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Where in Canada are you diving?I start solo dining in august and dive solo until the of the season in october, so i put down about 10 solo dive (2 tanks..).
Anyway solo diving bring to me a complete new vision of the sport i am not interested to go back with a buddy.
Being a solo diver you become in my opinion a better diver and more aware of the do and don't and try to avoid the Oh S, situation.
Over the course of these 10 dive i learn to use a compass find and keep a heading and reciprocal course. I also learn to use a pony and how to set it up.
More importantly i learn to plan my dive and dive my plan i don't do improvisation. I am using the 1/3 rule, at about 1200 psi i turn around end start to slowly ascent to my entry point. I am really conservative in my dive.
What i notice when i talk to non diver or diver that don't solo dive they say omg don't do that, how come, your gonna die...oh i don't talk about it anymore! I keep this secret relation with solo diving just for me.
Beside i agree with all the post before.
totally agree with you.I am a pretty independent person. I don't like to be lead around a dive site by someone else. I like to discover on my own. I like doing my own research. I like knowing exactly how my gear works. I like to service my own gear.
After spending more than 50% of my time chasing after a buddy that just ignored me for an entire dive, and realizing they would be no help to me if I had a problem, I started thinking about getting solo certified. I have also been on dives where my buddy used up their air before I got to half my tank.
When solo, I spend 100% of my time underwater doing what I want to do. I also spend more time paying attention to my location, depth, dive time, and air pressure than I did when having to keep track of a buddy location and his air pressure. When I meet other animals, there is nobody around to scare them away.
The extra benefit is not having to find a buddy to go diving with. If I want to do a shore dive today, I can just pack up and go. Another benefit is not being responsible for another diver that makes poor decisions that endanger themselves (or even a good diver whose body decides it's time to have a heart attack or stroke while diving).
Most of the boats I have been on don't insist I pair up with anyone. Once in a while a boat will require that I do buddy with another diver but I try to avoid that. If I know I will have to be with a buddy, I still carry all my solo gear.
centeen park brockville ontario, canadaWhere in Canada are you diving?
In my opinion, a solo (or "self reliant") diver, when done properly is generally safer than an average buddy team. For example, your redundant air stays with you, it doesn't swim away to look at some pretty fish.What i notice when i talk to non diver or diver that don't solo dive they say omg don't do that, how come, your gonna die...oh i don't talk about it anymore! I keep this secret relation with solo diving just for me.
i agree with you. Being alone you pay much more attention to details and your surrounding.In my opinion, a solo (or "self reliant") diver, when done properly is generally safer than an average buddy team. For example, your redundant air stays with you, it doesn't swim away to look at some pretty fish.
Absolutely. There’s nowhere to hide, nobody to follow, you have to think what you’re doing and plan your options.i agree with you. Being alone you pay much more attention to details and your surrounding.