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Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

A Job Involving a Lot of Pressure

November 24, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Health

Six deep-sea divers have been enlisted by the city of New York to repair a valve at the bottom of a 700-foot shaft in Dutchess County, yesterday New York Times reports. The shaft is located in the Rondout-West Branch tunnel, which is 45 miles long, 13.5 feet wide, up to 1,200 feet below ground” and which brings half of the water supply to New York city from reservoirs in the Catskill Mountains. For more than a month, the six divers have to live

in a sealed 24-foot tubular pressurized tank complete with showers, a television and a Nerf basketball hoop, breathing air that is 97.5 percent helium and 2.5 percent oxygen, so their high-pitched squeals are all but unintelligible. They leave the tank only to transfer to a diving bell that is lowered 70 stories into the earth, where they work 12-hour shifts, with each man taking a four-hour turn hacking away at concrete to expose the valve.

And more about how the divers work:

Three divers at a time climb into the steel bell, an orb that is lowered down the shaft for 20 minutes to reach the pumping equipment in the tunnel. The bell is tethered to a bundle of cables carrying air, communication lines, electricity and water. Each diver works for four hours and rests underwater for eight before returning to the tank at the surface, where 32 more employees of Global Diving and Salvage, the Seattle company running the project, pass meals, clothes and books through an air lock.

In the saturation control room, Patrick Boyd, a life-support technician, monitors the divers’ air on a panel of screens, one of which reads 2.26 percent, for the amount of oxygen. While underwater, divers often get more oxygen in their mixture to keep them alert. John Lapeyrouse, a dive supervisor who is one of the few who can understand the helium-riddled voices, one of the side effects of what is called “saturation diving,” talked to Mr. McAfee as he worked the other day.

Apparently, the divers can ” request whatever food they like, including steak and fresh salads” but because “the air pressure in the tank dulls the taste buds,” they have to add a lot of “Tabasco, salsa and jalapenos.” And when their work is done, they must “remain in the tank for a week to gradually wean themselves off helium.” Says Robert Onesti, who’s running the project for Global Diving.

“It’s not for everybody. It’s heavy construction work, and it’s deep.”

You can say that again: I’ve come to love swimming thanks to Charlie, but dislike going underwater. Charlie, on the other hand, seems to thrive on being in deep water and, indeed, being under it. Often when we swim at the YMCA pool, he positions himself just where the water is almost over his head, and crouches down under and then propels himself out, and then ducks down under, jumps up out—-repeat, repeat, repeat.

Before he goes to sleep, Charlie always wraps his feet and legs tightly in at least two fleece blankets: Deep pressure seems not merely comforting, but essential, to his system. I’ve said it before, but I don’t know what he, or we, might have done in the past before the invention of polarfleece. And I’ve given up getting potentially scratchy sweaters for Charlie and shirts with stiff cuffs and collars: If he needs to wear those when he’s older for special occasions, he and we can deal.

Who knows but Charlie might, indeed, like scuba diving (I wouldn’t be the one going under with him, that’s for sure)—being under so much water— living underwater for a couple of weeks in a pressurized chamber might (who knows, again) appeal to him.

There’s something out there that any of us, with our diverse talents, can do, even if you have to go to the bottom of the ocean to find it.

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Comments

5 Responses to “A Job Involving a Lot of Pressure”
  1. DavidA says:

    Kristina, I was able to get my son, Mark, certified to scuba dive when he was 13. It was a big deal but I had allowed our other kids to get their certification at that age so I wanted to do whatever was possible to allow Mark to participate when I took the other kids diving. Scuba diving is, by its nature, a dangerous activity and I am nervous when any of my kids go diving but it is especially trying when I take Mark.

    The results are worth it. Mark is not very coordinated or graceful as a diver. However, he loves the outdoors and animals. I think the combination of the weightlessness and the submersion in wildlife makes diving one of Mark’s favorite vacation activities, next to fishing.

    Because it is dangerous, I would never recommend that anyone undertake to learn and participate in scuba diving. However, for Mark and my family it has been a real treat. As with all other life skills, I cannot help but think that the confidence that Mark gets from participating will show up in other areas and activities.

  2. That’s so great to hear—–since neither Jim nor I know how to, I don’t know how likely it’d be for Charlie. But then, just a few years ago, no one in our family was riding a bike for miles and miles………

  3. Alli says:

    we did our first swimming lessons for Alec in October with school, his aide was there and so was I, expecting the worst because he had never progressed past the first step. Well didn’t we look silly hovering around! he took to the water immediately. After the 2 weeks of lessons we have kept up our visits and Alec spends most of his time… like Charlie bobbing down and then springing back up out of the water over and over again. He also loves doing backstroke push offs from the ladder like he saw in the Olympics.

    We are signed up for more lessons after Christmas. I worried at almost 7 we had left it too late but he makes up for it in sheer enthusiasm.

  4. DavidA says:

    Kristina,

    I did not know how to dive when I decided to do it with my oldest. I did my certification at the same time. I then went through the certification again with each of my other kids, including Mark. The instructor thought that I was nuts.

    In any event, like your experience with biking, I had no real expectations. The worst that could happen was that Mark did not like it or could not do it. In either case, no harm no foul. We have made an effort to try a lot things. Some worked out; some did not; but it was all fun.

  5. That’s an inspiring story. Most people never get past 50-60 feet. It’s a while different world down there.

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