Upwellings and Downwellings:
How to Get Out of Trouble in Vertical Currents

by Doc Vikingo
This article first apperaed in the February 2001 issue of Undercurrent

Riding along in a current is a great diving thrill, but when it suddenly
yanks you upward or downward, the thrill can become frightening and sometimes
tragic. In the summer of 1998, dangerous currents near Columbia’s Malpelo
Island trapped many divers in a blow hole for several days, with injuries ranging
from broken ribs to an eyeball torn from its socket. Seven recreational
divers off New Zealand’s coast were unexpectedly pulled to nearly 300 feet last
March. Three died. Last September we reported about six divers in Cozumel who
required treatment for both Type I and Type II DCS after being tossed about
by violent vertical currents on the Santa Rosa Wall. How you react is a matter
of life or death.

Oceans move constantly, with currents coursing through them like giant
rivers. Currents are the result of winds, tides and thermally unstable water
columns, which enter rivers and seismic events, often in various combinations.
Most currents run horizontally to the earth’s surface, but especially dangerous
ones run vertically, toward the bottom or toward the surface.

Such currents are often found when a horizontal current strikes the face of
a wall and then moves down, up, or both. Downcurrents can also appear when a
horizontal current runs perpendicular to a drop off, or where two opposing
currents run into or over each other. Marked differences in water temperature
and salinity in the water column can also produce vertical currents, but these
are generally sluggish and pose no threat to divers.

A downwelling can unexpectedly pull a diver deeper than his dive plan. It
may happen so gradually, he may not notice it. Sometimes, however, the current
will rapidly drive the diver deeper, occasionally much deeper. In Tobago
several years ago, the current yanked a nearby diver from 20 feet to 85 feet in
the blink of an eye.

While most divers fear downcurrents more than upcurrents, keep in mind that
a downcurrent will eventually release you, sometimes surprisingly quickly,
without taking you below recreational limits. If you have air, equalize quickly
enough and don’t panic, you can probably ride it out uneventfully. A violent
upcurrent, however, causes a diver to ascend far too rapidly, perhaps
missing a safety stop if not planned, and precipitating DCS. Additionally, if
surprise at the sudden ride upward results in breath-holding, an embolism is
possible.

Unless you are properly trained, physically fit, and intentionally seeking
out the challenges of strong vertical currents, it is best to avoid areas
where they are known to be fierce. Divemasters and guides should be aware of
problem sites, and will avoid or at least advise the diver about them. Of course,
vertical currents aren’t always predictable. There may be surface
manifestations, like circumscribed areas of water showing varying patterns of wave
frequency, height and direction interspersed with eerie mirror smooth areas, but
don’t count on this. Often surface conditions tell the diver nothing about
currents at depth.

If caught in a vertical current, what should you do? One strategy is to swim
out from the wall immediately, drop off or any other apparent source of the
current. Vigorously fin away, but do not exhaust yourself. It’s helpful to
orient yourself to bubbles or the direction and angle of any fish you observe.
As reader Barry Lipman (Brookfield, CT) observed last year aboard the
Galapagos Aggressor, “currents ranged from nothing to three or four knots.
Sometimes
your bubbles would leave you traveling up at a ten-degree angle; sometimes
you’d watch as your bubbles travel down into the depths.” Many divers,
however, do not have time to appreciate such details.

If you’re caught in an upcurrent, swim away and down. For a downcurrent,
swim away and upwards. It is best if you can make adequate upward progress
without BC inflation, as this both provides more surface area for the current to
push against and raises the risk of a poorly controlled ascent once you are
released. However, you may choose to inflate if rapidly descending or lacking
adequate gas to ride out a downwelling that does not show rapid signs of
weakening.

Do monitor depth and keep a hand on the deflator valve as you must avoid
shooting to the surface when the current relents. Consequently, it is also best
not to release your weights if possible, but again this may be necessary. In
any vertical current, remember to breathe normally.

Reader Josef D. Prall (Carrollton, TX), aboard the Baruna Adventurer in
Indonesia last year, says, “I was swept off a reef down and into the blue for a
few minutes before I decided to end the dive at 95 feet after eight minutes
including five minutes hang time. A beginner could easily panic when he finds
himself being swept down in a current and drop weights when the appropriate
response is to add air to the BC first, and then dump judiciously to control
the ascent. Or maybe even drop weights one-at-a-time.”

An alternate strategy if you’re near something graspable, is to fin to it,
grab on and pull yourself in the desired direction until you are free. (We get
reports of autocratic divemasters grounding divers for grabbing coral in
stiff currents — don’t let them intimidate you.)

Whichever method you employ, use surge to your advantage. When it propels
you in the desired direction, go with it; conserve your energy when it is
working against you. While sudden vertical currents are anxiety provoking, you can
frequently negotiate them. As in other stressful scuba situations, remain
calm and take rational problem solving action.

One final note: Cozumel is notorious for its vertical currents. While the
diving there is exciting, it can often be intimidating for beginners or those
who lack confidence in their skills. Reader Pat Wikstrom (Warne, N.C.), in
Cozumel last year, wrote: “On a dive at La Francesca Wall, we jumped into a
ripping current that quickly broke our group into three separate pieces. Weird
downcurrents caused my wife and me to abort the dive. Nevertheless, the poor DM
chased the other two sections of our party all over the wall, brought up half
the others after ten minutes, and went back down to find the last few folks
and get them back safely. He really earned his tip that day.”

© Doc Vikingo 2003
Reprinted by permission of
Undercurrent

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