That's not a statistic. It's the opinion of the people running the government in Quebec.
Yes. There actions were a result of high statistical information surrounding diver fatalities as a result of inadequate basic diver training.
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That's not a statistic. It's the opinion of the people running the government in Quebec.
To the extent that their knowledge and skills are retained, yes.
So despite all the benefits available today, why have the old ways been rejected by the recreational diving industry.
No Richard, that's the last thing that I want. I'd much prefer the diving industry to accept responsibility, so that Government never feels it has to become involved.
I wonder if we should start making football fields 50 yards . . . Should we make the game easier and give a trophy to every kid just for showing up?
Or, should these kids be expected to tow the line, play football on a 100 yard field . . .
Tough training didn't just help me become a better diver. Tough training helped me to be a better person. All I knew when I started diving at age 13 was that I wanted to be a diver. My instructors took care of the rest. I did what I was told and it was challenging, but fun. I had no idea how those skills would still be paying off to this day.
As compared to 1964:
- The diving population is different now than in the good-ol-days. Divers now are often older (I think the average age was mid 30's IIRC) and have more life experience. That life experience is something that the young Tarzans of your generation didn't have so compensation with training was necessary to save them from their own over-confidence. After all, as we see from statistics of automobile accidents, young men until about the age of 25 are at the highest risk. When divers consisted almost exclusively of young men, the risks were different. It was inherent in the attitude and behaviour of participants. this also partly explains why accident rates have dropped over the years. The current diving population simply consists of a cross section of society that collectively aren't willing to take the same amount of risk as divers did in 1964. They may not be able to do all the same things, but they don't lay awake at night because of it...
Saying that we should still be putting modern scuba divers (like Grandma and Auntie Bep) through the rigours of the good old days is to completely ignore this development in the demographics. The risk tolerance of divers has dropped.
- Modern divers engage in other activities and dive in other conditions. More and more divers dive in conditions very dissimilar to the conditions encounterd in the good-ol-days. Many divers, especially inexperienced ones, dive on shallow warm water reefs with a guide. The Tarzans in 1964 didn't. Most diving in 1964 was done in colder water, in more turbid water, engaged in spear fishing etc and with little to no "support" from more experienced divers and/or surface (boat) crews. You might not LIKE the hand-holding that gets done now, but it's a completely normal, completely expected well organized, widely available and safe way to take beginners under water.
You may be right to point out that newly certified divers are not as self sufficient as they used to be, but they also have a much better infrastructure and diving culture to support them in the initial phases.
- Tarzan dove with equipment that most modern diver wouldn't use if they were paid. The gear has improved vastly since 1964. In terms of comfort, utility, safety, reliability, availability and quality of maintenance etc. there is simply no comparison. Divers in 1964 had to be fitter because diving with that crap was simply put, a tougher job. Of course they had to be more prepared for OOA situations, they didn't have the SPG. Of course they had to be stronger swimmers. They didn't have a BCD, of course they had to be more confident. Their skill compensated for the shortcomings in the gear. It would still be many years before the first dive computers showed up .... you know the ones... the called them the Bend-o-matic....
You can't compare the situtation in 1964 with the situation anno 2009 because the CONTEXT simply isn't the same.
One last point about risk. A certain acceptance of risk is inherent in a sport like diving and people know that. People's risk acceptance is also context dependent. We all go diving fully aware that far and away the most dangerous part of our day is driving to the dive-site and back. The risks inherent in diving haven't (if you believe the stats) changed much over the years. Death and accident rates have remained stable even with lower intensity training, probably due in part to factors like I mentioned above. Evidently divers are willing to accept the risk profile the way it is.
The thing that you don't seem to understand is that risk isn't the only thing that's important to modern divers. Access, availability of nice places to dive, the infrastructure, good gear, etc. It's all part of what being a modern diver is. We like to go on vacation and go diving. We like to have a guide who can lead us around, we like to be able to choose gear for functionality, style, comfort and safety..... we like having an industry that supports us in getting the water quickly to go diving because we don't have huge amounts of free time and tourism is expensive.... You might want to go back to swinging through the proverbial jungle because something in you has a romantic attachment to that, but most modern divers don't. They want to go diving.
Since the agencies aren't continually defending lawsuits, we have to consider whether, perhaps, the training really is defensible. There just aren't that many accidents.
That's it, isn't it? You're all cut up because diving isn't a "commitment" anymore.I believe the opposite to be true. The average age of people taking diving in 1964 was older. Young people back then didn't have the disposable income as they do today. Diving was a commitment. It wasn't like going to McDonalds for a hamburger.
I disagree with your notion of "Tarzans,"
You misunderstood me. You can go just about anywhere now and find a shop and local guide and divers to help you. You're not seriously going to try telling me tht in 1964 you had all that? I just got back from Egypt from a dive-camp and there were 10 (count 'em) 10 zodiacs at our disposal, unlimited air and Nitrox, and a dive staff of I-don't-know-how-many to help the beginners. That's the infrastructure I'm talking about. I know you hate PADI but the fact is, they created a context that made diving accessible.In the 60's diving (at least in Canada) was Club based. Because of this, post-certification training was through mentorship, so without question there was a great deal of support from experienced divers.
I must have missed it.Again I've proven your theory of poor infrastructure in the 60's incorrect.
Ok... here you have a good point. Choices needed to be made and I'm as sure as you are that the choice was made to grow the industry and to not just stare blindly at accident statistics. Furthermore, if you compare the accident stats from now as compared to 1964 you can easily argue that the "standards" you hold so high weren't keeping people nearly as safe as you want people to believe they did.I can appreciate the advantages of technology, with it the diving certification organizations had a choice:
1/ Keep the standards where they were and increase the safety of diving through technology; or
2/ Reduce the standards and with the aid of technology maintain the current safety statistics.
Who said it's the only thing? Black-and-white again. Next.The one thing cannot be argued, is that technology fails. If that's your parachute, I hope you have something else for back-up Grandma.
Sure I agree with you. I teach me divers to be relaxed and develop situational awareness and good judgement too. Teh brain is your best bet, always. But that has nothing to do with your main point, which is hating the progress we've made.Perhaps I've already addressed this. I teach my students to be safe and independent. The equipment has advanced but the most important piece of kit that the diver has is his/her brain. This hasn't changed. It takes training to make the difference, not a decompression computer.
When I have 38 years of experience training divers we can sit down and drink a beer, toast to Tantor and congratulate both ourselves with this accomplishment. You for your success in your generation and me in mine.In 38 years none of the divers I've trained has been injured while diving to my knowledge.
this is another topic. i'd like to see some changes on this front but we can take that into another tread.Nothing I've said has been directed at a resort course. I don't have a problem with that at all.
I don't know what happened that made Quebec do what they did. From what I know about Quebec they like to be different, just because.... so you never know what's real and what's politics with those guys.Society also has this concern. If this isn't maintained, you have government intervention, such as what has been done in Quebec as a result of too many diving fatalities as a result of poor diver training.