billt4sf
Contributor
My wife and I recently took a dry suit course (so that we could dive in Monterey more comfortably) and the initial course / instructor was poor. After a complaint to the dive shop owner, he set it right and now we are good.
The dive shop was Bamboo Reef in SF. I feel a bit guilty mentioning the name but they did set us right in the end, and anyway it seems to me that one of the possible purposes of SB is to help other divers navigate their way through the "business" of diving.
Here is a short summary of the events.
The Dry Suit course is two days, the first was a night class in a pool and the second a dive at the Breakwater. After the first, night, class, my wife and I felt that we weren't being treated well, that the instructor was preoccupied with other concerns and kept talking about how he wanted to end the class early. He didn't explain much about the valve operation, less about the rest of the suits, and really no help getting them on the first time. But we "did" the required skills, more or less, and although my wife didn't feel comfortable, we decided to go ahead with the second part.
Three of us were in the course and the instructor was the third guy's "dive buddy". HA! Again he was in a big rush to finish, and NO HELP getting the suits on. When he got his suit on, he said "We''ll you're all certified divers so I'll see you in the water" and went in, leaving us to struggle and do our own buddy checks. He didn't even check HIS OWN BUDDY (who had some 10 dives in his experience). It took us easily 15 more mins to get kitted-out, we helped the third guy as well and went down to the beach, where we stood waiting with our tanks on looking for our instructor. We finally spotted him in the water, looking at us like, "well, what are you waiting for?".
I'll cut this short. The instructor lost us TWICE in the water because he swam ahead, never looking back in the 5 - 10 ft visibility. He didn't teach us how to correctly vent the suit, we each got water in it every time we vented (we all thought we were supposed to vent through the wrist!), and again we left not knowing how to use the valves. There were other problems too, but this is too long already. Despite this, the instructor declared us "dry suit trained" and forwarded our certs in to SSI.
Anyway I wrote a long letter to the owner and he agreed to let one of the instructors that we knew from the Bamboo Reef Monterey give us the course again for free. This instructor was GREAT!!! She helped us tremendously and we are now all set to dive dry in Monterey.
I just think that instructors need to take their time, especially with newbees that don't know things that are second nature to the instructor. I also think that course participants should COMPLAIN when things aren't done right.
I have learned alot in a short time from ScubaBoard. Maybe this message will be useful to someone down the line.
- Bill
The dive shop was Bamboo Reef in SF. I feel a bit guilty mentioning the name but they did set us right in the end, and anyway it seems to me that one of the possible purposes of SB is to help other divers navigate their way through the "business" of diving.
Here is a short summary of the events.
The Dry Suit course is two days, the first was a night class in a pool and the second a dive at the Breakwater. After the first, night, class, my wife and I felt that we weren't being treated well, that the instructor was preoccupied with other concerns and kept talking about how he wanted to end the class early. He didn't explain much about the valve operation, less about the rest of the suits, and really no help getting them on the first time. But we "did" the required skills, more or less, and although my wife didn't feel comfortable, we decided to go ahead with the second part.
Three of us were in the course and the instructor was the third guy's "dive buddy". HA! Again he was in a big rush to finish, and NO HELP getting the suits on. When he got his suit on, he said "We''ll you're all certified divers so I'll see you in the water" and went in, leaving us to struggle and do our own buddy checks. He didn't even check HIS OWN BUDDY (who had some 10 dives in his experience). It took us easily 15 more mins to get kitted-out, we helped the third guy as well and went down to the beach, where we stood waiting with our tanks on looking for our instructor. We finally spotted him in the water, looking at us like, "well, what are you waiting for?".
I'll cut this short. The instructor lost us TWICE in the water because he swam ahead, never looking back in the 5 - 10 ft visibility. He didn't teach us how to correctly vent the suit, we each got water in it every time we vented (we all thought we were supposed to vent through the wrist!), and again we left not knowing how to use the valves. There were other problems too, but this is too long already. Despite this, the instructor declared us "dry suit trained" and forwarded our certs in to SSI.
Anyway I wrote a long letter to the owner and he agreed to let one of the instructors that we knew from the Bamboo Reef Monterey give us the course again for free. This instructor was GREAT!!! She helped us tremendously and we are now all set to dive dry in Monterey.
I just think that instructors need to take their time, especially with newbees that don't know things that are second nature to the instructor. I also think that course participants should COMPLAIN when things aren't done right.
I have learned alot in a short time from ScubaBoard. Maybe this message will be useful to someone down the line.
- Bill