...even the guy who just did an iron man was exhausted
I'm not surprised, he should have taken a rest in between
/boomtish
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...even the guy who just did an iron man was exhausted
What can be logged as a dive? (Quoted from the PADI Instructor Manual, General Standards and Procedures) Minimum depth is 5 metres/15 feet. During open water dives, have divers spend the majority of time at 5 metres/15 feet or greater, and breathe at least 1400 litres or 50 cubic feet of compressed gas or remains submerged for at least 20 minutes.
This seems to indicate that Rescue Diver Course scenario/practice dives could rarely be logged as dives. However, the following guidelines were always given in the instructor manual:
Those are the overall general recommendations for what the instructor is supposed to do on a dive. That does not refer to what a diver can put in the log book.
Here is the definition of a logged dive (2012 manual, page 16):
Logged Dives
To credit as a logged dive for course requirements, the dive takes
place in open water and specific information about the dive (i.e.
date, time, location, depth, profile, etc.) is recorded. Training
dives for PADI courses (in open water) qualify as logged dives.
Those are the overall general recommendations for what the instructor is supposed to do on a dive. That does not refer to what a diver can put in the log book.
Here is the definition of a logged dive (2012 manual, page 16):
Logged Dives
To credit as a logged dive for course requirements, the dive takes
place in open water and specific information about the dive (i.e.
date, time, location, depth, profile, etc.) is recorded. Training
dives for PADI courses (in open water) qualify as logged dives.
I think the critical phrase in there is "for course requirements". If you log your pool dives, or very shallow dives, there is nothing wrong with that, but when you go for some certification like Rescue, or DM, those dives just won't count towards the required minimum.
Best bet is to just log every dive you do (I wouldn't do pools) just to be safe.
Best bet is have sufficient experience (logged dives) well in advance of the barest minimums for attendance on a course![]()