I was
absolutely gutted (to say the least) when I was unable to attend EUROTEK 2010 due to being stuck in a desert with my day job so when EUROTEK 2012 came along I knew I had to go.
EUROTEK is Europe’s largest technical diving conference. It is an event where the world’s leading explorers, cameramen, scientists and manufacturers can get together and talk about what’s happening in the ever expanding work of technical diving. Organised by Leigh Bishop, Mark Dixon, Rosemary E Lunn and Crispin Brake* it is regarded as being one of the best diving events in the world.
* Unfortunately
Crispin Brake died after he failed to surface from a dive in July earlier this
year whilst diving the wreck of the Arala.
2012 was the third such conference (following on from 2008 and 2010) and was held on Saturday 13th and Sunday 14th October at Birmingham’s ICC. Delegates could purchase an individual day pass or a weekend pass (plus the Gala Dinner) however unlike the Dive Shows, no presentation was repeated. Criticisms have been made over previous years EUROTEKs as there’s too many good presentations; you simply can’t see them all, and by looking at the program this years proved no different (4 halls and 7 slots per day). Leigh Bishop did comment on this in his opening address by suggesting the conference could be run over 3 days or by having fewer speakers however it wouldn’t be EUROTEK if it was.
Below I will try to
sum up the show by trying to explain the presentations I visited.
Day 1
I arrived nice and
early at 0830 to have a quick look around the stands. To name a few (from memory) there was Deep-Ideas, TekLine, Narked at 90 (2010 EUROTEK technical innovation award), Silent Thrill, Apeks, JJ-CCR, RAID, PADI TECREC, TDI, SF2 CCR, Light Monkey, Kent Tooling, Otter Drysuits (2010 EUROTEK special award for
outstanding contribution to the Industry), Miflex Hoses, SSI, Suex, Underwater Explorers, IANTD (UK), Hollis, VR Technologies, Santi, rEvo Rebreathers, Fourth Element (2012 EUROTEK outstanding
contribution to the diving industry awardwinners), Green Force, CDG, MR Diving, and Ambient Pressure Diving (2008 EUROTEK technical innovation award). I know I’ve missed
a few out; apologies to those I have.
I quickly found Stephen Phillips and Mark Powell from TDI and dropped off my bag. Between lectures and window shopping this is where I would be found.
2012 EUROTEK lifetime achievement award winner, author of aquaCorps
and the man who penned the term “Technical Diving” Michael Menduno delivered the first
of a 2 part presentation on the history of the sport.
This presentation was
trying to establish if CCR divers are more prone to incidents than OC divers,
and also which CCR, or type of CCR (manual or electric) is more prone than
others. Surprisingly, or not, the
statistics (although Dr Fock acknowledges that
not all incident data was present) show the percentages between divers trained
and incidents are similar.
2012 EUROTEK diver of the conference award winner delivered an amazing
presentation on the discovery of Mars the Magnificent. This is the type of project
that one can only dream of being involved in.
When listening to Richard talk everyone in the audience was amazed at what has been
achieved. The interest generated in his
own country was so vast, within 2 hours of finding the wreck it was protected
by law and the King of Sweden popped by for a visit. We knew the wreck was large, the dimensions
alone proved it. One of the things that
took the audience by surprise is when he showed a photo of 2 emergency
cylinders clipped to a line, and then zoomed out everyone was stunned. A collage of 650+ photos which if printed would
be 15ft wide! I truly look forward to
seeing how this project develops.
This presentation was
primarily about 3D filming however I went in to see the caves. In 3D it was truly stunning. Seeing a diver actually pop out of the screen
and swim towards you. Amazing.
Rescue of an unconscious diver from depth: the new UHMS Diving Committee Guidelines by Dr Simon Mitchell
Each diving agency
has their own guidelines which can be subject to debate. This presentation helped to answer a lot of
questions, for example, “if I find a casualty underwater with the regulator
out, do I put it back in?” “do I have to wait until the relaxation phase of an
o2 hit before lifting a casualty?”. A humorous
presentation which encouraged audience debate.
Gala Dinner and Awards Ceremony
This was the chance
for everyone to get suited and booted and show themselves off. The dress unsurprisingly was black tie so I
decided to go in my Mess Dress (& stood out). I was sat on the TDI table (#1) with a
variety of instructors and we ate and drank until the early hours (some earlier
than others). The food was great and
afterwards the awards were given. I’ve
already mentioned a few in this blog however another worth mentioning is the innovation
award which was awarded to Martin and Amy Stanton from Vobster Quay for TEKCamp (see my blog here). Additionally, there was a raffle where 1
lucky guest won a trip for 2 to Truk Lagoon with Lust for Rust worth over £7000.
Lucky sod!
Day 2
Unsurprisingly I
arrived a little later than yesterday but still in time for the first
presentation.
2010 EUROTEK publication of significance (Deco for Divers launched at EUROTEK 2008) award winner gave a great presentation on why accidents happen. It was very interesting to listen to and on a
number of occasions wowed the audience with things we missed.
To be honest, a
little above my head this one. However
what was interesting is that no single algorithm always got the diver out of
the water first.
A continuation from
yesterdays presentation.
For me the
presentation of the weekend by far. The
triumphs and pitfalls of exploring Blue Lake in Russia which resulted in the
unfortunate death of a support diver and his “DCI”. I for one am in awe of this man and can only
dream of doing some of the things he has been lucky enough to witness. I hope to be doing some “support diver” training
with him including setting a habitat, installing O2 and comms feeds, being a
habitat support to name a few. Watch
this space!
Decompression sickness in remote locations: an emerging problem in technical diving expeditions by Dr Simon Mitchell
Another humorous
presentation which again involved audience partition. Using Truk Lagoon and Bikini Atoll as an example, there
were discussions on how to plan dives and hopefully avoid a DCI but also, what
if you got one? Would you cancel a trip
of a lifetime for a sore elbow? No
rights or wrongs but certainly things to debate.
I am truly gutted that the conference didn’t last longer as there were some amazing presentations I wish I had had the chance to see including; Diving Incident and Safety Management System (DISMS) by Gareth Lock; Project Tiger – Wreck diving WW2 wrecks by Rich Walker; Deep Wreck Explorations of the Dark Star Team by Mark Dixon and Jeff Cornish; Rebreather Safety: checklists and other debates from RF3 including a panel of Rebreather Experts will answer your questions; Recreational rebreathers, their place and effect in technical diving by Paul Toomer; Making Bikini and Truk Lagoon a reality for divers by Pete Mesley; and Baltic Wreck Search - The search for lost wrecks in the Baltic Sea by Richard Lundgren.
I could talk about different kit I got to touch and play with but I won’t; it would bore you to death. Official photos for the event were taken by Jason Brown of BARDOCreative and can be viewed as follows; Exhibition, Gala Dinner, Speakers.
Hopefully this may have wet your appetite. Unfortunately the talks are not recorded for the fear of people not attending the conference and watching them online instead so the only way you will get to see these is to simply go. Myself, I cannot wait until EUROTEK 2014! Put the dates in your diary now; Saturday 25th and Sunday 26th October 2014.
The boring bit!
All opinions
expressed in my articles are my own and may differ to other instructor’s and
agency guidelines; by no means are they wrong and I would not wish to disrepute
any of them. This article is for
information only and should not replace proper training.
Safe diving!
Timothy Gort
BSAC, PADI
& SDI/TDI diver trainingl Mob: 07968148261 l Email: tim@rectotec.co.uk l