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I have not done any training for quite a while and did none of my training in Key Largo. @The Chairman or [USER=67808]@mselenaous have extensive experience in Key Largo and could probably advise you. There are many experienced members on SB that can also give you their recommendations for training in Key Largo.Any dive shop recommendations? Thanks.
Thanks, but since Idaho is land locked and I'm retired, I'll be diving all over the world, so I don't have a region. I'm a former Airborne Ranger, so temperature and equipment variations won't bother me.
There is more to it that that. I certified locally and almost always dive in the tropics. First time I went for a local dive a couple of years later, I couldn't go down until my buddy said pull the neck seal to let the air bubble out, then I of course depth-charged into the muck raising the clouds of silt... just as well most others weren't doing much better and the vis was already down to a yard in clear patches.
Plus there's what they call "learning to swim in the deep end of the pool" where I'm from: if you learn to dive in 7 mm suit in 20 feet of muck, you won't have a problem "all over the world". Learn in speedos in 60' and unlimited visibility, OTOH...
There's much more to it than that. I certified in SoCal, difficult beach entries, cold water, variable visibility. That taught me quite a bit, including navigation, but did not teach me swift currents, drift diving, wrecks... There's something to be said about diving in all kinds of environments. I'll continue to pass on the quarriesThere is more to it that that. I certified locally and almost always dive in the tropics. First time I went for a local dive a couple of years later, I couldn't go down until my buddy said pull the neck seal to let the air bubble out, then I of course depth-charged into the muck raising the clouds of silt... just as well most others weren't doing much better and the vis was already down to a yard in clear patches.
Plus there's what they call "learning to swim in the deep end of the pool" where I'm from: if you learn to dive in 7 mm suit in 20 feet of muck, you won't have a problem "all over the world". Learn in speedos in 60' and unlimited visibility, OTOH...
I've dived in SE Florida in very poor visibility and had a great time, if I wasn't already familiar with the conditions, I would probably have a tough time or abort. It's good to be flexible.I get it. Growing up in the northeast, we would say that if you can (snow) ski in the east, you can ski anywhere. But a powder skier...
Having skied in light, fluffy powder, I say, "Why do I want to ski in the east??".
I'm a warm water diver. I like 100'+ of viz. Why would I want to dive in cold water muck??
There's much more to it than that. I certified in SoCal, difficult beach entries, cold water, variable visibility. That taught me quite a bit, including navigation, but did not teach me swift currents, drift diving, wrecks... There's something to be said about diving in all kinds of environments. I'll continue to pass on the quarries.
I wouldn't argue, you do what you have. I'm lucky, get in a couple hundred dives per year in reasonable conditions. That counts spending all my energy trying to not fall down on the boats in SE Florida during the winterYou get the cold water and really crappy viz at the quarries without the difficult entry (depending on quarry!) or current! I had 30ft viz in a quarry last Saturday and I was in heaven! But then our gear froze between dives (25F air temp, probably 5F wind chill, 52F water temp)!
I've dived in SE Florida in very poor visibility and had a great time, if I wasn't already familiar with the conditions, I would probably have a tough time or abort. It's good to be flexible.