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Massive vessel sails right above a scuba diver.

Massive vessel sails above scuba diver.

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ant0szek • 2,215 points
I’m pretty sure he knew where he’s diving because he attached himself with a line. So he’s taking the risk.

D
DoubleDouble0G • 255 points
Did he fly the alpha flag?

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atxbigfoot • 755 points
Diving flags don’t matter for large ships in certain channels, tbf. It’s more like “hey, hey, hey I’m diving to repair the channel” and the ships are like “haha I have the right of way and am carrying $500M worth of shit so sucks to suck if you die” there’s a reason why the channels aren’t closed for divers doing normal repairs, and it’s $$$

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[deleted] • 163 points
[deleted]

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Hertock • 103 points
Seems to be nothing more than an urban legend, no? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighthouse_and_naval_vessel_urban_legend Lighthouse and naval vessel urban legend – Wikipedia

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LiiDo • 24 points
>Reminded me of this old joke

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Hertock • 9 points
That’s not the original comment. And the edit still proves that.. he edited in this additional info, quoting some other guy: „edit: Apparently it was between Spaniards and Americans, credit: u/ayb88“ Edit: and now he completely deleted his comment

N
NSA_Chatbot • 1 points
The original joke was probably between a Roman galleon and the lighthouse at Alexandria. “Ego sum pharos”

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ptrexitus • 54 points
Seems fake. Thats not how navy ships identify them selves plus the co isn’t on the radio. That and you know, nav equipment.

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SkoobyDoo • 49 points
This joke is ruined when you label the lighthouse as a lighthouse from the start. The punchline is the final line where the Spanish reveal they are a lighthouse.

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damnatio_memoriae • 9 points
come on guys. this is obviously an old joke.

D
Dyolf_Knip • 9 points
American: We can take him!

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BluntHeart • 2 points
They probably could.

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ayb88 • -13 points
This was an actual interaction, but not with Canadians. https://youtu.be/aKu04xhEU7I?si=5lqYylt0barWiPdh

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CW1DR5H5I64A • 36 points
That’s an old [urban legend](https://thetidesofhistory.com/2021/06/20/the-naval-vessel-vs-the-lighthouse-urban-legend/) that has been retold and retold for decades. There is no evidence it ever happened.

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SquanchySnoo • 19 points
Wow that’s crazy but does make sense. Thanks for explaining.

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atxbigfoot • 27 points
Yeah channels, narrow waterways, etc. often have very different and even location specific laws, which is one reason why they have their own captains/navigators that will board large ships to get them to the dock or through the channel. Normal maritime laws apply in a general sense, but specific changes are made as needed for safety. E.g. the rules might be changed to keep oil tankers further away from a population center in the Houston port in case it catches fire. Theoretically power boats are supposed to yield to sailboats under sail power, however that becomes impossible in narrow channels depending on the size of the two boats. Source- was a boat captain that operated in a narrow channel. If a diver was doing gov’t approved repairs we’d have a flotilla around them. If they were doing private company stuff we’d notify our neighbors and try to keep other boats from getting too close, which generally worked except for when idiot local cops would pull up lol.

E
ernapfz • 23 points
Still … makes you want to poop in your skin diving suit.

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honkballs • 7 points
What does attaching himself with a line mean, is it a route that ships take or something?

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HOLEPUNCHYOUREYELIDS • 71 points
Likely that he understood there was a good chance a ship would pass over him during the dive so he needed a line to secure himself if a ship did pass so he didn’t get tossed around and potentially sucked into the propellor

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aaaaaaaarrrrrgh • 31 points
“Line” is a nautical term for what landlubbers call a rope. He tied himself to something solid (looks like a wreck?) so he wouldn’t end up in the diver smoothie maker (propeller).

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LameBMX • 18 points
a line is a rope that has a job. even on land. some stuff in my boats storage is rope until I give it a job. some rope is lines because they are predestined for a future job, like my guest dock lines.

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svm_invictvs • 5 points
I thought that line was to his dive flag.

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MandibleofThunder • 715 points
I’m not a SCUBA diver, and live about 40 miles from any major port, but aren’t shipping channels very clearly marked as such? At least that’s what I remember from doing boater safety maybe 25 years ago.

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Praesentius • 299 points
The guy was tethered. Seems like he was there for the thrill.

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__redruM • 62 points
I was worried the tether would snag the ship and take him for a ride.

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twats_upp • 6 points
Every time I see this video

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catsmustdie • 43 points
Yes, he certainly did it knowingly. You don’t tie a rope like that in a second, if some “random ship” appears out of nowhere, neither scuba divers even carry ropes like that usually.

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xxov • 10 points
As a scuba diver, this dude is a fucking idiot and definitely did this intentionally.

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nathacof • 30 points
Red right return.

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