that crossed the boundaries of "abort", "surface"

    • @RainV23
      @RainV23 3 роки тому +91

      Sounds more like someone confident pushing their limits.

    • @ZombehFest
      @ZombehFest 3 роки тому +56

      @@3_up_moon Have you watched the source video? He screams "help" approx. 3 minutes in when he was still at a safe depth.

    • @KaladinVegapunk
      @KaladinVegapunk 3 роки тому +11

      yeah, definitely a bummer but didnt have to happen. noone is above safety, especially when it comes to diving.
      im just curious, the bends aren't always fatal, i feel like if youre going to drown/die anyway, maybe should have a rapid inflation balloon you can trigger to rocket up to the surface & detach weights? I mean its definitely risky and you might still be screwed but id say your odds are still better than being stuck at the bottom..since hes using regular air and not a mixture, wouldnt there not even be a risk? idk im not well versed

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 3 роки тому +3592

    The strangest aspect of this video has always been the fact that there's no obvious breaking point where you can see things transition from 'normal' to 'dangerous.' Everything seems perfectly fine, there are divers around him one minute... then before you even realize what's happening, he's all alone struggling to breathe while sinking deeper into the black abyss. I think most people expect to see the point where the diver notices something is wrong... and it just isn't there. Quite eerie to watch.

    • @LichaelMewis
      @LichaelMewis 3 роки тому +58

      He fast forwarded it

    • @l3lackoutsMedia
      @l3lackoutsMedia 3 роки тому +245

      That just shows how fast shit can hit the fan Underwater.

    • @ExON00
      @ExON00 3 роки тому +278

      If You watch the entire video, there is a point where he is behind other divers, and suddenly starts decending very quickly. As if his BCD failed suddenly.

    • @danklordsupreme8864
      @danklordsupreme8864 3 роки тому +283

      Around the 3 minute mark of yuri's video, its been determined you can hear him try to inflate his neck bouy, but it malfunctions or something. This is while other divers are still in the frame so the last 4 minutes of the video he already knows it's all gone wrong.

    • @terat1227
      @terat1227 3 роки тому +59

      Yeah, it's almost would be like watching a frog being slowly boiled a live in water. It's so gradually, by the time danger set in. It's too late. "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread."

  • @Madeline-Cano
    @Madeline-Cano Рік тому +1001

    Listening to him struggle and whimper while trying to breathe and then hitting the bottom, looking at his wrist and realizing that he wasn't going to make it out made me cry. I can only imagine how his mother felt watching this video. Regardless of his choice to go against professional advice and severe warnings against doing the dive, I still have sympathy for the fact that a mother lost her son and this is the last glimpse of him she ever got. Sometimes people make choices that lead to their death, but I don't think that lessens the sorrow and empathy we should have for others' losses.

    • @douglaslellismoreira2730
      @douglaslellismoreira2730 Рік тому +19

      EPIC COMMENT

    • @Stephanie-we5ep
      @Stephanie-we5ep Рік тому +125

      It seems to me that narcosis would have eased his death, he would have been completely out of touch with reality. The squeeks we could hear would have been from such high pressures combined with the little air he had left. At some point he might have enough clarity to recognize the peril he was in; that wouldn't have lasted very long though. The movements/thrashing that we heard at the end would have been seizures, Yuri very likely was unconscious at the end. He wouldn't have felt anything, I nearly drowned once and my experience was that my chest burned from holding my breath. That actually didn't last very long, and after that was such calm *peace* ---- the kind people meditate or turn to drugs to find. I really think that his last video is harder on us (and absolutely on his family!!) than on him.
      Whatever the truth of Yuri's last moments, it was mercifully brief.

    • @IntrusiveThot
      @IntrusiveThot Рік тому +25

      This might be the most nuanced response to this incident I’ve seen, 1000% agreed

    • @michaeldeww
      @michaeldeww Рік тому +5

      @@Stephanie-we5ep Is that true? i heard drowning is one of the most painful things only until your lungs are filled with water than it is less painful..

    • @Stephanie-we5ep
      @Stephanie-we5ep Рік тому +31

      @@michaeldeww I'm not sure what science has to say about drowning, I'm sharing my experience is all. To this day I remember the calm that came over me.

  • @thelegend-gu9eg
    @thelegend-gu9eg 3 роки тому +2264

    I went here as a teenager with my family to just snorkel. Absolutely stunning, went out in a jeep with three German men all in their late 20s wanting to dive. We were told over and over that you could see the arch but it's much deeper than you think and there's no way in hell you'd reach it without proper equiptment. They have a signs all over saying that it's deadly and you should just stick to depth unless you're very well trained.
    I remember clear as day that the three men went out just before lunch, deciding to do the dive first and then relax and swim after. They all went down and its probably barely 7 or 8 minutes later when one of the guys come up effing and blinding that one of his mates decided to go further. Everyone got this look, it was just chilling. The other guy stayed in the water at his max depth. There were guys in the full equipment ready to go in and hopefully get him when the other two men popped up out of the water, the friend holding the idiot by the back of his tank. Immediately people were screaming at him, and the dude was clearly off, crying and panicking and his face was grey. The guy dumped all of his weights and luckily got back to his mate before he got too incoherent, and that saved him. He was close. No one went in the water after that. I rarely dive but seeing that made me terrified of deep and blank ocean and I couldn't ever go back.

    • @Narusasu98
      @Narusasu98 3 роки тому +166

      Holy shit talk about trauma

    • @Irisedpig
      @Irisedpig 3 роки тому +193

      god that's hell of a story. amazing and so lucky his friend managed to save his life. but bloody terrifying

    • @TheGreatSpl00ge
      @TheGreatSpl00ge 3 роки тому +142

      That's called respect of the ocean. Everyone should feel this, especially anyone deciding to dive in it.

    • @JohnDoeWasntTaken
      @JohnDoeWasntTaken 3 роки тому +86

      @@TheGreatSpl00ge Amen, we know more about and have conducted more research on outer space than the ocean for a reason. I've seen some divers refer to the ocean as "inner space" and it's a fitting name.

    • @TehUltimateSnake
      @TehUltimateSnake 3 роки тому +24

      @@JohnDoeWasntTaken Agreed seeing as how we've only explored 20% of the ocean.

  • @ninachr
    @ninachr 3 роки тому +1844

    What’s really sad is the fact that he was told by several instructors that he’d need two weeks of training and the right equipment and he still did it anyway 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @kakky3222
      @kakky3222 3 роки тому +75

      Really stupid is more like it.

    • @Caninecancersucksrocks
      @Caninecancersucksrocks 3 роки тому +63

      Sadly, you sometimes just can’t fix stupid. Such a waste of a life.
      His poor family. 😢🥺

    • @leerigby5735
      @leerigby5735 3 роки тому +28

      @@Caninecancersucksrocks did what? Lots of open water divers dive part of that site very safely. I might be wrong, but it doesn't appear he tried to dive the arch (which catches a lot out) and I doubt very much he was planning to bounce to 115m. Something has gone wrong and he's been unable to maintain buoyancy but I doubt it's as simple as being overweighted as most BCDs can provide quite a bit of lift and it's hard to overweight that much (although I'm sure that could have been a contributing factor)... That said, at 115m his only chance was to ditch the weight (which he didn't do). But I suspect he's had some sort of BCD failure and lost control of his buoyancy and couldn't regain it.

    • @andygarza8132
      @andygarza8132 3 роки тому +7

      Fucking idiot

    • @Chipznicecream
      @Chipznicecream 3 роки тому +22

      You watched @MrBallen didn't you lol

  • @bhrawii
    @bhrawii 2 роки тому +408

    The Blue Hole is no joke. As an Egyptian, I have been to the Blue Hole 3 times at least when in Dahab. Every time I see the plaques with the names of divers who died there, it is very chilling for me. May they rest in peace.

  • @cleanerlakes
    @cleanerlakes 3 роки тому +1311

    It’s interesting that near the end of the video, I can hear the attempt at BCD inflation but there was none during the entire decent. Also, as a caver, a CCR diver, and a former dive shop owner, I do not have any desire to dive The Arch. It seems like such a random and arbitrary thing to. All the dangers and for what? If it’s an arch you want to see, there are lots that are much shallower. As someone who has the skills to dive deep, I rather dive shallow and then go drink beer with my friends.

    • @grecco4037
      @grecco4037 3 роки тому +115

      I watched a documentary talking about that arch. They said that once you’re underwater, it looks close. And when divers get “narc”-ed, they opt to go deeper into that arch also because of the light, it looks closer but it’s not.

    • @cleanerlakes
      @cleanerlakes 3 роки тому +54

      @@grecco4037 That would compound the problem for a less qualified diver who is target fixated on the Arch, versus watching their gauges. So many reasons that would make this "innocent" dive, not so innocent.

    • @Maritime007
      @Maritime007 3 роки тому +53

      I made a point of getting technical training even though I stayed within recreational limits. The ability to switch to a redundant air source, double bladders and the knowledge to carry out decompression stops if necessary adds another layer of safety.

    • @cleanerlakes
      @cleanerlakes 3 роки тому +8

      @@Maritime007 nice work.

    • @vivalechew
      @vivalechew 3 роки тому +16

      I used to teach there. The arch starts around 60m. He's just gone straight to the bottom. There's a whole grave site there now as a lot of free divers use the area.

  • @MrSoccerball100
    @MrSoccerball100 3 роки тому +1397

    The fact that his mom has the video of his death makes me terribly sad. Regardless of people saying he was arrogant and reckless he was still a human being and someone’s son. Terribly tragedy made even worse by the fact it was captured on video for his mom to see. RIP Yuri.

    • @chrisrheem980
      @chrisrheem980 3 роки тому +63

      I completely agree and I feel so bad for his mom because she has to live with the evidence and fact that not only her son is dead but that she watched him die

    • @WilliamStormXBlade88
      @WilliamStormXBlade88 3 роки тому +96

      As a counterpoint, it also means they were able to recover the body / know how he died. I think the pain would be alot worse if they never found his body and he was just listed as "missing", and his poor mother (family / friends) not knowing if he was kidnapped, or ran away or committed suicide. Regardless it is very tragic.

    • @chronicawareness9986
      @chronicawareness9986 3 роки тому +9

      the mom must have posted it online too

    • @MrSoccerball100
      @MrSoccerball100 3 роки тому +13

      @@WilliamStormXBlade88 That's true as well. Closure is a big step towards recovering and healing from the death of a loved one.

    • @MrSoccerball100
      @MrSoccerball100 3 роки тому +10

      @@chronicawareness9986 I was thinking about that, and based on what I know from public knowledge, I believe the mother had to be the one who posted it. Seems wrong though.Why would she post it?

  • @poot-poot
    @poot-poot 2 роки тому +291

    Tbh at that depth, with the knowledge that you’re going to drown shortly and staring down into the bottomless drop below.. it’s better that he was narced out of his mind. I couldn’t imagine being fully lucid in that moment. Much better to be confused and not fully knowing what’s happening then to go through that cognitive and aware. Rest In Peace Yuri.

    • @NeilMalthus
      @NeilMalthus 2 роки тому +8

      Is it though? When you're doomed, you're doomed. When you're in terror, you're probably still shitting your pants, narced or not. At least, fully lucid, you having a fighting chance of saving yourself. At any point in that rapid descent, dropping his weights / camera / attempting to use his regulator to inflate his bcd should have been undertaken, at least until the absolute point of no chance of self-rescue had been reached.

    • @crabmansteve6844
      @crabmansteve6844 2 роки тому +73

      @@NeilMalthus You don't understand, there was literally 0 chance for him.
      Rapid ascent and he'd have died of the Bends or barotrauma, he didn't have enough lift to ascend, he had literally zero chance of returning to the surface alive.
      It would have been so much worse to sit at the bottom, completely aware you're dying and there isn't anything you can do about it. Being Narced was a gift.

    • @ReigningWomban
      @ReigningWomban 8 місяців тому

      I agree with that. I would not want to be aware that I was dying, witnessing it as well as feeling it and being helpless in my own survival.@@crabmansteve6844

    • @mowsenballz8038
      @mowsenballz8038 5 місяців тому

      @@crabmansteve6844 how do you know? it can make you hallucinate aswell, you could see horrible things down there.

    • @SonnyKnutson
      @SonnyKnutson 3 місяці тому +1

      @@NeilMalthus He was already gone to far at that point.

  • @doneda3217
    @doneda3217 3 роки тому +1279

    21 years later and this still haunts me. I will always ask myself what happened at the beginning. 2min in , he’s still at the surface. Then a bewildering uncontrollable descent. Such a tragedy. I’d never hit that site as a rescue diver. I know my limits.

    • @LosKiwa
      @LosKiwa 2 роки тому +296

      From what I've read, it seems that his buoyancy compensator (kind of like a vest that can inflate more or less, which helps in controlling how you float) failed after a certain depth, meaning there was nothing keeping him afloat or nothing that could help him ascend again. He just was a person with a lot of weight that was pulling him down without any control. He also was unaware of all this happening because of nitrogen narcosis, which was made worse by the fact that he was probably using a mix in his tank that wasn't the proper for this kind of dives. His fate was already sealed, and he only noticed this when he hit rock bottom and checked his monitor. Truly terrifying.

    • @BS-dq1kz
      @BS-dq1kz 2 роки тому +12

      @Álvaro Terrasa Wow! So he couldn’t go up even if he wanted to because he was a big guy? Is that what happened? It’s so confusing. He just keeps going and going. Terrifying!

    • @itssweet2125
      @itssweet2125 2 роки тому +91

      @@BS-dq1kz it wasn’t he’s weight it was the weight of his equipment. He had oxygen tanks, he’s camera, and battery’s.

    • @riann7707
      @riann7707 2 роки тому +42

      @@itssweet2125 He only had 1 oxygen tank but he also had other weights and huge camera that most likely brought him down.

    • @wntdspartan1345
      @wntdspartan1345 2 роки тому +17

      @@riann7707 why wouldn’t he just drop the camera and extra shit tho. Material things are easily replaceable. Ur life isn’t, so when he realized he couldn’t go back up I don’t get why he didn’t just start removing items

  • @robertmunroe6860
    @robertmunroe6860 3 роки тому +507

    When I took my very first dive certification class years ago, one of the first things my instructor said, and repeated throughout my training was "know your limits and respect your limits" The saddest part of this for me is that it could have soooo easily been avoided.

    • @smarti1144
      @smarti1144 3 роки тому +12

      Those are sage words to apply to your life not just diving

    • @richardleetbluesharmonicac7192
      @richardleetbluesharmonicac7192 3 роки тому +11

      Don’t cave dive. It’s not worth the risk. I’m a caver and I used to dive. Know too many dead cave divers

    • @earthynomad7160
      @earthynomad7160 3 роки тому

      Yuri like all zionist think the world is theirs

  • @rafaelbenet3632
    @rafaelbenet3632 Рік тому +33

    Rec instructor and Tech DIR diver here... On minute 13:00 exactly, a thin piece of string, twisted around its own axis, fly for a second in front of the camera (use slow motion). Considering it maintains its shape constant, it is not cordino, bungee, or some kind of fabric but metal. The only piece of metal with that shape, used in a recreational equipment set up, is the spring within the "overpressure relief valves".
    Every model of BCD jacket may differ about quantity and position for this valves, but there is always one on the top left shoulder and another one on your lower back next to your kidney, either left or right. This valves are screwd to the BCD as plastic soda bottle caps are. That spring lets the valve open when there is too much gas in your BCD so it dosent explode, as a balloon would, if you blow too much air in it.
    I'm not going to go into detail on the possible reasons this valves malfunction or even pop out, but the fact is that if a critical malfunction happends to the one on your left shoulder you loose all the air you poor in your BCD as it is next to the intake flow. The position for this valve is on the back part of the shoulder and for some people it might not be easily accesible, hence the design includes a little string to manually open it in a more confortable way. But trust me, you are either flexible, or you are going to have a hard time reaching it to try to screw that in if it came out. Needless to say, that fixing this as falling to the deepest and darkest of abysms, narc out of your mind, is beyond anything you can expect of a recreational diver. But the fact is that when he gets to the bottom, and start trying to desperately fix whatever got him there, he reaps off this valve as i could only think you would if you consider it the source of the problem.
    Another interesting fact is the descent. What is the squeaky sound? lungs or second stage membrane? why he doesnt seem to strugle and panicking? he doesnt release the camera and help himself to swim up as is the most basic human reaction? Narcosis works in strange ways... it would make you do stupid things as with a lot of alcohol but without speech and movement disabilities to warn you. Nonetheless at 100m still seems to be aware enough of the camera and try to film his computer. Who knows what he was trying to leave behind for us to witness and what where his thoughts.
    Rest in peace brother. May your suffering be of reflection for all those who every day decide to go under water beyond their knowledge and capabilities.

    • @putty-e3686
      @putty-e3686 9 місяців тому

      maybe he is using the camera as light source when he looking at his computer.

  • @Night_Wood
    @Night_Wood 3 роки тому +1036

    I get a headache when i dive all the way down to the bottom of a 9ft pool, I can’t even imagine how horrific this would be.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +243

      Yes it continues to blow my mind when I think of this tragedy.

    • @Slx84
      @Slx84 3 роки тому +146

      you have to equalize your ears, before it starts to hurt, pinch your nose and blow through it. headache solved, this is basic diving know-how for pressure, kind of how you do in airplanes.

    • @ms1472
      @ms1472 3 роки тому +53

      @@Slx84 Serious question! Is it supposed to be painful when you "pop" your ears to equalize the pressure?! I feel like I could never dive because if I need to do this constantly to do so, I would be in too much pain. I never asked anyone before, but I wonder if you feel the pain!

    • @ms1472
      @ms1472 3 роки тому +8

      @Sailing Too Short thank you for your answer!

    • @Beelzebubby91
      @Beelzebubby91 3 роки тому +21

      @@Slx84 my doctor told me never to do that? He said to only swallow or chew. I have the same problem as the original commenter. I always felt like my ears were going to explode every time a plane landed or took off. It hurts so bad. I never grew out of it that much, but I found these special earplugs that equalize the pressure somehow!

  • @notareallifetiger4817
    @notareallifetiger4817 3 роки тому +829

    Losing air is one of my biggest fears. I’ve both nearly drowned and nearly strangled to death before and it was absolutely horrific. I can’t imagine the feeling of losing air combined with the confusion and panic of being isolated in the ocean. Truly tragic.

    • @yourdad7538
      @yourdad7538 2 роки тому

      Get the fuck out the water and dont play with nature

    • @Revens1
      @Revens1 2 роки тому +39

      drowning is the worst thing that i have ever experienced in my life, your judgement etc is completely lost as you panic and you just lose all ability to do something so simple that can prevent it but you can't think straight, it sucks.

    • @lindahandley5267
      @lindahandley5267 2 роки тому +14

      Same here, by swimming across a river and then nearly choking to death on a bite of food. It was terrifying.

    • @liamneslind4182
      @liamneslind4182 2 роки тому +8

      Having more air wouldnt have helped him because his heart was going to stop from the nitrogen

    • @Lewdacris916
      @Lewdacris916 2 роки тому +43

      strangled?????? the fuck?

  • @inuchan74
    @inuchan74 2 роки тому +95

    Tarek Omar was the man who retrieved Yuri's body and sadly enough was one of the instructors that told Yuri he needed 2 weeks training because he wasn't ready or equipped for the dive and not to do it. And the next day has to go and get him. As of 2012 he'd received more than 20 bodies from the hole but he said he stopped counting so doesn't know the real number.
    I'm sure it's in the comments somewhere but haven't seen it yet.

    • @-_YouMayFind_-
      @-_YouMayFind_- 2 роки тому +8

      I do feel like that some of these divers are overrestimating themselfes.

  • @SnekInTheGrass
    @SnekInTheGrass 3 роки тому +2012

    God the sound of his breathing gives me goosebumps.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +404

      Agreed. It was awful.

    • @UncleSpicey
      @UncleSpicey 3 роки тому +77

      Horrific, absolutely horrific

    • @Monochrome93
      @Monochrome93 3 роки тому +36

      Makes my chest hurt

    • @philippe_widmer
      @philippe_widmer 3 роки тому +64

      if you listen carefully, you hear that he is breathing normally, inhaling and exhaling. i think, that sound comes from (trying) equalizing the ears holding his hose and pressing. just a guess.....

    • @kirstystar74
      @kirstystar74 3 роки тому +6

      Sometimes the regulator does make These sounds.

  • @frogfatality9781
    @frogfatality9781 3 роки тому +343

    How terrifying. I could feel a lump building in my throat as I watched him walk around on the floor of the arc in the darkness. Imagining that feeling of not being able to escape, being so deep down away from everyone else, that's horrible. Please rest in peace Yuri

  • @salmor6086
    @salmor6086 2 роки тому +377

    Seeing him sinking to the bottom like a stone, hearing him breathe, seeing him struggle and then - nothing... This gave me such anxiety, as this must have been horrible for him. Perhaps he was not fully aware of what was going to happen, because he was so narced, but at some point in the beginning he must have noticed that something was very wrong...

    • @jaimie072
      @jaimie072 Рік тому +2

      Yeah that's what's strange. I normally test my BCD at the surface and/or at a low depth before commencing my dive. Did he try to inflate his when he was already pretty deep and it was too late - too last as in even with a full BCD there wasn't enough buoyancy to take him to the surface.

    • @shelleymurphy1966
      @shelleymurphy1966 Рік тому +17

      I’ve been narced once. Thankfully I recognized it immediately and went up about 20 feet, and it resolved. As a diver, you really need to be in tune with your body and listen to it when it lets you know something is off!

    • @LordSluggo
      @LordSluggo Рік тому +23

      @@jaimie072 Woody skipped over it, but when Yuri was still near the surface, you hear a really weird squealing noise. Everyone I've seen discuss this case had ignored that noise, and I think his BCD failed near the surface which was *why* he started sinking

    • @thunderdronefpv1412
      @thunderdronefpv1412 Рік тому

      I’m still anxious…

    • @kawaibakaneko
      @kawaibakaneko Рік тому

      ​@@LordSluggoI've seen other people noticing it

  • @Belowbluewaterdiver
    @Belowbluewaterdiver 3 роки тому +696

    I nearly filmed my own death back in august with a mask mounted GoPro. Me and a buddy were doing a fast paced long distance drift dive. With a bottom made up of rocks that’s pretty much featureless we often navigate by time drifting. The current was faster than usual and so we ended up drifting into an extremely hazardous wreck. I KNEW I was in trouble as soon as I saw the wreck in the distance. My partner wasnt phased and asked my air. I informed him I was past the agreed return point but he gave the order to stay “for just a little”. Well we go up and over the wreck and duck in behind it. This wreck normally provides cover but it’s recently broken up. So instead of relative “safety” I ended up stationary against the current. Desperately low on air at this point I start looking for my exit and at the point I made my attempt to escape. During the attempt my head mounted GoPro was ripped off my head blinding me, and then the currently forced its way into my regulator causing me to take in water. After taking in a little air and BARELY keeping control and not drowning. I went into panic mode. I lost control and made a run for it. But luckily I knew exactly which way to run and I made a mad dash to shore. I never regained control, I never got my mask clear again (I made my return pretty much blind and off memory) I surfaced with virtually no air after my safety stop.
    As crazy as it sounds in the moment when I felt this was the end I thought of this video and was horrified at the prospect I just filmed my own death like Yuri.
    For reference I had 12 years of diving experience at this site and my dive partner 40+. Bad things can happen on even “normal” dives. I couldn’t imagine the outcome of that dive if he or I were unfamiliar with the site

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +181

      Thanks for sharing your story and I'm glad you are both okay.

    • @Belowbluewaterdiver
      @Belowbluewaterdiver 3 роки тому +59

      @@DIVETALK I’ll have to post the video, you can see the exact moment the entire dive unravels

    • @FoOLiShGuAcBoWLMeRCHanT
      @FoOLiShGuAcBoWLMeRCHanT 2 роки тому +14

      @@Belowbluewaterdiver I'd like to see the footage. I subscribed to your channel and am looking forward to seeing it.

    • @bltn7469
      @bltn7469 2 роки тому +13

      @@Belowbluewaterdiver so were is the video brother? Hope you are doing OK and I understand if you don't want it out there . But I would like to also get a little education on how quick things can go wrong .

    • @Dimorac
      @Dimorac 2 роки тому +10

      @@bltn7469 seems like it was another UA-cam comment looking for clout...

  • @jamesotayza2230
    @jamesotayza2230 3 роки тому +162

    My diving skills are limited to the shallow end of the kiddie pool. That has kept me alive for 45 years. Very informative walk thru. Thank you! 👍

  • @e.l.2734
    @e.l.2734 2 роки тому +89

    Terrifying, but seeing you educate people on how to not suffer the same fate is comforting. Thanks for that.

  • @victoriapapinutti1799
    @victoriapapinutti1799 3 роки тому +324

    Im a diver, and I watched his video at least 20x. And every time I feel the pain and fear like I knew him. So so sorry for what happened. May he rest in peace

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +23

      Agree. So sad. RIP!

    • @mrsx7944
      @mrsx7944 3 роки тому +7

      @@DIVETALK it is sad. I feel sorry for him. Dying alone. Poor guy.

    • @vonarg
      @vonarg 2 роки тому +1

      I watched this video a few times, i still can't remove of my mind the "HELP !" 3:19 that he was yelling, certainly adressed to the other divers on top of him very early in this video before he goes into a fast descent.
      For me something goes wrong from the start, and not due to narcosis as a lot of people are arguing for.

    • @duncanferguson7814
      @duncanferguson7814 Рік тому

      at what point did he have a chance to turn it around in your opinion? like timestamp

    • @unbromomento6338
      @unbromomento6338 8 місяців тому

      @cortex3535 that sound was in reality a malfunction on the buyancy

  • @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer
    @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer 3 роки тому +559

    Of course this is the natural progression of watching Mr. Ballen. I seek out the actual footage. Condolences to this man and his family. Kudos on the respectful reaction.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +46

      So sad

    • @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer
      @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer 3 роки тому +35

      @@DIVETALK I agree. I like how you didn't insult the man yet pointed out the grave errors made. Excellent video.

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 3 роки тому +5

      @@WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer I get 'youtuber' vibes off of Ballen... he's a great storyteller. But he is one of the few (apparently, coz until Shipley clears it, I'm on the fence) Navy SEALS not to do something... that actually does some good in the world, rather than rubbernecking a bunch of irl creepypastas. UA-camrs... always end up being very disappointing people, lets just put it that way. I bet your guitar playing is more than OK!

    • @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer
      @WorldsOkayestGuitarPlayer 3 роки тому +3

      @@blacktoothfox677 yeah I can't argue there. The stories are what get me reeled in. It's better than an AI voice haha. Thanks for the compliment too BTW 😊

    • @syyneater
      @syyneater 3 роки тому +17

      @@blacktoothfox677 He was running a huge non-profit centered around getting veterans transitional help when they retire. The UA-cam/tiktok thing is more recent. He got some seal flak because he was originally coming at tiktok/youtube as a ‘former seal’. That’s why it’s downplayed and not referenced very much on his channel. If I’m remembering correctly, the charity is still going strong with a new CEO.

  • @alicesaxon601
    @alicesaxon601 Рік тому +74

    I still feel bad for Yuri, despite him ignoring the many warnings he was given. He probably knew he was dead when he touched the bottom and saw his depth. I mean the speed at which he sank to his death so quickly after beginning his dive is chilling. It almost looks like he went into a trance, enjoying the calm of the water to suddenly wake up in the dark alone under the pressure of the deep, dying. RIP Yuri ❤️

    • @claretheworm
      @claretheworm Рік тому +7

      That's the narcosis talking ..I think most divers who aren't trained professionally don't recognize the effects of narcosis until its way too late. I've heard it give you certain euphoria in an altered state, then it can turn very scary 😢

    • @janezjonsa3165
      @janezjonsa3165 Рік тому +1

      Your other part, when you talk about trance, is what he went through... before he simply clicked off.

    • @Softlol
      @Softlol 2 дні тому

      @@claretheworm I have had narcosis as a kid, it is nothing like being drunk at all. It's very much like floating in the sky, so it probably can feel very good and relaxing on some divers that experience it. And every professional divers might not notice until it's too late. If you have ever take psychedelics you will know how the feeling is. You feel fine, then you are like: Am I getting high? no its normal, then without knowing it you are tripping balls. There is no clear transition. It just happens kinda.

  • @wadehowell1369
    @wadehowell1369 3 роки тому +256

    We dove it recreationally just a few weeks ago. The guides are great but you have to be a good diver. We did not exceed limits, which is key. We had a guide, a plan, and watched out for one another. It is a beautiful site. It was a beautiful dive. Our visibility was not the best that day, but it was a wonderful experience. Be smart and stay within your limits.

    • @mrsx7944
      @mrsx7944 3 роки тому +2

      What's down there that's so interesting? I'm just curious.

    • @Lara-tm5nz
      @Lara-tm5nz 3 роки тому +1

      @@mrsx7944 an Arch. There is a very good documentary about the dangers of the Arch by Monty Hall. You can find it on YT

    • @Lara-tm5nz
      @Lara-tm5nz 3 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/hYuMN206Jzo/v-deo.html

    • @wadehowell1369
      @wadehowell1369 3 роки тому

      @@mrsx7944 it is a nice shore dive with reef and fish. Going deeper is always an allure for divers.

    • @inuchan74
      @inuchan74 2 роки тому +1

      @@mrsx7944 people are just obsessed with the idea of seeing this arch.

  • @Maddie-qu3kp
    @Maddie-qu3kp 3 роки тому +233

    When I first saw this video it legitimately traumatised me. I couldn't stop thinking about it. I am glad that his tragedy is being used as a warning and opportunity for education. I agree, it is a dangerous dive site that is far too easy to access.

    • @inuchan74
      @inuchan74 2 роки тому +13

      I had the same issue, it really affected me afterwards and couldn't stop thinking of him. I mean really it's a very benign video, but knowing what was happening just makes it terrifying

    • @Lilliz91
      @Lilliz91 2 роки тому

      There’s tons of ways to kill yourself with easy access, it wouldn’t change too much besides make things difficult for people who do things properly. People like him would go there illegally etc, too many cases of that.

  • @nevermind5321
    @nevermind5321 2 роки тому +21

    When You mimicked struggling to breathe,your dog came over to make sure you were ok, that was so cute😌

  • @joffles6516
    @joffles6516 3 роки тому +177

    Btw toward the end when he was moving around a bunch, he was holding on to the floor resisting the drag, since he was being dragged out of the bottom of the arch into a 3000 feet drop off

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +33

      Wow thanks for the info.

    • @SalveRegina8
      @SalveRegina8 3 роки тому +8

      For someone like me who knows absolutely nothing about cave diving, does drag mean the current?

    • @joffles6516
      @joffles6516 3 роки тому +37

      @@SalveRegina8 oh I don’t know much about cave diving either, I was just really interested in this case so I did a bunch of research, but I’m guessing that the reason he was being pulled deeper is because of his weight, and at that depth he was like no buoyancy so it’s be like impossible swims back up. Anyways I’m not a professional diver at all I just did research

    • @kellyegan7348
      @kellyegan7348 3 роки тому +13

      Wow a 3000 foot drop off. That’s horrifying.

    • @KSakamoto
      @KSakamoto 3 роки тому +9

      How does that make sense? They found the body where the video ends. If he had to fight the current dragging to a drop off, it would’ve got him when he died.

  • @ChrisCoombes
    @ChrisCoombes 3 роки тому +273

    I’m sure by not flooding the camera the guy who recovered it saved lives.

    • @basselsolomon3749
      @basselsolomon3749 3 роки тому +23

      Yea, but you gotta imagine the price, his mother watching it over and over again. I think I would have considered smashing it right there in front of her, even if it made me seem evil at that very moment, even if it was not my right. It's just cruel that she has to keep that.

    • @ChrisCoombes
      @ChrisCoombes 3 роки тому +5

      @@basselsolomon3749 I think your view is maybe more compassionate than mine. Gives me something to think about.

    • @boyznthewoodz770
      @boyznthewoodz770 2 роки тому +15

      @@basselsolomon3749 ah yes, destroy history because it makes you sad

    • @kosmicsloth86
      @kosmicsloth86 2 роки тому +21

      @@ChrisCoombes harsh as it is, if that video saved even one life it is worth whatever sorrow the mother went through. it would be more cruel to trade a life for someones sense of comfort. It is the mothers right to have that if she wants, not someone elses right to take that from her.

    • @gamechanger8908
      @gamechanger8908 2 роки тому +2

      @@basselsolomon3749 Coincidentally the guy who recovered Yuri's camera considered doing the same and regretted showing it to her.

  • @monasabbat9733
    @monasabbat9733 Рік тому +10

    As a noob diver with only two short dives behind me, I watch these videos to learn that it's not all fun and games and if I want to continue (and I really do) I need to educate myself as much as possible. Thank you for this channel!

  • @bigshan5806
    @bigshan5806 3 роки тому +158

    Had a mates neighbour who was a dive master, and it was so interesting to talk 2 him. He was in charge of the gasses and the divers in the bell. To hear him speak about the training, experience and skills needed to dive those depths was insane. I'm srry this man died but, never go against professional advice ever.

    • @freelectron2029
      @freelectron2029 Рік тому

      lol thats not a dive master. thats a saturation LST. life support technician. two very different things my friend. ones a professional and the other one is a kid who knows next to nothing.

  • @KMTSports21
    @KMTSports21 3 роки тому +343

    The malfunction was that he tried to use the BC for lift before releasing his weights, so it was counterproductive. He couldn’t lift because his weights were holding him down. So I would definitely say he was either very confused, very panicked, or both.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +71

      I’ll go with both

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +32

      @@gil658 it appears to be the case

    • @persom017
      @persom017 3 роки тому +41

      if he did ditch the weights, he didn’t do it soon enough. once he noticed his equipment was malfunctioning, he needed to ditch the weights immediately

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +21

      @@persom017 agreed

    • @whitedragoness23
      @whitedragoness23 3 роки тому +14

      @@persom017 from the sounds of dive talk he was too narked to properly think clearly. He probably thought he did or try to ditch the weights but his mind was too cloudy that he couldn’t think straight. I think he tried to but was too confused and didn’t realize he was narked

  • @alexiane250
    @alexiane250 2 роки тому +264

    im just an open water (padi) diver and the deepest I've ever gone was 30m for a wreck. The way the colors fade, its hard imagining even wanting to be that far down, but I really appreciated how you talked about this. This was hard but I think helpful to watch

    • @BritneyStinson
      @BritneyStinson 2 роки тому +6

      yeah, im open water thru padi too. i prefer snorkling tbh, but if i dive, i usually dont go more than 6-7 meters. i enjoy the videos and much respect to those that go beyond

    • @olufemi42
      @olufemi42 2 роки тому +3

      I just signed up for padi open water! You reckon it’s pretty safe? Also can you see sea life at 30m? Just curious thanks

    • @YZFoFittie
      @YZFoFittie Рік тому +3

      @@olufemi42 100%, there's life at the deepest depths...

    • @ykwia1
      @ykwia1 Рік тому +6

      If you're a padi open water diver then you shouldnt have exceeded 18m... and when people go beyond their limits is when things go wrong

    • @ykwia1
      @ykwia1 Рік тому

      ​@olufemi42 there's plenty at 30m

  • @co.dconfidential5395
    @co.dconfidential5395 3 роки тому +141

    Don’t trust water, respect it.
    A single tank?! That was a death sentence from the very beginning. There is a reason that sunlight does not reach that far, it’s not meant for human life. I feel like my mom would have done the same. At least to figure out how here baby, that she brought into this world, left this world.

    • @jamesdoakes4956
      @jamesdoakes4956 3 роки тому +15

      Humans weren’t meant to go in the ocean at all. There’s a reason we evolved to land mammals

    • @Kai_soze
      @Kai_soze 3 роки тому +8

      Yup it’s all about respect. People die in the ocean because of disrespecting how unforgiving it can be. Why would he deny proper training and do this dive anyways. That’s an accident waiting to happen

    • @MurtagBY
      @MurtagBY 3 роки тому +1

      He would drown twice faster with 2 tanks

    • @SLCtica
      @SLCtica 3 роки тому +2

      I hear oxygen alone at those depths is toxic, and should have been mixed with other gases to avoid intoxication

    • @DeuceGenius
      @DeuceGenius 3 роки тому +3

      Well you don't have gills you have lungs. None of it is for humans we've been on land far too long to go back

  • @renaysari6631
    @renaysari6631 2 роки тому +57

    When he asked the dive expert to take him, and the expert refused, Yuri should have really thought twice. I can't believe Yuri was an instructor and didn't understand that he was literally diving to his death.

    • @WarPigstheHun
      @WarPigstheHun 2 місяці тому +1

      he was 21. That was when I was the most reckless in my life. It's around that age I think were people are the most reckless

  • @MegaFPVFlyer
    @MegaFPVFlyer Рік тому +85

    This is quite possibly the most distressing event I've ever researched. Somethig about the fact that he was simply trying to have a bit of fun and died in the dark, alone, and extremely intoxicated with no way out really gets to me. Rest in peace, Yuri.

    • @MegaFPVFlyer
      @MegaFPVFlyer Рік тому +4

      Diving is a lot like flying. You would never attempt to fly a quad engine passenger jet when you've only ever been trained on gliders. The dive Yuri tried to do is not inherently deadly if he had the right equipment and training.

    • @richardlouk1154
      @richardlouk1154 8 місяців тому

      It looks as if even the other divers r like what’s this idiot doing?

    • @richardlouk1154
      @richardlouk1154 8 місяців тому +2

      Everything this guy saying is true n I’m no diver or even snorkler only swimming for me I’m a land creature

  • @FlyfishermanMike
    @FlyfishermanMike 3 роки тому +58

    It's shocking how similar diving deep and climbing high are. Pushing limits, getting to the bottom/top with nothing left to get back, narcosis/hypoxia and the confusion and poor decision making it brings. So many sad stories from the depths and the peaks.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +4

      Very similar indeed.

  • @Dopey21597
    @Dopey21597 3 роки тому +208

    Imagine dying alone in pitch black deep sea just horrible my condolences to the family that’s harsh

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +20

      So sad and horrible for sure.

    • @the_socompsp
      @the_socompsp 3 роки тому

      its not a fun thing to experience

    • @PoochieCollins
      @PoochieCollins 3 роки тому +9

      @@the_socompsp : I, too, have died in a pitch black sea. I now roam the Earth undead...

  • @zerooath
    @zerooath 3 роки тому +161

    I wouldn't feel bad at all to discover the video. His mother not only wanted it but knows exactly how her son died. There is some closure in that believe it or not. She knows exactly what happened and how. There is no guess work, there is no worrying about what happened. She is now somewhat at peace about this death. RIP Yuri.

    • @PuffKitty
      @PuffKitty Рік тому

      Maybe because she was at his birth 🤔 I couldn't do it, though.

    • @sagemybrain6740
      @sagemybrain6740 Рік тому +9

      ​@@PuffKitty I don't think a mom could miss their kid's birth unless they're doofenshmirtz

    • @timmarinelli2962
      @timmarinelli2962 Рік тому

      My mom said hold her beer

    • @willatano1464
      @willatano1464 Рік тому +9

      You do not want your final memory of a loved one be them struggling and fighting for life. That shit will literally haunt you.

    • @Velereonics
      @Velereonics Рік тому +4

      Yeah instead the last thing you have is a video of watching your son frantically try to do anything to save himself as he loses consciousness and drowns. That's the last experience of his life and the last record of him you have.
      I would never get closure if I lose someone this way.

  • @JoeRyMi
    @JoeRyMi 3 роки тому +217

    I sometimes get panic attacks just sitting around at my house. Yeah, don’t think I’ll be trying diving.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +55

      Good to know your limits.

    • @LiberatedMind1
      @LiberatedMind1 3 роки тому +6

      Same, I suffer from bouts of anxiety and depression.

    • @TinaMarieItalianIce
      @TinaMarieItalianIce 3 роки тому +4

      Same!!

    • @canofsouls2917
      @canofsouls2917 3 роки тому +1

      @@LiberatedMind1 What does have to do with depression

    • @LiberatedMind1
      @LiberatedMind1 3 роки тому +8

      @@canofsouls2917 Depression and anxiety affect your ability to do highly involved tasks. I could also have a panic attack underwater.

  • @electronichq974
    @electronichq974 3 роки тому +86

    I have a habit of putting myself in other people's shoes a lot of the time, which isn't a bad thing until I watch things such as this. I can only imagine the absolute terror this man experienced as he sank toward the ocean floor and it makes me want to shed a tear. I just hope that after all the pain he felt that his last moments were painless and was able to come to terms with his fate. Rest in peace Yuri.

    • @HomoLegalMedic
      @HomoLegalMedic 2 роки тому +12

      If it's any use, or even closure, most people who drown tend to be unconscious after 2 mouthfuls of water.
      So his suffering would be around 30 seconds maximum, and hopefully the nitrogen narcosis made him so delirious that it somewhat numbed an aspect of his suffering.

  • @Vivie17
    @Vivie17 Рік тому +55

    All the insights really added perspective - about the labored breathing, the speed you could see he was descending at, the possible halocline and therefore the improper weighting… wow.

  • @lynneaiken1647
    @lynneaiken1647 3 роки тому +60

    Thank you for taking the time to explain what was happening as it was happening... This was so sad and hard to watch. Feel bad for the guy who told him twice, it's too dangerous, then had to retrieve this body. Just stupid on the part of anyone who tries to do this ill equipt and without all the proper training...rest in peace.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +8

      Agree with your comment. Tough to watch for sure.

  • @2stepsforward4stepsback
    @2stepsforward4stepsback 3 роки тому +61

    You can see the empathy on Woody's face. Great video dude. Thoughts go out to the family of Yuri

    • @Gunsandbunsmma
      @Gunsandbunsmma 11 місяців тому

      You can see the mannerisms of being high on crack cocaine for sure. Dude is tweeking

  • @fey6
    @fey6 11 місяців тому +4

    I'm not a diver myself, but I am glad this video is respectfully being used as a way to educate and warn other divers from meeting the same painful death. My condolence to Yuri, his mother, and his family.

  • @basselsolomon3749
    @basselsolomon3749 3 роки тому +100

    The blue hole is actually a safe diving site, relatively, according to most experienced divers like Tarek Omar. It's just that a lot of people visit it with hopes of crossing the Arch, and they have limited time in the country, so they rush it, and as in Yuri's case, being a diving instructor or having enough dives under your belt gives you a dose of overconfidence that can be lethal.
    He actually had a diving partner, I think when you said 'there are still divers within sight' or something like that while fast forwarding, there was one diver, and that was his partner, who by the way was definitely an irresponsible diver from around who agreed to partner up with him under the circumstances.
    He lost sight of him, and started dropping.
    I think one divemaster from an agency(H2O, I believe) there harshly named the top reason for death in the Blue Hole as 'stupidity', and as harsh as that sounds, as a new diver myself, I think it will keep ringing with me as I learn, to never be overconfident, never be stupid.
    The first time I watched this and read the story, it broke my heart that his mother would have that footage of him, and I'm certain she'll watch it again, she won't be able to help it. And empathizing with how it would feel to be at the bottom, all alone just gets you, though I hope being so narked made it painless for him.

    • @Mallemusen1000
      @Mallemusen1000 2 роки тому

      what if his death was planned to bring attention and money to this small arabic place in the middle of nowehere. Knowing it would go viral after they simply fetch the video after letting him sink. Purposely misguiding him. I dunno, this whole thing seems fishy

    • @theobvu
      @theobvu 2 роки тому

      @@Mallemusen1000 dude stfu accusing people he was advised not to dive there because he got no background the people didnt help him it was his own decision. stop being an idiot and do some research.

    • @jenelaina5665
      @jenelaina5665 Рік тому

      @@Mallemusen1000 it was already well known. Go to hell with this thinly veiled Islamaphobic take.

    • @mrjollyguy25
      @mrjollyguy25 Рік тому +6

      @@Mallemusen1000 ok.

    • @empresscarrie6230
      @empresscarrie6230 Рік тому

      if I was her I wouldn't be able to do anything but watch it religiously, just imagining myself in her shoes is just a thought that makes me cry instantly... it's so sad to think about it... the struggle at the end is someone who desperately needs someone else, and a proper mother always wants to be there for her child... I feel so horrible for her, not many people have footage of their child dying, for good reason. I'd never be able to get through it, I hope she's okay.

  • @vickyalberts6716
    @vickyalberts6716 3 роки тому +99

    I can understand why his mum wanted the footage. I would too. Not knowing would be even worse.

  • @kurtbilinski1723
    @kurtbilinski1723 2 роки тому +64

    I dove for a few years and the deepest I ever reached was 135 feet. What I noticed most was how loud the air was when inhaling. Down that deep (4.5 atm), the air is four times denser (and using it four times as fast). Hearing the loud hiss in this video told me he was getting pretty deep... and it's dark. I kept a close watch on both my air and depth, and only was there for maybe a minute. For me, all the interesting stuff to see is less than 50 feet (where there's better color), but I'm no pro.

    • @bshiesty_9917
      @bshiesty_9917 2 роки тому +4

      Correct me if I’m wrong here I’m not entirely sure but I am pretty sure that the reason why the air was so loud was because your regulator works extremely hard to take in that air

    • @GaellisDarling
      @GaellisDarling 9 місяців тому

      I’m a rec diver and I agree; I’ve been as deep as 137 ft. at the Blue Hole in Belize and I was definitely narced. I began to feel it and then got the giggles, so I immediately turned and headed back up. I know my thinking was impaired by that short time at depth because I almost swam into the propellers of the boat just below the surface without even realizing it. Thankfully my dive guide saw me, grabbed me and prevented a tragedy.

  • @Toffee_Trees
    @Toffee_Trees 3 роки тому +80

    Two things I will not do “recreationally” without training
    1. Spelunking
    2. Spelunking underwater

    • @_e5598
      @_e5598 3 роки тому +2

      Anything with water or snow should be treated that way

    • @teariet.tekken-wolffenn5881
      @teariet.tekken-wolffenn5881 3 роки тому +2

      Those are nope, nope, nope, super nope!

  • @dorian4534
    @dorian4534 3 роки тому +65

    Even to a layman, this was incredibly informative. Thank you for this analysis

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +6

      Thank you for watching!

  • @ainabexell8685
    @ainabexell8685 3 роки тому +31

    Found this in my recommendations and I am now subscribed. My parents always recount with horror their recreational diving experience in Thailand with a group and an instructor, how they were guided into some cave systems and the current threw them all against the walls and dragged them along... thank God they are still here today and no one died that day.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +7

      What an awful experience. Glad they were okay! Thank you for subscribing.

  • @HumorousHearsay
    @HumorousHearsay 2 роки тому +53

    I’m a dive instructor, recreational only, and the deepest I’ve ever gone is 110’. At that depth, even on nitrox, I only stayed around 5 min. because (although all dives are decompression dives) I don’t want to have to make a deco stop on my ascent. Also, I think a lot of divers don’t know the difference between a decompression stop and a safety stop. Anyway, Other than cave diving, I don’t understand why people want to go deeper? There’s absolutely nothing to see at that depth. Were on a wreck and that’s the only reason we dove that deep. I say all that, to say even if he could have began to ascend, he wouldn’t have enough air to make one deco stop, much less the 5 or 6 or maybe even more that would be required at that depth. His body was sucking nitrogen in like crazy at that depth and to rid the body of that, he would need several deco stops. His only option (if he could ascend) would be to go straight up and that would have killed him also! I just don’t understand people! I’ve been diving since 1990 and I still, to this day am very careful and have a dive plan the night before. I probably miss a lot of wildlife when diving because I’m constantly checking my computer to ensure I’m keeping within the limits of my dive. I believe a lot of divers feel after they’re certified in open water, the danger isn’t as bad/real. Diving is the most awesome/incredible thing I’ve ever done and I absolutely love it, but you have to keep how dangerous it can be in the back of your mind at all times. At least that’s my opinion…

    • @NotTheBomb
      @NotTheBomb 2 роки тому +6

      Sounds like diving is a lot like owning a firearm. It is more then perfectly safe and will never hurt you. So long as you follow the rules. I make this compression because it seems you really have to respect the water, and EVERY FOOT you descend. I’m a land lubber, so this is the only way I can relate :/

    • @Skyflarie
      @Skyflarie 2 роки тому +2

      @@NotTheBomb I really like this comparison! I'll have to use it more often

    • @HumorousHearsay
      @HumorousHearsay 2 роки тому

      @@billbrooke4355 that is a very good point!👍🏻

    • @HumorousHearsay
      @HumorousHearsay 2 роки тому +1

      @@NotTheBomb that’s a really great comparison!👍🏻

    • @HumorousHearsay
      @HumorousHearsay 2 роки тому

      @@billbrooke4355 that’s definitely (other than cave diving) a great reason to dive deep. I can’t imagine the skill level required to dive that deep! Also, I can’t imagine the level of trust you need to take others that deep with you! I imagine is was very exciting to see those two huge bits of history!

  • @jeskeepinitreal
    @jeskeepinitreal 3 роки тому +274

    10:11 Dog appears when dog senses person is feeling intensity and anxiety. Dogs are amazing. Your dog is good.

    • @Platinum_Tugboat
      @Platinum_Tugboat 3 роки тому +33

      at 18:09 too just from emulating the breaths like in the video. Doggo for sure thinks something is wrong. I love dogs man..

    • @82566
      @82566 3 роки тому +6

      This is why I love animals ❤

    • @Catenfur
      @Catenfur 3 роки тому

      Watching this I can see his jacket pulsing really fast with his heart beats.

  • @wiasnd4334
    @wiasnd4334 3 роки тому +173

    it’s so fucking hard to just even watch. i couldn’t imagine having to go through this. rip yuri.

    • @mrsx7944
      @mrsx7944 3 роки тому +9

      Made me very thankful for my couch and free air. Humans don't belong in the ocean. Just like fish don't belong in the open air.

    • @KSakamoto
      @KSakamoto 3 роки тому +1

      @@mrsx7944 all he had to do to prevent this was make good choices.

    • @FortisV
      @FortisV 2 роки тому

      @@mrsx7944 This is just like saying humans don't belong in the air when referring to planes. It's just anti progress

    • @brianjensen5661
      @brianjensen5661 2 роки тому +1

      He was warned but didn't listen.

    • @Hannah.g358
      @Hannah.g358 2 роки тому

      I'm shaking bro it's so sad...

  • @occultustactical6138
    @occultustactical6138 2 роки тому +13

    I’m an open water diver, although I haven’t dove in 25 years. I was told that N2 narcosis happens at a specific depth for each person. My dive master used to get narced at 80’. When we were doing our advanced open water and had to go to 120’ she, our diver master, would quickly swim through 80’ to get to a deeper depth avoiding the narcosis. You mention that he was narced at his depth, which makes sense to me. Being at 330+ feet is just nuts for a rec diver on air. Hell with mixed gas I would not even attempt that depth. He had no business being anywhere below 60’. Very sad story.

  • @thevalorousdong7675
    @thevalorousdong7675 3 роки тому +217

    You can feel the pressure on your chest in a backyard pool, I couldn't imagine the pressure at over 300 feet

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +124

      You don't feel the pressure when you are breathing underwater...I feel no different in a pool vs. 200 ft in the ocean...it's kind of cool!

    • @thevalorousdong7675
      @thevalorousdong7675 3 роки тому +34

      @@DIVETALK oh really? That is very interesting indeed haha.

    • @marcgeh5465
      @marcgeh5465 3 роки тому +78

      The pressure you feel in a pool is because with your head above the water you're breathing in air which has surface level pressure, while your chest is underwater, experiencing a higher pressure. The water is pressing against your chest forcing the air back out which makes it harder to breath and causes the feeling of a weight sitting on your chest. If you're diving you're breathing in air at the pressure of the depth you're at and that's why you don't feel a difference.

    • @thevalorousdong7675
      @thevalorousdong7675 3 роки тому +26

      @@marcgeh5465 ah ok man, thanks for fully explaining that

    • @squanchysquanch1840
      @squanchysquanch1840 3 роки тому +8

      @@marcgeh5465 freedivers breathe at the surface and can go down pretty far so pressure intensifies the further they go I would imagine?

  • @aannadangelo
    @aannadangelo 3 роки тому +49

    This video was terrifying the first time that I saw it, but watching a professional react to it made me completely scared stiff

  • @TheStrayCryptid
    @TheStrayCryptid 2 роки тому +14

    It is good to see footage like this. It grounds our perspective and helps us realize our own mortality when performing dangerous feats like this.

  • @rosekay5031
    @rosekay5031 3 роки тому +15

    This is the second time I’ve watched this video. The first time I didn’t understand a lot of your comments. Since then I’ve watched a lot of your videos and because of all the technical information you provide, I understand everything you’re talking about this time. I appreciate you sharing the wealth. Non-diver from Aus.

  • @E.Mulchi
    @E.Mulchi 3 роки тому +72

    I am so glad to see actual professional divers react to these sort of videos. Subscribed :)

  • @ctgeorgia
    @ctgeorgia Рік тому +13

    I dove the Blue Hole to 180 ft once on regular air.
    What I still don't understand is he had to have known immediately that he was in a full descent. Normally when in descent, you'd add additional air to your BCD to create neutral buoyancy. He never did this...unless there was a malfunction with his BCD. When that happens you have to drop your weight, camera gear, etc. but I think full panic set in on this guy and sadly he lost his life. Terrible tragedy.

  • @camtankerous
    @camtankerous 3 роки тому +26

    This was the first video i ever found from you guys after it was linked on a tumblr post. So glad i watched it and checked out your other videos, theyre all incredibly informative and have helped me get over my fear of diving to a degree. The podcast has also been great for commuting to and from work, and its given me something new to bond with my brother over. Thank you guys so much for putting all this amazing content out there!

  • @bugsfrickingbunny
    @bugsfrickingbunny 3 роки тому +73

    What was the saddest part was this was entirely preventable. And now this mans mother had to watch him die.

  • @SinArtavia
    @SinArtavia 2 роки тому +25

    From what I've read about it, he was attempting a "bounce dive" in which you see how quick you can descend and make it back up... Yuri and some of his diving circle would always try and one up each other.

    • @Ilovegrunge123
      @Ilovegrunge123 2 роки тому +6

      Reminds me of this guy from China who used to go on top of large buildings and do stunts withought a harness or any safety measures. Until he went to one but wasn't allowed on top of roof of the building so had to climb and when he did his trick where he hold on to the edge didn't have enough energy to climb himself back so fell to his death.

    • @Softlol
      @Softlol 2 дні тому

      @@Ilovegrunge123 also a big part was the structure was super slippery, his legs could do nothing. He did it because of a contest in order to win money, and as far as I can tell they enjoyed his risky content so he kept on doing it...

    • @Ilovegrunge123
      @Ilovegrunge123 2 дні тому

      @ I heard that he survived when he fell but no one was around to help him I can’t imagine the pain he was in.

    • @Softlol
      @Softlol 2 дні тому

      @@Ilovegrunge123 Wait, are we talking about the same guy? The video I saw was on a 100+ meter skyscraper or something. The guy must have just turned into a pulp on impact…
      I mean there are many videos of people doing stupid shit like this so.

  • @ellendaniels8715
    @ellendaniels8715 3 роки тому +143

    God the sounds he made while descending as it got harder and harder to breathe are disturbing. Condolences to the mom.

    • @weswoodworth4604
      @weswoodworth4604 3 роки тому +5

      My opinion is those sounds are him trying to equalize the pressure in his ears

    • @mothbelly333
      @mothbelly333 3 роки тому +2

      @@weswoodworth4604 i hope you’re right, otherwise those sounds are haunting

    • @leifeldby7177
      @leifeldby7177 3 роки тому +2

      Nothing to do with him trying to equalise he's trying inflate his BCD

    • @travisbryson6948
      @travisbryson6948 3 роки тому +2

      He was breathing panicked, but the sounds are him crying because he knew he was in trouble.

  • @lilguppy2
    @lilguppy2 3 роки тому +16

    Yay thank you so much for fulfilling my request and doing this reaction video! You guys are awesome! :-D

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +5

      Thank you for making a request!

  • @kaylinkinnison8237
    @kaylinkinnison8237 Рік тому +3

    I've never ever watched a diving video I know absolutely nothing about it but I swear I could listen to you talk about it all day long! 😂 You just have a very calm tone!

  • @2wittysue535
    @2wittysue535 3 роки тому +277

    I really hope when he was "narc" that he was not aware he was going to die and had found some kind of euphoria. I'm not a diver so I don't know the different gases involved in diving. Sad but very interesting.

    • @JohnJones-iq7uj
      @JohnJones-iq7uj 3 роки тому +88

      Judging by the amount of silt thrown around, and his reaction once he was on the bottom, not really. He was full panic, and during a dive, panic is your worst enemy. Sorry, but that’s just my observation.

    • @2wittysue535
      @2wittysue535 3 роки тому +75

      @@JohnJones-iq7uj your right, I just thought that being 'narc' would feel like being drunk or stoned but I'm sure there's not enough beers or weed in the world is going to distort the horror of drowning. Until I developed gills I'll not be diving anytime soon!. 👾🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @Sidiciousify
      @Sidiciousify 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah man prolly no.

    • @triple_gem_shining
      @triple_gem_shining 3 роки тому +6

      It's nitrogen poisoning. Must feel something like nitrous oxide at dentist

    • @andygirone7442
      @andygirone7442 3 роки тому +4

      I am no diver! I live in Wyoming the absolute furthest from any water I could be. But I do believe that he already knew he was screwed when he seen the slope (floor)at the bottom.

  • @zacknelson8918
    @zacknelson8918 3 роки тому +39

    If you look into his death, Mr ballen explains it very well, he wanted to dive the blue hole and the arch b4 he went back home but wasn't experienced enough and and the class to do it was going take to long and he asked many many instructors to help him and teach him but no one would in one day so he went alone, and had massive weight problems and was on regular air and missed the arch opening and just sank

    • @codykeane6107
      @codykeane6107 3 роки тому +6

      Yeah it's very sad. Unfortunately the man who recovered his body was the one that warned him not to do it multiple times. Omar has recovered 20+ bodies from people missing the arch, very sad. The spot is a deadly mix of circumstances, nowhere close to being one of the toughest spots in the world but that makes people think its attainable without the proper training.

    • @kingyonis5182
      @kingyonis5182 2 роки тому

      @@codykeane6107 where is the toughest in the world the blue whole had killed over 100 people

    • @poot-poot
      @poot-poot 2 роки тому +3

      @@kingyonis5182 It isn’t a difficult dive if you know what you’re doing. The arch and blue hole have decent visibility, it’s impossible to get lost like in underwater caves, and so long as you have the proper equipment and training swimming down through the arch and back up is fairly easy. What kills people isn’t that it’s a complicated tough dive, it’s that they are inexperienced with equally inexperienced fellow divers accompanying them, not trained, wrong equipment, too cocky, and ultimately just gross negligence with a false sense of confidence in their ability as divers. On top of all that the arch is deceptive in the sense that it seems a lot closer than it appears, and is a lot wider than it seems. It’s 30 meters long to swim through it, on top of having to first swim down to it and then back up after going through. With the equipment a lot of those lost divers are using they aren’t even supposed to be going deep enough to reach the arch, let alone go through it.

  • @jenniferlehman326
    @jenniferlehman326 2 роки тому +1

    My brother is a diver. Certified for sea and fresh water. But I know, if something happened, he would want his dive partner to bring him to the surface for his family. But he knows his limits. He would never dive beyond what he knows he can do. Thank you for sharing this video. Dive Safe. From a former Paramedic in Ontario, Canada, Jenn. 💖 🇨🇦

  • @spencrob
    @spencrob 3 роки тому +31

    I am so glad I have found this channel, the last couple days I have randomly become obsessed with free diving videos and scuba videos. It's very reassuring to hear an experienced diver give their take on these videos, as it stops me speculating. Keep up the good work and for goodness sake don't get yourself killed!

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому

      Thanks for the comment and the encouragement.

  • @mnnesotance7004
    @mnnesotance7004 3 роки тому +14

    Dude I love how your comments feel genuine. Not like comments your just trying to say to add more air time. The facts you stop to point out I feel are needed. Normal behavior vs normal behavior. What anomalies you find odd. It all feels imperative to the narrative the way you portray the facts or your opinions. It's very old school and it's a breath of fresh air on UA-cam. Your also a super pure hearted person from the couple videos I've seen. You really seem to respect the fact your watching videos of someone's loved one who had died. It seems so genuine that your not just reacting to these shocking videos just because they are shocking. It really does seem these videos could save lives. So these videos can stop other from making the same mistakes. Not only is it respectful but the video is informative

  • @corgisaan
    @corgisaan 2 роки тому

    Thank you for breaking down the video! I appreciate your input!

  • @aritomasviarsson7142
    @aritomasviarsson7142 3 роки тому +54

    That was so hard to watch, his breathing was scary.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +9

      I know. It was hard for me to even comment.

  • @isaaca9123
    @isaaca9123 3 роки тому +92

    This was a sad, but very educational video. I hope that good can come out of this by educating future divers of this location, thus saving many other lives in the process through avoidance and adequate precautions taken

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +9

      Thanks for the comment and the encouragement.

  • @greensofa3234
    @greensofa3234 2 роки тому +4

    it's the most respectful decision to give yuri's mother the closure no matter how painful and no matter how people think she shouldn't be seeing that.

  • @quinnyellstrom719
    @quinnyellstrom719 3 роки тому +32

    I've never been diving but this was very informative and easy to follow. Thank you for posting.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @watamatafoyu
    @watamatafoyu 3 роки тому +18

    It gives me chills imagining falling down there, realizing you can't get back up, and slowly realizing you're drowning and there's nothing you can do.

    • @diosantana2659
      @diosantana2659 3 роки тому

      Technically he didn’t fall lol

    • @Corey_Tenderson
      @Corey_Tenderson 2 роки тому +1

      @@diosantana2659 “lol”
      Ah yes, what a funny matter

  • @7SFAmerica
    @7SFAmerica 2 роки тому +5

    I remember seeing this footage a year or so back before I took my cert. Much like other posters before ; the struggle and his last breaths broke my heart.
    Stay safe down there people.

  • @anishelali8217
    @anishelali8217 3 роки тому +27

    Today i have dived to 40m (131ft) for the first time and experiened "light" (from my perspective) narcosis with eupheria and slow reactions, i had enough brain left to notice how dangerous in a situation i was even though i was with 4 instructors, diving deep is not worth it to me, i'd very much be much happier diving at shallower depths and enjoying myself, i won't ever accept to myself to dive any deeper than that ever without trimix, even though i today i have became a CMAS 3 star diver and wanting to become i trimix CCR deep diver, i have a long road to go. Stay safe know your limits and respect them.

  • @chuggon7595
    @chuggon7595 3 роки тому +34

    Best part about having a deathly fear of water is that I won't ever have a chance to die this way. R.I.P Yuri Lipsky!

    • @jaynekittycat9252
      @jaynekittycat9252 2 роки тому +2

      I would sooner stay on the surface. I have a fear of deep water.

    • @tgmidaz223
      @tgmidaz223 Рік тому +1

      @@jaynekittycat9252 same its a no go for me noooo way I'd be that deep

  • @nusak5879
    @nusak5879 2 роки тому +4

    The sound he lets out after looking at his computer and seeing the depth chills me. It's almost like a muffled "scream"

  • @skepskep6859
    @skepskep6859 3 роки тому +18

    I’m 18 I wannabe a saturation diver watch has scared me but also makes wants to keep learning and learning everything I need to know

  • @sloveniaisgoodcountry6511
    @sloveniaisgoodcountry6511 3 роки тому +8

    I was literally wishing for a channel like this the other day and what do you know here one is!

  • @MissNebulosity
    @MissNebulosity 2 роки тому +7

    Im not even a diver and this is hard to watch. I can't imagine having experience diving and knowing the intricacies of how much trouble he was in while watching this video. 😱😱😱

  • @Codoxnz
    @Codoxnz 3 роки тому +24

    Looking from the time he roughly went over the ledge, to the time he hit the to of the slope, around 89 meters (the computer read out when he first looks at it), it was around 1 minute and 15 seconds. Yuri was descending just over a meter per second. Yuri would then slide another 30 meters down the slope before coming to a rest by jamming himself into the slope of the sea bed floor. I wonder at what point was it that he knew he was in trouble?

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 Рік тому +2

      probably when he tried to slow down and his device malfunctioned. he even attempts to ditch his weighted belt to slow down but it's too late :(

  • @kathywedzik4905
    @kathywedzik4905 3 роки тому +18

    I'm also glad the film was not destroyed as this video is highly educational for divers especially to that dive. God bless.

  • @tomcal
    @tomcal 2 роки тому +5

    Not sure why I am watching hours worth of this channel when I have never been diving or even had any interest.. but here we are algorithm

    • @ctt7971
      @ctt7971 2 роки тому

      Me as well!

  • @Agridefense
    @Agridefense 3 роки тому +59

    Back when I was diving and doing my technical training my instructor let me get narcd to feel it. I had to keep telling myself to keep the reg in my mouth, it was a spooky feeling. I decided after that, that deep tech was not for me and went back to my airplanes.

    • @Coltensreefing
      @Coltensreefing 3 роки тому +5

      No way really so you just wanted to take it out naturally?

    • @saintslayer6041
      @saintslayer6041 3 роки тому +4

      @@Coltensreefing yes when that happens you take it out to try and breath but you end up just breathing in water and dying

    • @Agridefense
      @Agridefense 3 роки тому +14

      Yes I had this euphoric feeling, it was so very odd. Once we surfaced and my head cleared up you realize how out of it you really were.

    • @CaptainSlowbeard
      @CaptainSlowbeard 3 роки тому +11

      @@Coltensreefing my instructor told me about a dive where he realised that an experienced diver had suddenly and unexpectedly gone into narcosis - he saw him pull his reg out and was trying to offer it to some passing fish. He had to swim over and put his reg back in and pull him up a couple of meters, at which point the narcosis subsided. Scary stuff.

  • @halflife120
    @halflife120 3 роки тому +11

    Thank you for breaking down this scenario! I love it when you guys analyze videos like this. Your expert insight is so valuable.

    • @DIVETALK
      @DIVETALK  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you for watching!

  • @drizztdourden8636
    @drizztdourden8636 9 місяців тому

    I really appreciate the way you handle difficult topics like this sad story. You educate and help people understand how easy it is to make fatal mistakes when going past their limit. You seem like a kind soul and I love watching your videos. I am not a diver and never want to dive outside of aquariums (I love fish) but I still find your content informative and inspiring

  • @DaVeganZombie
    @DaVeganZombie 3 роки тому +44

    How unbelievably tragic. His mother watching turns this from an accident to utterly horrifying.
    What a sad end of nothing learned except more pain.
    I hope his mother is okay. I hope he rests well.

  • @classirox
    @classirox 3 роки тому +14

    I was watching videos on Mount Everest and suddenly I'm randomly recommended this video?? Got to love UA-cam!
    This was extremely interesting and informative for a layperson with no desire to dive 😂
    Can't wait to watch more videos! Thank you!

  • @annasstorybox7906
    @annasstorybox7906 2 роки тому +6

    Im not a diver. I only have very, very basic understanding of the physics behind diving... But my boyfriend dives as a hobby and the one thing that I remember from what he explained is that anything deeper than 30 meters requires special equipment, specifical training and both is significantly more expensive than what most recreational divers want to spend on their equipment. He has been on diving vacations in Egypt (marsa Alam) and without me trying to sound awful, from his experience a good number of Russian diving tourist tend to be reckless, inexperienced and they apparently seem to be not that well trained.

  • @trailofdebris
    @trailofdebris 3 роки тому +18

    i have asthma, i've had asthma attacks and the panic that fills you when you can't breathe is just, primal. his breathing is making me breathe weird as well, wow. i feel so, so sorry for the poor guy. if he was at all aware of what was happening, the fear he must have felt... fuck. poor dude.

    • @BbananaBbread
      @BbananaBbread 2 роки тому

      Can confirm

    • @WildWinterberry
      @WildWinterberry 2 роки тому +1

      Same. You can't explain it to people who have never had breathing problems. It's terrifying

  • @colmdoherty49
    @colmdoherty49 3 роки тому +14

    I think it’s called the arch as it is an arch leading out to sea, me and my buddy did it in the mid eighties, it was more difficult to access back then, buoyancy control and sticking to dive plan massively important

  • @NeilMalthus
    @NeilMalthus 2 роки тому +8

    I got my openwater license in Bali. It was amazing going along a reef along a wreck and then on the other side there was a 'bottomless' drop. All the money in the world wouldn't have seen me want to swim out over an area where I couldn't see the bottom.