Duo make history in 40m disabled diving first

Mohammed Salim Patel and Shaun Gash in the sea with their instructors after completing the 40m diving challenge
Image caption,

Salim and Shaun completed the challenge at Um Sid in Egypt

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Two divers from Lancashire are celebrating after making history as the first disabled duo to scuba dive to a depth of 40m (131ft).

Paraplegic Shaun Gash and Mohammed Salim Patel, who is blind, have spent months preparing for the challenge, which they undertook at Um Sid in Egypt.

Guided by their instructor Curly, the pair spent an hour underwater and reached 40m which is the deepest depth any recreational diver is allowed to go.

"We want to spread the word that diving is for every body, for every ability," Shaun said.

Image caption,

The pair spent an hour in the water and reached a maximum depth of 40m – the deepest any recreational diver is able to go

The pair were trained by Curly, an Egyptian diving instructor at Morecambe Area Divers, and it was the first time a blind person and a paraplegic amputee had dived together.

Salim, a BBC journalist, and adventurer Shaun also dived at the Cave and Cavern Canyon dive sites as part of the challenge, which required significant skill and preparation.

“Myself and Salim have had to do the same practical and theoretical training as anybody else," Shaun said.

"The difference is we’ve got a disability - but we haven't, everybody's got a different ability.

"You’ve got somebody with legs that are powering away and someone with arms that are powering away and together we are like V6 engines."

Image caption,

The diving data has now been sent for official verification

The diving data has been collected and sent to the Guinness Book of Records for official verification.

“The record has been set,” Salim said. "We did 40m and we were down there for 60 minutes.

“We've done it. We've done it in the Red Sea and it couldn’t have been possible without all of these people.”

Instructor Curly said it had been "a big achievement for me and also for every single one working with me".

“It was really great," he said. "My main thing is honestly not the record, my main thing is seeing their faces after each dive.”

Clarification 28 November: This story has been updated to clarify the length and location of the dive.

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