fnfalman
Contributor
I have been diving since 1965 and I have never bothered to keep a log book. The guys I had been diving with didn't keep logs and I hadn't even heard of divers' logs until sometime in the late '70s. I just didn't see the need for one even after I learned of their existence.
Recently, a friend of mine who owns the only LDS that I will use told me that dive ops require a log book and won't let you dive from their boats without one. If this is the case, what is a diver like me supposed to do?
Granted that my diving experiences revolving primarily around SoCal water and charters plus a handful of lake diving, so I can't say anything about dive ops in the Red Sea, the Carribean, the Far East, etc. Nonetheless, I have yet to have any charter; be it the boat company or the LDS that chartered the boat, wanting to "inspect" my dive log.
I do keep a dive log but that's for my own purposes than to prove to others my diving experience.
Supposedly if one were to want to be a dive professional, then the prerequisite includes showing some sort of dive log to prove one's diving experience.