When I was a young fella (17-18 yrs) I would frequently samba when not breathing up properly and peeling off repetitive 90-100 ft dives.... it wasn't until I hit my twenties, and had a full shallow water blackout diving for pearl shell at around 140 ft that I finally learnt my lesson not to push it... nowadays I am much more careful and always dive well within my range - and ALWAYS with a buddy! Cheers and thanks for sharing.
Awesome session man, glad you are all ok. I don’t dive anywhere near your depth & only been diving coupe years but had a big scare myself about 6 months ago. Not what happened here but thought I’d share. Lost a gun on the bottom in about 13-14m (5m vis) went down to try find it and couldn’t find it at first after being down there for a good amount of time , end of my breath hold I spot it… this moment I should of just gone back to surface but I pushed an extra couple metres and went and unjammed the gun from beneath a rock and headed for the surface. About half way up I was basically no breath left, pannick set in, body even started to weaken a little bit . Was worried I wasn’t going to make it at one point . I fortunately made it to surface and jumped back in the boat for the day. Really shook me up and took a few dives in trips to come to be able to relax again. Lesson learnt to stay within my limits for sure…
Yeah mate for sure, always helps with a couple mates around too, It’s bloody hard in bad vis but atleast they can give you a hand searching while you breath up again.
20-30m isnt shallow regardless of how deep other people can dive, also gotta remember the more you do it through the day the harder it gets. Finally hyperventialtion pushes back the urge to breathe, if you are unconciously hyperventilating in your breath up you may feel fine on a dive that is pushing your limit.
@Cainit - I just stumbled onto your dive videos and are loving them. I have a question though - looking at your Aimrite - you seem to have your reel line wrap around the handle - whats the logic there?
Good stuff mate, good to share & learn from it. I noticed a few bubbles coming out of, I'm assuming your mask on the way up. You can inhale all that air through your nose as it expands again on the ascent, gives you that little bit more oxygen and can be just enough to stop a samba if you're on the edge. Takes a bit to get used to and especially if you have a bit of water in your mask but definitely worth practising. Stay safe!
That was brilliant mate loved it.be careful as my dad was a spearfishing champion in new Caledonia. Thousands of competitions and in the water spearfishing every second day of the week. He speard a big Spanish mackerel it pulled off got back on the boat spewed up a heap of blood his eyes rolled back and he died within minutes. Age 41.
Good to hear your ok and even better to see you were sensible enough to call it a day after that, too many times people have pushed on and paid the price. Ended up with an awesome bag as well ✌
Sucks to hear mate , but a good thing to talk about to keep everyone aware and remind everyone about buddy diving and to get an eye out for mates in the water 🤙🏾
Just drives home the point, never go alone and watch your buddy. Glad it was only a close call. Pulled up and revived my share of floaters as a clubby, lost a couple on the beach too though. Seen it all from panic attacks to full blow heart attacks even a secondary drowning. It's no joke. People die in the water every day, and they're not all clueless mongs who should have stayed on the beach.
I came up from a dive after collecting my spear which got stuck in coral at about 20m, I felt fine, but my mates got real concerned because I was bleeding from my nose. I didn’t dive again that day.
Went spearfishing once and I lined up on an awesome tuna at 25 meters...I was just about to pull the trigger and realized I left my speargun in the boat.....
This past weekend diving in Hong Kong I lost a monster red snapper of around 10-12kg. The big boy broke my spear line running into his caves. Great to see you guys land your snappers.
Not a good feeling man. Had to do a resus on a mate a few months ago that fully blacked out with the fish that he shot wrapped around him. Scared the shit out of the both of us. Only lasted about 20 seconds but felt like 5 minutes at the time.
I blame the freediving courses giving people the idea they can tell how long and deep they can handle in the sea - nobody can tell, don't have a clue and nobody know their limits in the sea on a spearfishing trip. The sea and macho competitive BS don't mix. Glad to hear you are OK.
When I was a young fella (17-18 yrs) I would frequently samba when not breathing up properly and peeling off repetitive 90-100 ft dives.... it wasn't until I hit my twenties, and had a full shallow water blackout diving for pearl shell at around 140 ft that I finally learnt my lesson not to push it... nowadays I am much more careful and always dive well within my range - and ALWAYS with a buddy! Cheers and thanks for sharing.
Awesome session man, glad you are all ok. I don’t dive anywhere near your depth & only been diving coupe years but had a big scare myself about 6 months ago. Not what happened here but thought I’d share. Lost a gun on the bottom in about 13-14m (5m vis) went down to try find it and couldn’t find it at first after being down there for a good amount of time , end of my breath hold I spot it… this moment I should of just gone back to surface but I pushed an extra couple metres and went and unjammed the gun from beneath a rock and headed for the surface. About half way up I was basically no breath left, pannick set in, body even started to weaken a little bit . Was worried I wasn’t going to make it at one point . I fortunately made it to surface and jumped back in the boat for the day. Really shook me up and took a few dives in trips to come to be able to relax again. Lesson learnt to stay within my limits for sure…
Yeah mate for sure, always helps with a couple mates around too, It’s bloody hard in bad vis but atleast they can give you a hand searching while you breath up again.
Two mates watching ya and pulling up for the day after it. Can’t get safer than that, well done mate. Good to go for another day
Cheers mate. Thanks for watching.
I had a near blackout and my friend had a classic shallow water blackout. It's always in the back of my mind -especially when we go to deep spots.
Awesome stuff mate! Nice support, great mates.
I just found your channel and I’m only a beginner at spearfishing!! I love that you ID the fishes. Thank you for that! And dive safe always!! 💙
Thanks for watching mate.🤙🏾
20-30m isnt shallow regardless of how deep other people can dive, also gotta remember the more you do it through the day the harder it gets. Finally hyperventialtion pushes back the urge to breathe, if you are unconciously hyperventilating in your breath up you may feel fine on a dive that is pushing your limit.
@Cainit - I just stumbled onto your dive videos and are loving them. I have a question though - looking at your Aimrite - you seem to have your reel line wrap around the handle - whats the logic there?
Good stuff mate, good to share & learn from it. I noticed a few bubbles coming out of, I'm assuming your mask on the way up. You can inhale all that air through your nose as it expands again on the ascent, gives you that little bit more oxygen and can be just enough to stop a samba if you're on the edge. Takes a bit to get used to and especially if you have a bit of water in your mask but definitely worth practising. Stay safe!
Cheers mate, that’s great to know. Appreciate it. I’ll have to give it a try next time and remember hook breaths.😂😂🤦🏼♂️
That was brilliant mate loved it.be careful as my dad was a spearfishing champion in new Caledonia. Thousands of competitions and in the water spearfishing every second day of the week. He speard a big Spanish mackerel it pulled off got back on the boat spewed up a heap of blood his eyes rolled back and he died within minutes. Age 41.
Sad to hear mate, doing something he loved tho.
Good to hear your ok and even better to see you were sensible enough to call it a day after that, too many times people have pushed on and paid the price. Ended up with an awesome bag as well ✌
Thats bloody awesome bro I love to be able to dive like that. Love seeing this stuff
Thanks for watching mate.
I love fishing my friend thanks for sharing your video support from Puerto Princesa Palawan Philippine 💖💖💖🐟
The scariest stuff happens when you are most relaxed in diving. Glad you had mates around and it was all ok.
Great vid, glad you are ok and had mates nearby as well. Hopefully this will help save someone from a bad outcome one day.
Sucks to hear mate , but a good thing to talk about to keep everyone aware and remind everyone about buddy diving and to get an eye out for mates in the water 🤙🏾
Just drives home the point, never go alone and watch your buddy. Glad it was only a close call. Pulled up and revived my share of floaters as a clubby, lost a couple on the beach too though. Seen it all from panic attacks to full blow heart attacks even a secondary drowning. It's no joke. People die in the water every day, and they're not all clueless mongs who should have stayed on the beach.
Happens all to easy.
I came up from a dive after collecting my spear which got stuck in coral at about 20m, I felt fine, but my mates got real concerned because I was bleeding from my nose. I didn’t dive again that day.
Either a sinus issue or you just got a nose bleed coincidentally. Usually you would feel some pressure/pain in your sinuses though.
It was a sinus issue, I definitely felt the pressure but didn’t realise it was that bad.
@@erinjuniorteague-suradi3196 not worth pushing through any pressure or pain with ears and sinuses, can always dive another day.
@@spearo16 It definitely wasn’t the best choice I made, I know better now though.
Went spearfishing once and I lined up on an awesome tuna at 25 meters...I was just about to pull the trigger and realized I left my speargun in the boat.....
Epic vid. Gotta love diving in blue water like that. Pretty scary for that to happen to you, glad your okay mate 🙏
This past weekend diving in Hong Kong I lost a monster red snapper of around 10-12kg. The big boy broke my spear line running into his caves. Great to see you guys land your snappers.
We call them mangrove jack over here, we get some large snapper types aswell but usually a bit deeper. We lose a few also don’t worry.😂🤙🏾
Hey cainit, what size aimrite roller do you use mate? I’m thinking about getting one,
Mines a old 110 mate, it’s a bit of a modified Aimrite now, but they’re super nice guns.
@@CAINIT nice mate, that little scare mustn’t have been to pleasant wither
Bit of a wake up call, we always watch each other when we go a little deeper than we normally do. Just showed how easy it could go wrong.
Thanks a lot for awesome videos!!!
Was it a near shallow water black out?
Thanks mate, yes an LMC is getting close. Still a bit to go but.
Awesome content mate, thanks for sharing 👍
Thanks for watching mate.. 🤙🏾
Thanks for sharin g
Avoid GT for reb bas. Good choice
I suffer from hearing loss due tu frequent diving before also often occured bleeding in my nose do be careful..
Is your reel dont have a guideline for dynema?
Nah it doesn’t
Bit of a scary moment there! Nice boat mate what is it?
Yeah good wake up call for us all. It’s a Jenkscraft 25 mate. 🤙🏾
@@CAINIT Haven’t had this experience myself but definitely hits home that you should never dive alone
🤙🤙🤙🤙😍😍
Nice master, from in Indonesia🇮🇩 😇🙏
Not a good feeling man. Had to do a resus on a mate a few months ago that fully blacked out with the fish that he shot wrapped around him. Scared the shit out of the both of us. Only lasted about 20 seconds but felt like 5 minutes at the time.
Shit that’s unlucky, hopefully he was all good.
Bloody good reality check tho. Guess it’s time to start some freediving training. 😂
That targa top 🤌😍
Yeah the bloke did an awesome job on it for me. It’s mint.
I blame the freediving courses giving people the idea they can tell how long and deep they can handle in the sea - nobody can tell, don't have a clue and nobody know their limits in the sea on a spearfishing trip. The sea and macho competitive BS don't mix. Glad to hear you are OK.