The best area for easy drift dives in that area is centered around Briny Breezes reef. The closest inlet is Boynton Beach.
Location: Boynton Beach (outer reef) Description: You may think from the name, this reef may have been named by an Irishman. But in fact it was named for the landmark :Briny Breezes mobile home community directly inshore. The reef line like most all reefs runs parallel to shore making it great...
www.southfloridadiving.com
Starfish Scuba is a good boat that operates out of Boynton Beach. If Ren is still there, I can highly recommend him if you want a DM. He was the instructor for my son's OW course and my Rescue class.
maps.app.goo.gl
Well I'm happy to report that my family is now certified!!
The kids all had good buoyancy control. My wife struggles a bit more but mostly because her ears are hard to clear
They all had fun with it, although the first day of checkout dives was rather pointless...well not pointless I know, but boring and a let-down as I knew that it would be. Just a lather rinse and repeat of the pool dives. All skills and nothing to look at, not fun really.
First day of dives was at Blue Gratto. All their time was spent on the 10ft and 20ft platforms. No tour...not that there's much to look at....and I'm assuming that the standards for students say "no overhead", so they were limited to a very small volume of water. They weren't even shown the novelty of the diving bell there, just 20ft or so away! Seriously, those sorts of sink hole "spring dives" are no different than the shop's pool except 8 ft deeper, colder, fish, and a little more turbidity.
That night over dinner my son was asking about the purpose and that led me to a discussion about "open water" and the effect of depth.
Personally I really do think that the training establishment is doing a disservice by not at least taking them down to the 30ft platform for day one. And at least by day two into "real" open water. Day two in my opinion, would be good to take them down even a little deeper maybe 40-60ft...and in something that is truly open water...not a natural swimming pool
Anyway
Day 2 was at Rainbow River. They all had a blast with the drift dive.... although the cold did take a toll towards the end.
It confirmed my suspicion that a nice saltwater reef drift dive would probably be a big hit for them!
That place, even though the depth is still very limited, I think is a much better training environment. It feels like real open water, adds a giant stride off the boat, more to see and explore. Adds current, fun navigation scenarios, etc...
Looking forward to our keys trip in August now. I do plan to ask the captain for at least one dive someplace down maybe in the 40-50ft depth range? I know it probably won't happen there, but I still think that I'd prefer maybe 60ft to get well past 1atm deep...to experience the smaller relative pressure gradient...and otherwise just for the confidence boost.
And I think I'll be thinking about a drift dive trip next....maybe to Boyton!