Why Bob, I had a great big, huge, enormous, Al 80! Why would I need anything bigger for a dive like that?

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This would be the same Island Dive Industry that thinks it's OK to destroy hundreds of years worth of coral growth in order to capture an octopus for a client to handle?
I left Maui with a pretty "bleh" impression of the attitudes of the dive "professionals" I came into contact with over there. Most don't seem particularly interested in either diver safety or sustaining the diving environment. It's probably the biggest reason I've never gone back.
... if you think PADI's bad, wait'll you meet some of the SSI folks ...
Just kidding, of course ... there's good and bad divers and dive instructors in every agency. PADI just happens to be the biggest, and therefore the one that's easiest to notice the bad apples in.
Bet if you looked hard enough, you could even find a few in the CMAS program ...
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
... if you think Maui's bad, wait'll you meet some of the Guam folks ...
Just kidding, of course ... there's good and bad dive instructors on every Island. Maui just happens to be where halemano lives, and therefore the one that's popular to point out bad apples in.
Bet if you looked hard enough, you could even find a few in the PNW Islands ...
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
halemanō;5811243:If a lava rock anchored coral colony is small enough that a diver can turn it over, what do you think happens to it when the big seasonal storm swells hit the shore?
The difference between a cavern and a cave is the presence of ambient light. If there is light it's a cavern if no light it is a cave. Both have special training requirements,
... and this makes it somehow acceptable for a dive guide to destroy it in order to capture an octopus for a client to hold ???
Thank you for providing a timely example of the mentality I was just talking about.
Nowhere else I've been on this planet would a dive professional defend that sort of activity. As with other things you've promoted, it also goes against the teachings of the agency you represent.
And don't EVEN talk to me about "typing down one's nose" ... you're the ScubaBoard expert in that category ...
Actually, I was looking for specifics. How do you 'teach them well?' Specifically what do you say, what do you demonstrate, and what skills / exercises must the students complete so that they meet your performance standards so that they may safely conduct deep dives and dives in overhead environments, after having only just completed your OW course?
halemanō,
Care to respond?
Apparently not!