Sharm El-Sheikh F.A.Q.

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i think theres a rule about the guide because of the deaths there, if u go on youtube u can find a video of a russian guy that died there,scary stuff, i would say that perhaps the goverenment made the rule to stop people going deeper than they should to keep the deaths down,bad for tourisim i suspect, if you go to wiki and search the blue hole dahab u will see that some people want to go threw the arch and underestimate its distance and run into trouble

maybe someone that lives there or knows more can comment

the blue hole is amazing, it was the first reef i seen for real and i sh#t my pants when i went in the divers entrance up the hill just looking at the deep below
 
Accidents is one of the reasons. Second is that finding the path is not that easy, so if you don't know the place, you need a guide. Otherwise you may end up in a lot of trouble....
 
Why is there such a rule?
So many reasons :)

1. Diving in the Red Sea is about tourism not sport. So having a guide should ensure seeing the best parts (thus coming again to the Red Sea). Even for the same dive site, having a guide that knows the points of interest is more enjoyable than going alone.
2. Some sites are really tricky and an average diver will get lost (or will lose the enjoyment trying to navigate all the time).
3. Some sites have strong changeable currents that only local guides know how to get through.
4. Some sites are dangerous and not having a guide might cause troubles.
5. Again it's about tourism not sport so people have to earn living.
 
the changing and local currents thing is very true
i was at shark observatory and my guide had the plan worked out perfectly as to where we were going if the current was heavy in the different place, and beleive me it was very strong and the current was exactly in one of the places he said it would be, we where on the sand plataue above yolanda wreck site and we were almost crawling across the sand using it to make our way it was that strong, so we ended up going 2 inches to the reef down along the seaward side and using the rock work to crawl our selfs along gradually, this was my first real experiance with current and was really cool,but if i was with a dm from my country there wasnt a hope of getting to the surfacing point around at satelite reef

i dived with subex and they are really the best place i have dived with so far and they use air 28 so that is perfect for me because im an unfit smoker and have only 20 dives so i dont burn through my air as much,or as someone said before its not the air 28 its just that i was more comfortable,but in april please god...i will dive with subex again because they were the friendliest people i had met in the dive clubs i dived with over there,but i think most of the clubs are friendly anyway, but they really did know there stuff and trust me if ur only a new diver u can do with a guide, my guide on myt last dive of the trip told me i was okay to go with an unguided group but it turned out the 2 guys i was diving with on that day didnt know how to navigate underwater and i ended up leading which was an absolute nightmare because navigating is so difficult with current and everything kinda looks the same at times hahah ill never go unguided again until i am a lot more experianced even if my guide says he or she has the upmost confidance in my diving abilitys hahah
 
i think theres a rule about the guide because of the deaths there, if u go on youtube u can find a video of a russian guy that died there,scary stuff, i would say that perhaps the goverenment made the rule to stop people going deeper than they should to keep the deaths down,bad for tourisim i suspect, if you go to wiki and search the blue hole dahab u will see that some people want to go threw the arch and underestimate its distance and run into trouble

At best, it is only partially true.

If you look over the years, I think you'll be surprised to discover that the number of deaths in Egypt much higher during these years that guided dives are mandatory.

However, one can play with statistics and get whatever result you want- in the last years the number of divers has also increased, so overall perhaps it is the same death per number of dives with or without guided dives enforced.

Also, there has been some incidents in which a whole group of divers has disappeared during a guided dive (for example in Elphinstone last year) so it biases the statistics, and also quite a lot of latest deaths were actually technical divers, presumably very experienced.

Another thing, the "Blue Hole" suffers from bad public relationship about its death toll, and in the past many divers who died in nearby sites (like "The Canyon")- their deaths were attributed to the "Blue Hole" because it made better headlines in newspapers or just the reporter's ignorance (as is reflected in most diving accidents reported with lots of wrong information...)

I believe that the "mandatory guided dives only" is mainly from economic reasons- not a bad reason in general- but it has nothing to do with accidents or marine conservation, although both are high in the list why it is good to have mandatory guided dives.

Most divers who come for a few day's vacation would prefer to use a local guide who'd take them to the "best sites", will show them "the best fish", will know the local currents etc etc. These type of divers will always prefer to have a guide whether it is mandatory or not, because it will allow them to get the best from their short vacation.

However, there are lots and lots of divers from all over the world who come quite frequently and already know where and how to div- sometimes even better than local guides, or just prefer from their own reasons to dive by themselves and it is not allowed presently.

About "The Russian guy video" (most probably you are referring to Yuri Lipski's video), he was an experienced dive guide. It was not the only (and unfortunately not the last- a year ago Polish/Israeli instructor/guide working for Planet Divers Robert Wickowski died in the Blue Hole) death case of experienced divers (in many cases dive instructors!) well acquainted with the site, who knew how to dive more than most of us- and died there. For many of these cases, the reason why is still mystery...
 
If you look over the years, I think you'll be surprised to discover that the number of deaths in Egypt much higher during these years that guided dives are mandatory.
Do you have these statistics in hand?
 
New season so looks like this thread is going to get revived!
Off to the red sea in May this year. I was planning on going to hurghada but when the non diving wife went to the travel agent they talked her into Sharm, so now we seem to be going there instead.
And no RSS, I dont think she will opt for Dahab as it looks like it might be lacking the vital ingrediants for her... sorry. :(
What I'd like to know now after having spent a week researching Dive centres in Hurghada and we are nt going there any more, is who do you "Sharm / naama regulars" reckomend as a dive centre? I want to do my Padi AOW, touching on Peak perf boy, Wrecks and one other as my specs. So who and where please guys and girls?

Thanks a whole lot as I know you'll come through after reading the posts so far to date!
Waxy.
 
When I was in Sharm El Sheikh last august I used Emperor Divers and had a great time
 
Just wanted to drop by and say hello to everyone, and a special hello to Asser and Mania :)
 

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