My thoughts:
- everyone has a first time some time.
- everyone makes their first 9 or 10 dives (min 5 in a pool and 4 outside) without certification.
If you really break it down, all an intro dive is, is telling people
- clear your ears and don't hold your breath
- follow me
- any questions?
The whole DSD is designed to do exactly what the op is describing. Just get the gear on and get wet with an experienced buddy. If the buddy in the OP's first post were a DM or an instructor then we'd all be saying "good idea, go for it". In reality, what the guy is suggesting doesn't sound weird to me.
10-15ft is a perfect depth to do this in and assuming that his buddy, who has been "diving for years" has at least as much experience as the average DM then I don't really see the big issue. You might open a bit of a legal pandora's box if something goes terribly wrong but all things created equal I'd look at it as an opportunity as much as a risk.
There's one big caveat to this, though. The buddy can be highly experienced and still be an idiot. There isn't enough information in the OP to tell what kind of diver they are but I'd say to the OP.... not all "experienced" divers know what they're doing. Don't get in the water with him unless you're *sure* he's capable of supervising a rank beginner. Not all experienced divers are up to this.
R..
- everyone has a first time some time.
- everyone makes their first 9 or 10 dives (min 5 in a pool and 4 outside) without certification.
If you really break it down, all an intro dive is, is telling people
- clear your ears and don't hold your breath
- follow me
- any questions?
The whole DSD is designed to do exactly what the op is describing. Just get the gear on and get wet with an experienced buddy. If the buddy in the OP's first post were a DM or an instructor then we'd all be saying "good idea, go for it". In reality, what the guy is suggesting doesn't sound weird to me.
10-15ft is a perfect depth to do this in and assuming that his buddy, who has been "diving for years" has at least as much experience as the average DM then I don't really see the big issue. You might open a bit of a legal pandora's box if something goes terribly wrong but all things created equal I'd look at it as an opportunity as much as a risk.
There's one big caveat to this, though. The buddy can be highly experienced and still be an idiot. There isn't enough information in the OP to tell what kind of diver they are but I'd say to the OP.... not all "experienced" divers know what they're doing. Don't get in the water with him unless you're *sure* he's capable of supervising a rank beginner. Not all experienced divers are up to this.
R..