Author Topic: Compulsive viewing  (Read 88881 times)

Offline Bubba Ho-Tep

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #180 on: December 28, 2021, 12:57:57 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.

Offline silverbullet

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #181 on: December 28, 2021, 02:39:55 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.
Watched this a few weeks back:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8999972/


Offline Bubba Ho-Tep

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #182 on: December 28, 2021, 06:38:04 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.
Watched this a few weeks back:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8999972/
I remember that . One of the guys in Thailand rescue team dived with this lad here in Ireland.  IIRC, Staunton and Warny were part of the recovery team.

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/tributes-paid-to-cave-diver-as-body-found-1.592264

Offline silverbullet

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #183 on: December 28, 2021, 06:50:12 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.
Watched this a few weeks back:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8999972/
I remember that . One of the guys in Thailand rescue team dived with this lad here in Ireland.  IIRC, Staunton and Warny were part of the recovery team.

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/tributes-paid-to-cave-diver-as-body-found-1.592264
The guy Dave had recently created a world record, recovering the body of Deon Dreyer was a good excuse to beat that record.

Offline Bubba Ho-Tep

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #184 on: December 28, 2021, 07:37:18 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.
Watched this a few weeks back:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8999972/
I remember that . One of the guys in Thailand rescue team dived with this lad here in Ireland.  IIRC, Staunton and Warny were part of the recovery team.

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/tributes-paid-to-cave-diver-as-body-found-1.592264
The guy Dave had recently created a world record, recovering the body of Deon Dreyer was a good excuse to beat that record.
Dave Shaw died on the body recovery dive IIRC.

Offline silverbullet

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #185 on: December 29, 2021, 06:02:34 pm »
The Rescue on Disney + about the Thai cave rescue. Rick Staunton and John Volanthen actually take part in the documentary. These two avoid TV cameras like the plague. Top cavers, did a few body recoveries in Irish caves.
I remember following that story very closely Bubba and talking to folk in the cab about it by night, and it was you giving us (the forum) the inside goss about diving and me passing it on to my customers and they almost salivating listening to your/my quotes.
Good result in the end with the 15 young lads all getting out, just a pity that 2 of the divers didn't make it.(R.I.P.)

The documentary is a must watch. The 2 lads thought it was hopeless at one point and were going home. Volanthen holds his hand up for that decision in the doc. Interviews with Yanks and Thais endorse the skill set the Brit team brought to the rescue.
Watched this a few weeks back:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8999972/
I remember that . One of the guys in Thailand rescue team dived with this lad here in Ireland.  IIRC, Staunton and Warny were part of the recovery team.

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/tributes-paid-to-cave-diver-as-body-found-1.592264
The guy Dave had recently created a world record, recovering the body of Deon Dreyer was a good excuse to beat that record.
Dave Shaw died on the body recovery dive IIRC.
Yep, hence the film title.
I found this article:
He dies trying to retrieve long-lost body
STEPHANIE NOLENLATIN AMERICA BUREAU CHIEF
JOHANNESBURG
PUBLISHED JANUARY 14, 2005

An extreme-diving tale that has riveted South Africa for days ended with a ghostly coda on Wednesday, when a weird mix of fluke and physics brought the bodies of two divers, believed lost forever, floating up from the bottom of one of the world's deepest freshwater caves.

Dave Shaw, an Australian airline pilot who held world deep-diving records, made a carefully planned descent last Saturday to Boesmansgat cave in the Northern Cape.

His goal was to retrieve the body of Deon Dreyer, who had died in the cave 10 years ago at the age of 20.

But in a twist that stunned the deep-diving enthusiasts watching the event, the 50-year-old Mr. Shaw, one of the best technical divers in the world, ran into trouble.

The five minutes he was meant to spend at the bottom of the cave, at 271 metres, elapsed with no sign of him. The sixth emergency minute ticked by.

Then his backup diver, Don Shirley, shot up, already violently ill with decompression sickness, with a dive slate bearing the words "Dave's not coming back."

Mr. Dreyer's family had been waiting at the water's edge with their minister, planning a few quiet minutes with their son's skeletal remains, but instead the scene was suddenly one of panic and horror.

It soon became clear that Mr. Shaw had perished at the bottom of the cave, the third deepest freshwater cave in the world.

He had been emphatic, though, saying that if anything was to happen to him on the dive, no attempt was to be made to bring his body up.

"If something goes wrong, leave me down there," Mr. Shaw is reported to have told his dive buddies shortly before starting Saturday's descent.

And so it fell to his friends to call his wife in Hong Kong and two children in Australia to tell them he would not be coming back.

Deon Dreyer sank to the bottom of the cave when he lost consciousness during a dive there in 1994. Mr. Shaw found Mr. Dreyer's body on Oct. 28, totally by chance, when his flashlight caught a glimmer of gear in the pitch-black cave. Mr. Shaw was near the bottom of the 282-metre-deep Boesmansgat, in a successful attempt to set a depth record at 271 metres.

It took him about 25 minutes to get to the bottom, and more than five hours to get back up. Divers must make the ascent slowly to avoid potentially fatal decompression sickness.

Within minutes of getting out of the water, though, Mr. Shaw was on the phone to Mr. Dreyer's parents, whom he had never met, pledging to retrieve their son's body for them.

"I'm doing this now so that the family can get on with their lives," he said a few days before last week's ill-fated dive.

Elaborate preparations were made for the dive, with dress rehearsals and with cylinders of oxygen stationed all along the route. Mr. Shaw was to arrive at Mr. Dreyer's body at 263 metres, roll a body bag onto the lower half, then cut the skeleton free of the diving gear, pull the rest of the bag over the body, and begin to haul it up to the 220-metre mark for handover to Mr. Shirley.

Mr. Shirley knew something was wrong when Mr. Shaw did not return to the 220-metre mark after a maximum six minutes, as planned. He risked his life to go down to 250 metres but could see no sign of Mr. Shaw, for whom he was "Robin to his Batman."

He had to turn back when his breathing apparatus started to fail. He began to vomit and was overcome by dizziness on his ascent, but is expected to make a full recovery.

At that point, Mr. Dreyer's family accepted that their son's body would never be recovered.

But on Wednesday afternoon, surviving members of Mr. Shaw's technical diving team (those who are spaced out along a deep-dive route to support the deep diver) went back to the cave for the grim task of retrieving equipment, such as extra diving cylinders, that had been left behind when Saturday's dive went so badly awry.

Petrus Roux and Peter Herbst went down to 100 metres and tied an inflatable buoy to the main line running up from the cave bottom. (Mr. Shaw had tied the cave line to Mr. Dreyer's body last year, with the intention of one day returning to retrieve it.) It appears that Mr. Shaw's body was entangled with the main line, and as the buoy pulled it up, the oxygen in his body expanded, making him lighter and drawing him up until his body was wedged against the underwater roof of the cave. It was eventually retrieved at 36 metres.

In a bizarre twist, Mr. Dreyer's body, meanwhile, was pulled up by the force of all this expanding oxygen, and was retrieved dangling a few metres below Mr. Shaw's.

When Mr. Herbst surfaced with the gear, police divers assisting him said they had been trying to attract his attention with lights, because they could see the bodies rising up behind him as he ascended. He and Mr. Roux then descended again to bring the bodies of the two men up.

Dive team members said a recovered video camera, worn by Mr. Shaw, showed him running into trouble, possibly getting tangled in the line.

"On the tape you can hear Dave breathing. Harder and harder and harder. Then there's silence," Mr. Herbst told the Johannesburg Star moments after leaving the cave for the final time.

"It's much too soon to say exactly what went wrong, but, from the bit of footage I've just seen, it appears that Dave was working too hard.

"At first it looks like everything was going fine. He'd got to the body and he was working [but]it looks as if he ran out of time. It looks like he tried to give up and get out, but he got entangled in the cave line. He kept trying to cut the line, but he couldn't. He was breathing faster and faster."

Deep cave diving lures its fans with what some describe as "velvet blackness." Unlike ocean diving, there is total silence, stillness and engulfing darkness. The deepest inland cave in the world is in Mexico, followed by one in France.

On Saturday, Mr. Herbst told reporters that "as long as there are deep holes, there will be people like us who want to explore them. . . . Dave was drawn to the adventure aspect of diving. Like other crazy people who dive, he wanted to go where other people haven't been before. Dave died with his boots on."


Offline Bubba Ho-Tep

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #186 on: December 29, 2021, 06:34:48 pm »
Sloppy reporting, oxygen in his body expanded,  it was most likely his drysuit and or rebreather counterlungs that inflated by the decrease in water pressure.
It appears that Mr. Shaw's body was entangled with the main line, and as the buoy pulled it up, the oxygen in his body expanded, making him lighter and drawing him up until his body was wedged against the underwater roof of the cave. It was eventually retrieved at 36 metres.

Offline Cool Boola

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #187 on: December 30, 2021, 02:40:39 am »
On another bright note…..I am still watching Dopesick…Opium type-pain killers that the Pharmas lied about…………..again
Dis an Dat Im not a rat

Offline silverbullet

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #188 on: December 30, 2021, 02:00:46 pm »
On another bright note…..I am still watching Dopesick…Opium type-pain killers that the Pharmas lied about…………..again
Anyone taking those painkillers for too long is an OXY-moron. 8)

Offline Belker

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #189 on: February 04, 2022, 09:47:34 am »
I watched the Tinder Swindler on Netflix yesterday and couldn't help but to think of a young Octy all the time !

Online Rat Catcher

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #190 on: February 04, 2022, 03:48:28 pm »
Senior World Darts Championship... all weekend live on Virgin Media 3 (TV tree tree), BBC Red Button and BT Sport.
If it doesn't have a roof sign and door stickers it's not a taxi.

Offline Cool Boola

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #191 on: February 06, 2022, 11:38:16 am »
Its a load of bull but still a good standard…..id say
Dis an Dat Im not a rat

Offline Lizzzy

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #192 on: February 06, 2022, 12:18:17 pm »
Can't have zombie movies anymore,just too many of 'em knocking around,best one I saw was World War Z.

A great show.

Offline Lizzzy

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #193 on: February 06, 2022, 12:23:57 pm »
The Power of the Dog.  All-star cast but Benedict Cumberbatch is meant to be esp good.  Haven't seen it myself yet.


Quote
A domineering, magnetic rancher responds with mocking cruelty when his brother brings home a new wife and her son, until the unexpected comes to pass.

Call me old fashioned but once I saw his cock I turned it off.

Offline Shallow Hal

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Re: Compulsive viewing
« Reply #194 on: February 06, 2022, 12:42:46 pm »
The Power of the Dog.  All-star cast but Benedict Cumberbatch is meant to be esp good.  Haven't seen it myself yet.


Quote
A domineering, magnetic rancher responds with mocking cruelty when his brother brings home a new wife and her son, until the unexpected comes to pass.

Call me old fashioned but once I saw his cock I turned it off.

Homophobe!!

 


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