By Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Wyatt Huggett and
Mass Communication Specialist 2rd Class Jared Aldape
KEY WEST, Fla. (NNS) -- Navy divers traded white snow for
white sands, clear water, and diving and are now one step closer for deploying
having completed their unit level training in Key West, Fla., Feb. 1-24.
Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit (MDSU) 2's MDS Co. 2-3 and
MDS Co. 2-4 both left snow ridden Virginia Beach, Va. earlier this month and
were able to reach deeper and more advanced dives in Key West as the local
conditions typically provide a safe visibility range of 50 feet between trainee
and facilitators.
"[Key West] gives our divers concentrated training away
from home as well as an environment that enables them to see what correct
procedures look like when they're in the water," said Chief Warrant
Officer 3 James J. Hordinski, training and readiness officer at MDSU2. "If
they ever encounter problems they will know what 'right' looks like and how to
handle those issues."
This unit-level training is important for the MDS Companies
as they advance towards certification through MDSU2 and become ready to deploy.
"This is part of their fleet readiness training plan
each mobile dive and salvage company goes through in preparation for upcoming
deployments," said Hordinski.
"We have to continue to train so that we can maintain a
standard in all aspects of our operations and our mission requirements. We have
to be able to fulfill all mission areas at all times so this training is to
develop and sustain the skill sets required to complete that mission."
During their time in Key West, divers trained with a variety
of dive rigs to demonstrate proficiency on equipment they may use while
operating in a deployed environment.
"In Key West, we are doing a mixture of different types
of diving; surface supplied air diving, surface supplied mixed gas diving, MK16
diving, and SCUBA," said Navy Diver 2nd Class Jonathan Pounders, a diver
assigned to MDS Co. 2-3.
During mixed gas dives, for example, divers use a helium and
oxygen mixture (HeO2) to submerge to deeper depths. With this type of diving,
Navy divers must slowly ascend to the surface to allow their bodies to
decompress and acclimate safely.
"Many times, things that need to be salvaged out of the
ocean are deep, and with that kind of diving come decompression
obligations," said Pounders.
Senior Chief Navy Diver Steve Askew, MDS Co. 2-3 master
diver, explained the importance of mastering all dive stations whether it's the
dive rigs themselves,
operating the console that supplies the diver's air,
supervising the dive, or tending the divers.
"The team needs to function as a unit to make sure
everyone is trained so we can effectively go out and complete missions."
No matter what station they operated, all Navy Divers
conducted an average of three to five dives a day while descending to depths
below 100 feet, where HeO2 is needed, and to as deep as 195 feet to
successfully complete their unit level training as a team.
While diving in any capacity can be dangerous, the steps
taken to properly train and build the confidence of Navy divers mitigates many
of the hazards divers face in real world salvage operations.
"During any dive the dangers range from injury,
decompression sickness, arterial gas embolisms, as well as a myriad of things
that are well defined within the [U.S. Navy] dive manual," said Hordinski.
"We do our best to ensure that the divers' heads are in the game during
any dive operation. The training prepares them for the operational situations
that they may encounter along the road."
Navy divers observe strict standards when conducting dive
operations where safety is routine and reinforced throughout their careers.
"Being safe is the most important part of the training,
it takes the entire team, everybody is here to ensure all the divers are
getting the best training while being as safe as possible," said Askew.
Navy divers trained aboard rescue and salvage ship USNS
Grapple (T-ARS 53). Grapple, one of four Navy rescue and salvage ships owned by
Military Sealift Command, is operated by 26 civil service mariners and four
military personnel.
"We wouldn't be doing the training without
Grapple," said Pounders. "It's home base, it's where we plan our
dives, and it's where we execute our dives. Everything that we are doing out
here is based off this ship."
"Grapple provides fixed support for diving
operations," said Timothy Kelly, ship's master. "We have a
recompression chamber, we have wenches that will raise and lower the diving
stages, we are able to recover heavy materials off the bottom using our 40-ton
boom and we have berthing available to support a mobile dive and salvage
team."
Having completed their unit-level training milestone, MDS
Co. 2-3 and MDS Co. 2-4 will now prepare for their final evaluation problem
scheduled for later this spring.
MDSU 2 is an expeditionary mobile unit homeported at Joint
Expeditionary Base, Little Creek-Ft. Story in Virginia Beach, Va. They
previously conducted successful salvage operations supporting TWA Flight 800,
Swiss Air Flight 111, the space shuttles Challenger and Columbia, the I-35W
Mississippi River bridge collapse in Minnesota, the Civil War ironclads USS
Monitor, CSS Georgia, and recovery of downed F-16Cs off the coast of Italy and
Virginia.
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