annlaur
Contributor
I've logged about 80 dives so far, and all have been led by professionals. Granted, most times I didn't have a choice (mandatory guided dives), but even if I had, I would have hired a professional. As a matter of fact, I even hire private DMs at the beginning of every dive trip and whenever I try something new (drift diving, UW photography…
I am a vacation diver, not a strong swimmer, only snorkeled twice before taking up diving at 33 years old, am sometimes anxious in the water. I also have poor visual memory, so don't trust myself much as far as navigation goes.
Sure, if I lived close to some shallow water and had local dive buddies, I could practice on a regular basis and dive without a pro. To be honest, provided I had more experience and redundant equipment, I would just love to do solo dives on very shallow reefs so I could just spend 10 minutes looking at one creature without feeling like I'm slowing down everyone else.
While I admire/envy all of the very experienced/hardcore divers out there and am all for making sure OW students receive proper basic instruction, I'm also glad that the agencies have made it easy for most people to enjoy the underwater world.
My Padi instructor was great, and I'm sure I could have dove the sites we trained at without him. Or any other shallow reef with great vis and little current.
But I went home and didn't dive for a year and on my next trip to a different location, I had forgotten everything, did a trust-me dive and had a close call which has shaken my self-confidence. My fault, not my instructor's. He'd warned me about the necessity to keep on diving/learning/doing refreshers, but I had such great memories of my OW certification that I didn't realize I had forgotten most of my training until I was underwater.
No matter how great a 5 day course is, it is not enough to build "muscle memory" and have the skills down on the long term.
And if I had been offered a longer course right from the start, I probably wouldn't have taken it, because that would have been quite an investment of time (and money) to make on a sport that, for all I knew, I might not even like.
Maybe I'm being oversensitive as it's been a long day for me in snowy Paris, but I find some of the posts written in this thread condescending towards those of us who choose to hire professionals.
Going on guided dives and/or hiring a private DM allows me to avoid an instabuddy, have a thorough briefing about the site and conditions, free my mind of navigation (no, I don't expect them to watch my gauges or my depth, but I do expect them to know where the mooring/exit point is, they know the site, I don't), see some critters I would have missed, have the peace of mind of knowing someone experienced is close by should the $… hit the fan (I don't expect them to babysit me, but their mere presence makes me feel safer and gives me self-confidence) or simply have a "model" to watch and learn from.
Hiring a private DM when in Dahab, Egypt, and in Cozumel, was also a wonderful way to spend the surface interval, both to get tips and advice about diving and to talk about the local way of life.
So, to answer Brianna's question, I know I'm too green to dive without a dive professional basically because I can't dive on a regular basis and my skills get rusty in between trips.
I am a vacation diver, not a strong swimmer, only snorkeled twice before taking up diving at 33 years old, am sometimes anxious in the water. I also have poor visual memory, so don't trust myself much as far as navigation goes.
Sure, if I lived close to some shallow water and had local dive buddies, I could practice on a regular basis and dive without a pro. To be honest, provided I had more experience and redundant equipment, I would just love to do solo dives on very shallow reefs so I could just spend 10 minutes looking at one creature without feeling like I'm slowing down everyone else.
While I admire/envy all of the very experienced/hardcore divers out there and am all for making sure OW students receive proper basic instruction, I'm also glad that the agencies have made it easy for most people to enjoy the underwater world.
My Padi instructor was great, and I'm sure I could have dove the sites we trained at without him. Or any other shallow reef with great vis and little current.
But I went home and didn't dive for a year and on my next trip to a different location, I had forgotten everything, did a trust-me dive and had a close call which has shaken my self-confidence. My fault, not my instructor's. He'd warned me about the necessity to keep on diving/learning/doing refreshers, but I had such great memories of my OW certification that I didn't realize I had forgotten most of my training until I was underwater.
No matter how great a 5 day course is, it is not enough to build "muscle memory" and have the skills down on the long term.
And if I had been offered a longer course right from the start, I probably wouldn't have taken it, because that would have been quite an investment of time (and money) to make on a sport that, for all I knew, I might not even like.
Maybe I'm being oversensitive as it's been a long day for me in snowy Paris, but I find some of the posts written in this thread condescending towards those of us who choose to hire professionals.
Going on guided dives and/or hiring a private DM allows me to avoid an instabuddy, have a thorough briefing about the site and conditions, free my mind of navigation (no, I don't expect them to watch my gauges or my depth, but I do expect them to know where the mooring/exit point is, they know the site, I don't), see some critters I would have missed, have the peace of mind of knowing someone experienced is close by should the $… hit the fan (I don't expect them to babysit me, but their mere presence makes me feel safer and gives me self-confidence) or simply have a "model" to watch and learn from.
Hiring a private DM when in Dahab, Egypt, and in Cozumel, was also a wonderful way to spend the surface interval, both to get tips and advice about diving and to talk about the local way of life.
So, to answer Brianna's question, I know I'm too green to dive without a dive professional basically because I can't dive on a regular basis and my skills get rusty in between trips.