I`ve lost three mates doing spearfishing. All three of them very strong and expert freedivers with many years in the water, capable of fishing with ease under 40meters. All three lost their lives because they broke the first and most important rule of freediving. ``Don`t dive alone.``. All three would be alive now if they had not break that rule. Admittedly i`ve broken that rule in the past myself and i have been extremely lucky to still be around. A few close calls and a full on blackout. What saved me on that instance is that i felt it coming and managed to take my weight belt off before blacking out, i was close to surface so i was positively buoyant, my snorkel was out of my mouth and i had a weight strapped on my back which forced my body to lay flat on my back when i surfaced, so my first unconscious breath was air. Please, DONT DIVE ALONE! Life is precious and spearfishing/freediving is meant to be something special and fun. No fish, no dive, is more important than your life.
Yea. I think some people just forget how dangeorus it is because it is also so fun. Im sorry about your 3 friends. I know this comment is 1 year old but it was so great i just had to comment on it. Always dive safe.
Even diving with a partner, if you shallow-water-blackout the chances of being seen sinking are very, very low. We are all focused on our own zen, not watching our partners every move. Be careful, keep the discipline of slow ascent, but embrace the risk... this is a part of being a Waterman.
what if you follow the rule of thirds like in cavern scuba diving and always come up with one third air reserve or even better why not get a 6 cubic foot tank and a small compact regulator for backup.
HealthSupercharger: It is called "freediving" because we are diving without air tanks. One Breath, and down you go. It requires great skill and focus to become a competent spearfisherman. The safety comes with being aware of your limits, and not forgetting where you are 40'-100' (or more) down... that may be hard to imagine, but the euphoria of diving can be quite hypnotic.
Billder Inbaja i do understand i am also a freediver, scuba diver and have been diving 23 years. I love both types of diving. The issue with spearfishing is that it diverts your focus towards fishing and away from you diving. A tiny tank the size of a 1.5 liter pop bottle would only be used as backup and would not affect your diving much. Plus carma will pay u back for taking life it will take yours sometimes, we r not carnivores or ominivore.
Thank you very much for this video.... many spearos don't understand the dangers we face as soon as we take that breath and make our decent. Watching this video brought many years to my eyes because I lost my best friend who was a seasoned diver 20 years ago, I was new at spearfishing and didn't practice the buddy system. I found him over half an hour later at the mouth of a cave with a huge trevally at the end of his spear. Only if I was there, we still be diving together today. You never forget your friend's face when he's dead in your arms and you're trying to drag his dead body back to shore. Since then I'm a big advocate of diving safe with a buddy. Be safe out there, respect the ocean, and Malama I Ke Kai.
I was taken down to the very bottom of my line by a good sized tuna and went into samba at surface about 6 months ago (wrapped leg - poor line management) I was able to cut my self free down around 120 feet or so, but regardless, I probably would have only had a 'short death' had I dropped my knife or not been able to sever the line, because my buddy was at surface and knew exactly what was happening. He was already working the lines trying to get me up. Learned two things: A solid dive buddy and a really sharp f*&king knife are detrimental.
Thanks for this great video with the most important educational message for freediving. However I would like to add another major safety issue: The unlucky spearo sank from the surface as soon as he blacked out. This means he was overweighted according to another very important safety rule: You should not sink from the surface on a full exhale. Test yourself to this rule every time before you start your session! I am aware that many spearos like to be heavy in the water to make it easier to get to depth silently and with minimal movement. As tempting as this might be, it is a bad trade-off: It will make the ascent harder. And if things go wrong, it will be towards the end of a dive, on ascent. So you want to make your ascent as easy as possible. By training your duck dive, body posture and finning technique you can get smoothly under water *without* being overweighted, while maximising your safety margin. Thanks again for this very important video. All the best to you all! Oli Christen, AIDA Instructor Trainer, Bali
yep, you can, but normally by the time you realise you need to dump the weight belt, it is too late, ie blacked out. I aim to be neutrally buoyant at around 10m, anything above that and i start floating, yes it is a bit of effort finning down, but on the return once oxygen is used up, it is easier requiring less effort. I was told by a top freediver, the less weight you can have the better
I recommend the book "Deep" by James Nestor, he graphically describes what it is like to watch not just one, but multiple absolute professional competitive divers succumb to shallow water blackout. Once you blackout you have two options: someone saves you or you become part of the ecosystem.
Amazing story....I was a near drowning victim at the age of 13. My father did CPR on me and saved my life, but I have never been afraid of the water since then. Now I’m an avid scuba diver and am looking to learn how to free dive at the age of 55. Being underwater is my happy place, and i agree that life is short. As an ER nurse for the last 22 years I see that everyday. We do need to do what keeps us happy and at peace.
I lost my long time best friend just a little over a month back due to drowning. This really hit close to home. Life without your best pal really turns dull and grey. So be thankful for all the moments you get, you never know once they will end. I had spoken to my friend on a sunday just casually and by monday I recieved a call that said he had drowned and passed away. That moment was the most heartbreaking so far. Life really gets ripped apart. Still today I don't believe it and I'm allways waiting for the moment I'll see him coming down the road to my house like before. Which will never happen. I was at the moment where I stood beside his chest at the funeral I realized that the nightmare was reality. So take care of all your buddies for as long as you get them.
in our waters and most waters with low visibility it would not be possible to see your diving partner blackout and sink. It is up to you to keep well within your limits.
My mate and I used to fish most afternoons after work, usually @ Watsons Bay, Sydney and together we were cool and rarely came home without dinner. One afternoon we took a bunch of his mates, more people, more confusion. One of them shot at a fish and missed, as it went under me I hit it but my spear went through and lodged in the bottom, next to a sunken container not all that deep really. I hauled but it wouldn't come free. went up got air and tried two more times, once at the spear itself even. Stupidly I didn't tell anyone else what I was up to, swum to the bottom put my feet down and hauled like hell; the spear eventually came free but I had used up almost everything I had. I launched for the top with nothing left and vaguely remember ripping the snorkel from my mouth on the way up, the next I remember was floating on the top desperately gasping for air and all by myself because everyone else had moved on. Getting out was sheer hell. Bloody stupid of me, and way too close for comfort. Big lesson, even with mates you've got to use your mouth and tell others what is going on, don't assume they're watching and so will help. - No point having brains if you don't use them, or being too proud to ask for help!
13yrs ago I had a spazzimo after free diving a deep wreck in Malta. It was a Sunday afternoon (my only day off) and I was alone... Pushed to go through the rudder of the wreck at 34msw. When I broke surface it hit me... I was really lucky that day.... Really, really lucky... Well surfice to say I learnt my leason, and now enjoy every season with my partner in crime😉 Great video!
I'm new to the sport and I have been taking the chance diving alone. I'm getting to the point were I want deeper water and starting to push thought caves ect. Ummmm never again not alone. Didn't think it was that easy. Thanks guys. You may of just saved I life. Now I'm looking for a dive buddy
@ shallhonda85 I am a little late here, but here's one advice: Unless you are scuba diving and with extra tanks, STAY AWAY FROM CAVES, even when you have buddy/buddies with you. Miscalculations are very easy to happen -and in water it's none too healthy.
This hit deep! I'm only fairly new into Spearfishing and apart of recognising dangerous sharks, blackouts are my most biggest fear. It can happen to anyone and not everyone gets a second chance but you two are lucky to have eachother and to have gone through this experience would have been one of the most scariest and hardest times in your lives!
Great video. The same exact thing happened to one of my best friends. Watching this really got the heart pumping. I remember seeing him floating beneath the surface the same why your friend was in this video. We have also learned so much from that day and are thankful to have a second chance. Keep doing what you love.
i'm having a best friend i know since baby steps too, this image scared me so much 6:38 because my brain replaced it with my mates face, we're diving both too (not proper freediving like you guys tho). I'm so glad that your mate survived and that he has a friend like you. keep doing what you love thx for this video - it made me being grateful and ringing my bro
Really, really amazing short film on free diving with a beautiful message about the value of life and every precious gift God has to offer. Thank you for making this❤
Nic si z toho nerob, aj ja chodim sam. Jednoducho nieje s kym. Keby som cakal na to, kedy budem mat partaka, tak by som dodnes nepotapal... Ono vacsina hovori stale o tom, ze be safe, never dive alone, pritom aj tak kopa z nich potapa osamote. Lebo tzba byt vo vode je vacsia, ako cakat na suchu na zazrak, ze niekto pride a bude sa potapat s tebou. (podla mena som usudil, ze mi budes rozumiet...)
It really puts things in perspective. As Spearos and freedivers we face death on every decent, whether it's from predators or blackouts. I've never met or known anyone personally that has blacked out, but I have heard many scary stories. Enjoy and respect the ocean. Dive safely!
This is the real deal, you have to see it to believe it, a true learning lesson for all those freedivers out there. Very insperational, you are truly BLESSED to have had the oppurtunity to share this video of a true life and near death experience. I was running out of air myself while watching this video. You are very lucky to have a friend that reacted quickly and was looking out for you. Very good video.
My freediving course starts in two months and I can’t wait for that. I’m so grateful for this video. Although every article I read and video seen talks about safety a little, but this is so far the best. Hail free-divers and may safety be with us all!
I’m not a free diver but this was the best recommendation from TH-cam in awhile. The filming, story, and inspirational message at the end was powerful enough to get me out of a bad space in my life. Many thanks 🙏🏽✌🏽
I just lost my best friend last week he was always into this kind of stuff. this video really got to me you never think that ur best friend could just be gone like the flash of lightning this video just brought some good memories back to me. He had so much the love of his life,brother,family, friends where all gona have to rebuild from this but Keep informing people about stuff like this it makes people think twice about life.stay safe out there.
Thank you so much boys, great story. Very lucky to have each other, true mates are a dime a dozen! Best of luck with all your future adventures and keep pushing the limit and enjoying life to the absolute fullest.
Beautifully made!!! Great contrast between the mesmerizing tranquility and the very real dangers of hypoxia. I fell in love with free diving few years ago and am still learning lots.
Thanks for sharing your profoundly moving story and lesson in life. Something many of us never learn, how to be really alive, to each other and the world around us.
Hey guys glad this clip came up to my suggestion from TH-cam! I'm new to the community of freediving and I don't know what to expect! This clip made things it crystal clear for me! Feel great of you guys made it out from this difficult situation! Enjoy life to fullest and don't forget to breath 🤙✌️
Whoa, makes my aniety go up. Reminds me of time I almost drowned scuba diving. Equipment failure. Didn't dive for over a decade. Got all new gear in 2020, was watching Daniel Mann's vids- ended up here. And now even more aware and better educated- thanks for sharing.
So well done, to see a black out from the person's perspective is almost hard to comprehend, this video really puts it into perspective! Really great story.
great video - so true, we never know our time here on this planet! My best friend & mate has an incurable cancer, and we try to live every day as the gift it is, with joy & gratitude. Welcome to loving life more & look forward to more of your videos, or series.
Thank for taking the time to put this online. I can’t believe how many people only saw the fish being shot( excellent with a little lemon and fennel). Qld hunter in and out of the water.
Thanks for the share guys... really made me think everything over as my mate and I are hacks trying to push each other... just shows the importance of never diving alone... something i did 2 days ago but ill be thinking twice now....
Great video, best in a while. I quit spearfishing because I was pushing myself too hard for a fish that was always just out of my reach. Now I dive for fun, enjoying the beauty and splendor.
Great experience to share...It really makes us appreciate life and free diving much more. Every time we go spearfishing with our best friends, we have to respect th eocean, respect and plan carefully every dive, at the end...we never know if it´s gonna be the last one but as longest we do right as a team one watching the other, things shoud be allright. Thanks a lot for this video. Keep on freediving, keep on enjoying life but on a safe manner.
Farrrrk fellas! That’s heavy! The relationship you must’ve already had would be strong as anything after something like that. Thanks for sharing, I still sometimes sneak a shallow shore dive in alone, but this video is a major wake up call that you just never know what could happen! Need to get my mate to commit to more dives! No more solo’s!
I was planning to skin dive alone this coming week. Thank you for sharing the video now I learned so much. I will share your clip to my friends so they be educated as well.
10 ปีที่แล้ว +1
Wow. I can imagine how you feel in this moment. Be safe guys.
Great Vid, happened to my dive buddy in Ft. Lauderdale. like Aaron my buddy recovered. Thank god a dive buddy was there for both of them. Never Dive alone!
So glad he made it. Thought there would be a technical lesson here, but I guess it’d be Don’t push it. I totally align with the “That’s what we’re here for” philosophy though.
Great Video guys! Inspirational stuff! When I dive I will be even more careful not to push myself because of this video and when I am down there I will appreciate its beauty and danger even more so than I do now. Thank you for posting such a well made, honest and beautiful video.
Oh my god, same thing happened to me exept it was a samba/LMC... I'm FII certified and I used to spearfish at 10m-22m but 2 weeks ago, I was diving with my buddy, spotted a huge mutton down my feet while I was already at 20m I guess. Then I decided to chase the mutton on a 20m distance at a deph of 27m and then shooted right in the belly. I didnt realise that I was at that deph, I was focus on the fish and check my watch once I was up, after the LMC/samba... Everytime you see those big fish down, you feel like you have more oxygen until you shoot... The ascent was horrible and while coming up, I panicked a bit because I couldnt see my dive buddy up. Hopefully he was at my back, saw me kicking hard, understood that my dive have been longer than usual and came to me on the ascent at 8m. When I surfaced, I was dancing...SAMBA! haha. My buddy was AIDA certified so he really did a great job. It was a samba so even alone I would have been able to manage the situation but It could have been a black out. Thats why you should NEVER DIVE ALONE even if you have a lot of experience and try to dive with a certified buddy if you can. A fish doesnt worth your life... .
my gpa went down to 1.7 and a 2.0 during junior and senior year because i would skip 3 or 4 days every week to go free-diving and honestly i dont regret one second of it. free-diving has changed my life completely
Glad for the final outcome and that the guys enjoy such a deep friendship! Freediving is one of the many beautiful human activities, but imo) one should not see that as THE great thing in one's life here on the planet.. Already something like true friendship, not to mention this very planet, its past, present and future, and the reason behind its existence carry much, much greater meaning
This is more than a spearfishing vid though it was amazing message for us spearos, what an amazing wake up call, this is one of the most touching, heartfelt, inspiring vids I have ever watched. To live your life, to have a different attitude on life and an amazing friendship, brotherhood. wow amazing fuken love it. Thank you.
Thank you for this video. I am fairly new to the sport of freediving, I have only been freediving for about a year now but this made me think. what would happen to my freinds and family if i do die? i am not afraid of dying, i am afraid for what i leave behind. what will happen to my family? This is why it is so crucial to follow the rules. because were not invincible. and we can not take life for granted
I never truly push myself and I find that I just continue to increase depth and breath hold. I will keep it that way as it allows me to enjoy the water more
I`ve lost three mates doing spearfishing. All three of them very strong and expert freedivers with many years in the water, capable of fishing with ease under 40meters. All three lost their lives because they broke the first and most important rule of freediving. ``Don`t dive alone.``. All three would be alive now if they had not break that rule.
Admittedly i`ve broken that rule in the past myself and i have been extremely lucky to still be around. A few close calls and a full on blackout. What saved me on that instance is that i felt it coming and managed to take my weight belt off before blacking out, i was close to surface so i was positively buoyant, my snorkel was out of my mouth and i had a weight strapped on my back which forced my body to lay flat on my back when i surfaced, so my first unconscious breath was air.
Please, DONT DIVE ALONE! Life is precious and spearfishing/freediving is meant to be something special and fun. No fish, no dive, is more important than your life.
Yea. I think some people just forget how dangeorus it is because it is also so fun. Im sorry about your 3 friends. I know this comment is 1 year old but it was so great i just had to comment on it. Always dive safe.
Even diving with a partner, if you shallow-water-blackout the chances of being seen sinking are very, very low. We are all focused on our own zen, not watching our partners every move. Be careful, keep the discipline of slow ascent, but embrace the risk... this is a part of being a Waterman.
what if you follow the rule of thirds like in cavern scuba diving and always come up with one third air reserve or even better why not get a 6 cubic foot tank and a small compact regulator for backup.
HealthSupercharger: It is called "freediving" because we are diving without air tanks. One Breath, and down you go. It requires great skill and focus to become a competent spearfisherman. The safety comes with being aware of your limits, and not forgetting where you are 40'-100' (or more) down... that may be hard to imagine, but the euphoria of diving can be quite hypnotic.
Billder Inbaja i do understand i am also a freediver, scuba diver and have been diving 23 years. I love both types of diving. The issue with spearfishing is that it diverts your focus towards fishing and away from you diving. A tiny tank the size of a 1.5 liter pop bottle would only be used as backup and would not affect your diving much. Plus carma will pay u back for taking life it will take yours sometimes, we r not carnivores or ominivore.
4 years on and we're still kicking! Stay safe everyone.
what about now?
Thank you very much for this video.... many spearos don't understand the dangers we face as soon as we take that breath and make our decent. Watching this video brought many years to my eyes because I lost my best friend who was a seasoned diver 20 years ago, I was new at spearfishing and didn't practice the buddy system. I found him over half an hour later at the mouth of a cave with a huge trevally at the end of his spear. Only if I was there, we still be diving together today. You never forget your friend's face when he's dead in your arms and you're trying to drag his dead body back to shore. Since then I'm a big advocate of diving safe with a buddy. Be safe out there, respect the ocean, and Malama I Ke Kai.
Cozntera17 I'm sorry about your friend. Condolences. Thank you for sharing this story.
Cozntera17 sorry to hear that u and your friend have my prayers
Cozntera17 I am very sorry for you it is very brave of you sharing your story
I was taken down to the very bottom of my line by a good sized tuna and went into samba at surface about 6 months ago (wrapped leg - poor line management) I was able to cut my self free down around 120 feet or so, but regardless, I probably would have only had a 'short death' had I dropped my knife or not been able to sever the line, because my buddy was at surface and knew exactly what was happening. He was already working the lines trying to get me up. Learned two things: A solid dive buddy and a really sharp f*&king knife are detrimental.
Thanks for this great video with the most important educational message for freediving.
However I would like to add another major safety issue: The unlucky spearo sank from the surface as soon as he blacked out. This means he was overweighted according to another very important safety rule: You should not sink from the surface on a full exhale.
Test yourself to this rule every time before you start your session!
I am aware that many spearos like to be heavy in the water to make it easier to get to depth silently and with minimal movement. As tempting as this might be, it is a bad trade-off: It will make the ascent harder. And if things go wrong, it will be towards the end of a dive, on ascent. So you want to make your ascent as easy as possible. By training your duck dive, body posture and finning technique you can get smoothly under water *without* being overweighted, while maximising your safety margin.
Thanks again for this very important video. All the best to you all!
Oli Christen, AIDA Instructor Trainer, Bali
thanks for writing this mate im in new zealand and have just brought a wet suit and dive gear but i have no experience at all thanks for the good tip
nice observation and comment regarding over weighting.
(As someone with no dive experience), couldn't you dump the weight belt if necessary for a faster ascent in an emergency?
yep, you can, but normally by the time you realise you need to dump the weight belt, it is too late, ie blacked out. I aim to be neutrally buoyant at around 10m, anything above that and i start floating, yes it is a bit of effort finning down, but on the return once oxygen is used up, it is easier requiring less effort. I was told by a top freediver, the less weight you can have the better
I would need floaties for that I sink even with full lungs
I recommend the book "Deep" by James Nestor, he graphically describes what it is like to watch not just one, but multiple absolute professional competitive divers succumb to shallow water blackout.
Once you blackout you have two options: someone saves you or you become part of the ecosystem.
Tak Ackman echo. Great book.
Yes! I bought that book on a whim a while ago and loved what I read. I need to finish it now that you’ve reminded me.
Amazing story....I was a near drowning victim at the age of 13. My father did CPR on me and saved my life, but I have never been afraid of the water since then. Now I’m an avid scuba diver and am looking to learn how to free dive at the age of 55. Being underwater is my happy place, and i agree that life is short. As an ER nurse for the last 22 years I see that everyday. We do need to do what keeps us happy and at peace.
I lost my long time best friend just a little over a month back due to drowning. This really hit close to home. Life without your best pal really turns dull and grey.
So be thankful for all the moments you get, you never know once they will end.
I had spoken to my friend on a sunday just casually and by monday I recieved a call that said he had drowned and passed away. That moment was the most heartbreaking so far. Life really gets ripped apart. Still today I don't believe it and I'm allways waiting for the moment I'll see him coming down the road to my house like before. Which will never happen.
I was at the moment where I stood beside his chest at the funeral I realized that the nightmare was reality. So take care of all your buddies for as long as you get them.
I’m really sorry to hear this Linus, I hope you’re coping alright and can appreciate all the time you guys shared together.
One of the best short films I've ever seen! Love its messages surrounding mortality, gratitude, beauty, and friendship. 10/10
How beautiful. Privileged but so down to earth, if I could choose for a life(style) I’d choose this. Australia, the family, the slow life ❤
no stress, no noise, no pollution and most importantly ... NO PEOPLE
We all think it will never happen to us................but it can and also a good example of why you shouldn't dive alone. Well done Jack.
in our waters and most waters with low visibility it would not be possible to see your diving partner blackout and sink. It is up to you to keep well within your limits.
@@HealthSupercharger Very correct!. That's Thumbs Up from me here.
My mate and I used to fish most afternoons after work, usually @ Watsons Bay, Sydney and together we were cool and rarely came home without dinner. One afternoon we took a bunch of his mates, more people, more confusion. One of them shot at a fish and missed, as it went under me I hit it but my spear went through and lodged in the bottom, next to a sunken container not all that deep really. I hauled but it wouldn't come free. went up got air and tried two more times, once at the spear itself even. Stupidly I didn't tell anyone else what I was up to, swum to the bottom put my feet down and hauled like hell; the spear eventually came free but I had used up almost everything I had. I launched for the top with nothing left and vaguely remember ripping the snorkel from my mouth on the way up, the next I remember was floating on the top desperately gasping for air and all by myself because everyone else had moved on. Getting out was sheer hell. Bloody stupid of me, and way too close for comfort. Big lesson, even with mates you've got to use your mouth and tell others what is going on, don't assume they're watching and so will help. - No point having brains if you don't use them, or being too proud to ask for help!
13yrs ago I had a spazzimo after free diving a deep wreck in Malta. It was a Sunday afternoon (my only day off) and I was alone... Pushed to go through the rudder of the wreck at 34msw. When I broke surface it hit me... I was really lucky that day.... Really, really lucky... Well surfice to say I learnt my leason, and now enjoy every season with my partner in crime😉 Great video!
I'm new to the sport and I have been taking the chance diving alone. I'm getting to the point were I want deeper water and starting to push thought caves ect. Ummmm never again not alone. Didn't think it was that easy. Thanks guys. You may of just saved I life. Now I'm looking for a dive buddy
+shallhonda85 try contacting your local dive shops, see if they have free diving/spero groups most will do easy way to meet other that love the sport.
@ shallhonda85
I am a little late here, but here's one advice: Unless you are scuba diving and with extra tanks, STAY AWAY FROM CAVES, even when you have buddy/buddies with you. Miscalculations are very easy to happen -and in water it's none too healthy.
This hit deep! I'm only fairly new into Spearfishing and apart of recognising dangerous sharks, blackouts are my most biggest fear. It can happen to anyone and not everyone gets a second chance but you two are lucky to have eachother and to have gone through this experience would have been one of the most scariest and hardest times in your lives!
Great video. The same exact thing happened to one of my best friends. Watching this really got the heart pumping. I remember seeing him floating beneath the surface the same why your friend was in this video. We have also learned so much from that day and are thankful to have a second chance. Keep doing what you love.
Stay solid Cuhz
i'm having a best friend i know since baby steps too, this image scared me so much 6:38 because my brain replaced it with my mates face, we're diving both too (not proper freediving like you guys tho). I'm so glad that your mate survived and that he has a friend like you. keep doing what you love thx for this video - it made me being grateful and ringing my bro
Really, really amazing short film on free diving with a beautiful message about the value of life and every precious gift God has to offer. Thank you for making this❤
I feel so stupid now, i often go and freedive alone... I'm not pushing my limits, but still not a wise thing to do.
Nic si z toho nerob, aj ja chodim sam. Jednoducho nieje s kym. Keby som cakal na to, kedy budem mat partaka, tak by som dodnes nepotapal... Ono vacsina hovori stale o tom, ze be safe, never dive alone, pritom aj tak kopa z nich potapa osamote. Lebo tzba byt vo vode je vacsia, ako cakat na suchu na zazrak, ze niekto pride a bude sa potapat s tebou. (podla mena som usudil, ze mi budes rozumiet...)
If you blackout you die, dont go alone
same mate same
The fact that im an introvert and not much people are capable of freediving are the main reasons I free dive alone
Same,
So many messages in this video. Life, friendship, trust, appreciation, ego,respect, gratitude. Really powerful story. Thanks for sharing.
It really puts things in perspective. As Spearos and freedivers we face death on every decent, whether it's from predators or blackouts. I've never met or known anyone personally that has blacked out, but I have heard many scary stories. Enjoy and respect the ocean. Dive safely!
What a wonderful environment, and a group of mates. Carry on and keep on smelling the roses, and appreciate the your victory.
Always!
This is the real deal, you have to see it to believe it, a true learning lesson for all those freedivers out there. Very insperational, you are truly BLESSED to have had the oppurtunity to share this video of a true life and near death experience. I was running out of air myself while watching this video. You are very lucky to have a friend that reacted quickly and was looking out for you. Very good video.
I have never done free diving, but this video gives a strong message to any adventure seeker. Hats off.
My freediving course starts in two months and I can’t wait for that. I’m so grateful for this video. Although every article I read and video seen talks about safety a little, but this is so far the best. Hail free-divers and may safety be with us all!
I’m not a free diver but this was the best recommendation from TH-cam in awhile. The filming, story, and inspirational message at the end was powerful enough to get me out of a bad space in my life. Many thanks 🙏🏽✌🏽
Thanks mate! Glad to hear the video helped, best of luck 👍
I'm glad you are safe and still diving. Thanks for sharing your story.
I just lost my best friend last week he was always into this kind of stuff. this video really got to me you never think that ur best friend could just be gone like the flash of lightning this video just brought some good memories back to me. He had so much the love of his life,brother,family, friends where all gona have to rebuild from this but Keep informing people about stuff like this it makes people think twice about life.stay safe out there.
Thank you so much boys, great story. Very lucky to have each other, true mates are a dime a dozen!
Best of luck with all your future adventures and keep pushing the limit and enjoying life to the absolute fullest.
wow that was the best video i have watched.. Really hit home. Thankyou for taking the time and sharing this experience!
Beautifully made!!! Great contrast between the mesmerizing tranquility and the very real dangers of hypoxia. I fell in love with free diving few years ago and am still learning lots.
Thanks for sharing your profoundly moving story and lesson in life. Something many of us never learn, how to be really alive, to each other and the world around us.
Beautiful Documentary, seriously the way you told everything with the footage, music and interviews is stunning. Great work.
I just watched all the b2b videos! This is so touching. Thank God
Hey guys glad this clip came up to my suggestion from TH-cam! I'm new to the community of freediving and I don't know what to expect! This clip made things it crystal clear for me! Feel great of you guys made it out from this difficult situation! Enjoy life to fullest and don't forget to breath 🤙✌️
Thanks mate, glad you enjoyed it 👍🏻
Whoa, makes my aniety go up. Reminds me of time I almost drowned scuba diving. Equipment failure. Didn't dive for over a decade. Got all new gear in 2020, was watching Daniel Mann's vids- ended up here. And now even more aware and better educated- thanks for sharing.
I love the title. It is so simple and natural in the meaning of it, yet so profound given the subject.
So well done, to see a black out from the person's perspective is almost hard to comprehend, this video really puts it into perspective! Really great story.
Brought tears to my eye. Very glady you are ok, and had a great mate there when you needed it most.
great video - so true, we never know our time here on this planet! My best friend & mate has an incurable cancer, and we try to live every day as the gift it is, with joy & gratitude. Welcome to loving life more & look forward to more of your videos, or series.
awesome to see true friendship - thanks boys
A great way to learn to appreciate the ocean and all it gives us!! 😊
Thank for taking the time to put this online. I can’t believe how many people only saw the fish being shot( excellent with a little lemon and fennel). Qld hunter in and out of the water.
Thanks for the share guys... really made me think everything over as my mate and I are hacks trying to push each other... just shows the importance of never diving alone... something i did 2 days ago but ill be thinking twice now....
Glad you are ok. It's good to have a buddy like that. Let me know when you guys need some more stickers.
Great video, best in a while. I quit spearfishing because I was pushing myself too hard for a fish that was always just out of my reach. Now I dive for fun, enjoying the beauty and splendor.
exactly.
It just means you dont love it enough, even if i almost die 20 times i will still keep spearfishing
Bingo @@pcvideos7480
Great experience to share...It really makes us appreciate life and free diving much more. Every time we go spearfishing with our best friends, we have to respect th eocean, respect and plan carefully every dive, at the end...we never know if it´s gonna be the last one but as longest we do right as a team one watching the other, things shoud be allright. Thanks a lot for this video. Keep on freediving, keep on enjoying life but on a safe manner.
Farrrrk fellas! That’s heavy!
The relationship you must’ve already had would be strong as anything after something like that.
Thanks for sharing, I still sometimes sneak a shallow shore dive in alone, but this video is a major wake up call that you just never know what could happen! Need to get my mate to commit to more dives! No more solo’s!
Glad you took something out of it mate, and yep a different level of best mates since this day!
Thanks Guys, nice video and beautiful message! Thanks again for the warning and remind us how life is beautiful. Don't change anything.
I was planning to skin dive alone this coming week. Thank you for sharing the video now I learned so much. I will share your clip to my friends so they be educated as well.
Wow. I can imagine how you feel in this moment. Be safe guys.
What a great short film. Really do what you want to because life is wasted if you don't.
Great Vid, happened to my dive buddy in Ft. Lauderdale. like Aaron my buddy recovered. Thank god a dive buddy was there for both of them. Never Dive alone!
Crazy.. This video and this feeling hits home.
U are one lucky man bro..wish i can save my buddy too..but didnt see he was drowning..very sad life history..
So glad he made it. Thought there would be a technical lesson here, but I guess it’d be Don’t push it. I totally align with the “That’s what we’re here for” philosophy though.
So happy he survived and well 🌹
I watched this video with a buddy, gotta stay safe
Lol
never dive alone, never over weighted. I will keep this as golden saftey roles.
Your life is more important than catching a big fish or impressing your friends, so let's stay within our personal limits no matter what.
couldent agree more
nah mate gotta push em
Nah g lets break human limits like floyd floyd Mayweather go harder and deeper.
Great Video guys! Inspirational stuff! When I dive I will be even more careful not to push myself because of this video and when I am down there I will appreciate its beauty and danger even more so than I do now. Thank you for posting such a well made, honest and beautiful video.
8:35 Great words
Oh my god, same thing happened to me exept it was a samba/LMC...
I'm FII certified and I used to spearfish at 10m-22m but 2 weeks ago, I was diving with my buddy, spotted a huge mutton down my feet while I was already at 20m I guess. Then I decided to chase the mutton on a 20m distance at a deph of 27m and then shooted right in the belly. I didnt realise that I was at that deph, I was focus on the fish and check my watch once I was up, after the LMC/samba...
Everytime you see those big fish down, you feel like you have more oxygen until you shoot...
The ascent was horrible and while coming up, I panicked a bit because I couldnt see my dive buddy up. Hopefully he was at my back, saw me kicking hard, understood that my dive have been longer than usual and came to me on the ascent at 8m.
When I surfaced, I was dancing...SAMBA! haha. My buddy was AIDA certified so he really did a great job.
It was a samba so even alone I would have been able to manage the situation but It could have been a black out.
Thats why you should NEVER DIVE ALONE even if you have a lot of experience and try to dive with a certified buddy if you can. A fish doesnt worth your life...
.
Free divers are the most awesome people in the world. The perfect zen humans, totally at one with the earth. Wow, just wow.
my gpa went down to 1.7 and a 2.0 during junior and senior year because i would skip 3 or 4 days every week to go free-diving and honestly i dont regret one second of it. free-diving has changed my life completely
Thank you for sharing, a great ending to a very scary story.
6 years ago and I'm just now seeing this. Kewl video... love the fighter pilot scene. Haha...
that is insane boys, awesome stuff, very inspirational
thanks for your video, I'm starting as a freediver, so this is very important to be careful when you do this
This small movie helped me a lot I’m really thankful that I found you guys!
Thanks so much man, glad to hear that!
True inspiration. Thanks boys
I’m crying!!!! Thank you for this very informative and sentimental video
Glad for the final outcome and that the guys enjoy such a deep friendship!
Freediving is one of the many beautiful human activities, but imo) one should not see that as THE great thing in one's life here on the planet.. Already something like true friendship, not to mention this very planet, its past, present and future, and the reason behind its existence carry much, much greater meaning
Absolutely beautiful video! Thank you for making this and sharing your story with us.
This is more than a spearfishing vid though it was amazing message for us spearos, what an amazing wake up call, this is one of the most touching, heartfelt, inspiring vids I have ever watched. To live your life, to have a different attitude on life and an amazing friendship, brotherhood. wow amazing fuken love it. Thank you.
so well put into words what it is to free dive! I can relate to every word.
I am glad your friend made it!
Has to be the most pure and realist video going 👌
A video lesson for those who did not dive with a couple.. The sea wants respect.. Good video like a movie concentrated in 9 minutes..
Sad, but true. A lot of spearfishers, who diving quite deep, haven't done proper education and skiping some of the basic safety rules....
he got story to tell and im glad that every one safe
Awesome video guys. Thanks heaps
Ive been wanting to try this sport... This has made me realize that I need to find a controled environment to start... Amazing video
Thanks! Be safe and have fun 👍🏻
Thanks so much for this video, ❤ It teaches a lot of valuable lessons and as a starting spearo, brother is it, all I needed.
Thankyou for making this video mate, very important lessons about life and Freediving that everyone should follow. Cheers
This a great video. That first part, really captures the essence of free diving.
give this guy an oscar!
Thank you for this video. I am fairly new to the sport of freediving, I have only been freediving for about a year now but this made me think. what would happen to my freinds and family if i do die? i am not afraid of dying, i am afraid for what i leave behind. what will happen to my family? This is why it is so crucial to follow the rules. because were not invincible. and we can not take life for granted
Great video, guys! Many thanks fr sharing, used it as an educational...
That was the thing that amazed me most about free diving.
How unafraid the sea life is.
I cannot stop to watch this video. This is such a good job !
Stunning video! Loved the quote at the end definitely gave me a reality check. Thank you
Gracias por compartir experiencia, excelente video! , comparto and like for you great divers !!!
nicely done. great learning for a newbie like me. look forward to more of your videos.
This is a very inspiring video and it really has shown me that life is taken for granted and that even in the most amazing places danger still lurks
Nice one boys...
Good advice for life & diving..👍
I never truly push myself and I find that I just continue to increase depth and breath hold. I will keep it that way as it allows me to enjoy the water more
Too true! Thank you
Great video. Well done for keeping an eye on your mates. And who could "thumb down" this video?
Great film
Thank you sir!