How to Engage Younger People in Diving?

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True it may be hard to find a dive buddy, but it is easier to find a dive buddy, than a bagpipe musician looking for a drummer to jam with!

But when I look at the data (PADI 2019 Worldwide Statistics - TREND BY AGE GROUP), for each of the last 5 years, there has been growth in certifications for both ages 10-19, and 20-29. Therefore, while some young people might face challenges to start or continue diving, according to PADI, certifications of young people is steadily growing that is contrary to your experience "I am concerned for the longevity of our sport because I see fewer young people becoming divers."

https://www.padi.com/sites/default/files/documents/2019-02/2019 PADI Worldwide Statistics.pdf

Perhaps some of the growth, are frustrated bagpipe musicians taking up scuba!

Best wishes in the new year!

Are you the piper or the drummer. If you're the drummer, i know where to find the piper and he's recently become a dive master, though I think his piping gigs are keeping him busy.
 
Great idea! Maybe Scuba Board would consider adding a forum where members could post good dive and travel values?

Safe, clean, lower-priced accommodations near dive destinations would also be useful information to share. When we were new divers and were driving down to Florida to dive, we often stayed in studio apartments. I also remember staying in a studio at Sand Dollar on Bonaire.

Nowadays I prefer a one-bedroom apartment or condo but having access to some food prep was a big help with controlling expenses. You can do a lot with just a small frig, a microwave, a coffee pot, and a sink and that really helps with the budget.

Some old coworkers of mine rent out rooms of their houses as AirBnBs specially geared towards divers. Close to dive shops and sites so it's convenient to crash there for a night and go diving in the morning (or vice versa). Some type of moderated spreadsheet could be good where members suggest or name places with info so they can be contacted to verify prices and availability. I guess that's what yelp is for, but a list on here would be nice
 
It might also be useful to compile some information on what you can expect to spend to get certified in various places, both to help budget-conscious students/ young folks just starting out to get a sense of the all-in cost, and also to help them identify a good deal (vs. one too good to be true) and figure out how to trim off a little (e.g. when to buy used.)

I know I got into diving about 10 years later than I was first inspired to because of the cost. And sure enough, everything has ended up costing more than it first appeared. My friend found a Groupon for an OW course for I think $200. Awesome! But it turned out that didn't include the book, or the rental gear, or the personal gear (mask, fins, snorkel, and booties) I didn't realize I had to buy--I thought it would at least come with the rental gear. I also had no idea how expensive it would be; I'd owned those things before from snorkeling and didn't know the scuba version was different. The rental gear also didn't include any of the safety signaling devices the book told us we must never dive without, though I was apparently the only person who took that seriously and bought a mirror, a sausage, and a whistle. Oh, and then there was the boat cost. The course covered beach dives only, but the weather was looking shifty and they urged us to spring for the boat if we were in a hurry to get certified before a trip, which I was. In the end, that $200 course set me back over a grand. It was annoying given the level of disposable income I enjoy as a professional with no debt; as a student waiting tables, I would've been devastated.

I just keep spending money, too, though I don't regret anything I've bought. Dive computer so I can get used to one interface and always have it with me? Best $200 I ever spent! Surf-fur so I don't freeze between dives? Best $150 I ever spent! My own complete set of gear so everything fits and I don't have to make two trips to the dive shop every time? Best (mumble mumble) I ever spent... but yeah, I was completely right that I couldn't afford it back then. Heck, I didn't even have a car. Now I can pay extra for the hatchback version and rubber floor mats. (Best $600 I ever spent!)

I'm a little afraid to actually add up everything I've spent on courses, trips, gear, and other scuba-related expenses. Come to think of it, maybe we shouldn't tell potential new divers what they're in for...
 
What initially sold me on the prospect of diving, were those Sunday programs of "The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau," in the 1970s, which were far more interesting to me than the Disney pablum that was shown earlier on those same evenings. Who wouldn't want to go diving?

Now, there is a constant bombardment of televised, streamed, recorded entertainment product, several orders of magnitude greater in scope than I had ever experienced or could have even imagined, as a kid; and it is far simpler for many now, to live more of a virtual life, and to seldom leave your door. Activity, physical activity, is becoming a harder sell. Why bust a hump, dragging gear to a remote beach, when you can virtually wage war; travel through time; do something still illegal in a few states, in your mom's basement, all while doing the Macintosh Workout, in your tightie whities?

What the young really need, is probably what I luckily had, as a idle teenager -- someone to literally throw you into the deep end of the pool. In my case, it was an uncle, who was a navy man, who quietly loaded his bomber station wagon early one Summer morning, with all manner of things I had never really seen, outside of TV, and took a few of the willing and not so willing nieces and nephews to a public pool, near La Jolla, without telling us where we were going, or what we were doing.

Inside of a few hours, we were all swimming on scuba, chasing one another; no one died, though I got a bloody nose, unrelated to diving; and the harder sell, was convincing us to leave, even those of us with very blue lips and toes.

I still have one of the regulators that we used . . .
 
I'm still diving my first regulator
Looks like it will also be my last. :p
 
Is @scubadada on this thread? Any thoughts on how accessible the shore diving around Boynton Beach and surroundings I've read about would be for fairly new divers, let's say between 10 and 50 dives post-OW cert.? I've heard of groups hitting Blue Heron Bridge, and the San Diego, California area has the Power Scuba club that has offerings that could help a new young diver take advantage of opportunities (plus California has some budget prices even on boats!). Anything like that around Boynton Beach?

Hi @drrich2

There is little to no shore diving in Boynton Beach, West Palm, or Jupiter, other tha BHB. I'm unaware of any budget boat dives. There is shore diving farther South, others could comment on that, perhaps @Scuba_Jenny
 
As a club we have quite a good number of younger members. This is probably because a vast quantity of new flats (sorry ‘apartments’) are being built near by and we are one stop on the tube from a few 100k workers earning 3 to 10 times average U.K. wages.

We also try to lend people kit, especially cylinders and lead, as buying it and particularly storing it is a problem with today’s housing.

In the U.K. most (and have nothing but personal observations to support this) ‘shop’ instructors (ie not clubs, which is another matter) are older blokes doing it to get out of the house and for discounts on kit. The price of a course is too low to sustain real wages that people can live off.

From the way that ‘instructors’ post on SB I assume the same is true in the US.

Mark Powell did a talk on the age issue at a recent U.K. dive show. As I recall his main theme was to encourage young instructors so that young people are not faced with taking a course from someone older than their father.

SB as a whole is extremely disparaging of ‘zero to hero’ instructors.

If you are not part of the solution....
 
How to Engage Younger People in Diving?

Buy their gear for them because they can't afford it. :D "Scuba is expensive" is not new no, but that fact that everything else is so much more expensive makes a big difference.
 

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