I played matchmaker today. Actually, I've been working on it for a while, but it came to fruition today.
I got two fifteen year old boys together to do what I'm pretty sure was for both of them the first dive that THEY planned and THEY executed, albeit with fairly close supervision by parental units on both sides. It was really fun. We (the two fathers and I) sort of prompted them through a dive plan and review, and then we descended as a buddy pair and a team of three and went through the dive. The kids got to deal with navigational confusion and team communication, and even coped (very nicely, I must add) with losing a couple of divers, when Kirk stopped to take a picture and I stayed with him. The kids stopped, turned around, and used their lights to let us know where they were. (There was no real doubt, because we were all following a rope trail on the bottom, but it was properly done.)
Afterward, we went for warm drinks, and went through a dive debrief. I think everybody involved enjoyed it.
I saw almost no marine life, between watching the kids and keeping an eye on my two teammates, but I really had a lovely dive, seeing what I'd planned and plotted actually happening and working pretty darned well.
I'll bet all of us can remember our first dive with a buddy of equal skill, where we planned it and did it and felt absolutely elated that WE were diving. Got to watch that happen today. It was cool.
I got two fifteen year old boys together to do what I'm pretty sure was for both of them the first dive that THEY planned and THEY executed, albeit with fairly close supervision by parental units on both sides. It was really fun. We (the two fathers and I) sort of prompted them through a dive plan and review, and then we descended as a buddy pair and a team of three and went through the dive. The kids got to deal with navigational confusion and team communication, and even coped (very nicely, I must add) with losing a couple of divers, when Kirk stopped to take a picture and I stayed with him. The kids stopped, turned around, and used their lights to let us know where they were. (There was no real doubt, because we were all following a rope trail on the bottom, but it was properly done.)
Afterward, we went for warm drinks, and went through a dive debrief. I think everybody involved enjoyed it.
I saw almost no marine life, between watching the kids and keeping an eye on my two teammates, but I really had a lovely dive, seeing what I'd planned and plotted actually happening and working pretty darned well.
I'll bet all of us can remember our first dive with a buddy of equal skill, where we planned it and did it and felt absolutely elated that WE were diving. Got to watch that happen today. It was cool.