Belize Livaboard Aggressor 1V Questions

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My GF and I are AOW and are considering taking the offered Rescue course and then other courses to get our Master Diver Certification. Is it worth doing on the trip, is it worth doing it at all? I always felt that Master Diver was really just a badge and a reason to put more money in the PADI coffers without really learning anything new.

- Only course I would consider doing would be Nitrox right at the beginning. Just enjoy the diving.

Is a hood necessary? We just got back from South Florida and I was chilled on some of the dives, never was before but I'm a bit older and a bit thinner. My GF was fine and she wore a hood.

- I didn't need any more than my 3mm full length (i'm 6'2", 160lbs, so skinny), but there were a few divers that wore thin hoods.

Is there sufficient room in the Deluxe Staterooms for 2 pieces of hard sided luggage or should we purchase collapsible bags?

- They have storage space down in the engineering spaces for hard-sided luggage if i remember right. So, you can empty your bags into drawers and they will stow the bags for the duration of the trip.

Does the boat carry a full service dive shop for regulator repairs, o ring replacements, batteries, etc? I usually carry a spare 1st and 2nd stage regulator and all the tools necessary to fix them but I'm thinking leave it home this time.

- Negative. Tools and some replacement parts, but not a full service dive shop. However, they have a good policy that if any of your gear malfunctions, they will provide rental gear at no charge.
 
- Negative. Tools and some replacement parts, but not a full service dive shop. However, they have a good policy that if any of your gear malfunctions, they will provide rental gear at no charge.

Ok I understand that the courses probably aren't worth it and there's not really much downtime, got it.

As far as regulator rental, we use AI wrist computers that require 2 HP ports on the regulator, we'd rather not use rental gear especially if we can't swap out first stages so I'll bring an extra set of first and 2nd stage regs but probably not a hose, sounds like I can always steal one off a rental kit if the unlikely happens and one of us busts a hose.
 
Your luggage will be stored elsewhere, not in your room, after you unpack.

If you do all the dives/day, I believe adding reading, study, knowledge base answering and instruction would make for a grueling week.

I didn't see anything to indicate full service dive shop functionality onboard. Not sure just what they can handle. Bring your own spare batteries.

Multiple days of multiple dives can chilly you. A hood is small to pack and can make a significant difference; take it along.

Richard.
 
Thank you in advance for the helpful divers on this forum.

We are diving aboard the Belize Aggressor IV in May 2018 and I have a few questions as I prepare for this trip. We're diving with a group of people we've never met but they sound like great guys and gals. I don't want to keep bugging the trip leader with questions although he's been quite helpful and is even going to bring along a piece of gear for me!

Anyway here are my questions. I did send an email to the Aggressor IV but have not received a response as of yet and besides I'd like to hear it from fellow divers.

My GF and I are AOW and are considering taking the offered Rescue course and then other courses to get our Master Diver Certification. Is it worth doing on the trip, is it worth doing it at all? I always felt that Master Diver was really just a badge and a reason to put more money in the PADI coffers without really learning anything new.

An U/W photography course is also offered. Same questions. Is it worth it? I shoot videos with my Gopro Hero 4 and I'm pretty much good with it, she wants to start getting into U/W photography, and they also rent cameras. Should we just use their gear or should she use my old Canon digital camera with housing and Sealife strobe?

Is a hood necessary? We just got back from South Florida and I was chilled on some of the dives, never was before but I'm a bit older and a bit thinner. My GF was fine and she wore a hood.

Is there sufficient room in the Deluxe Staterooms for 2 pieces of hard sided luggage or should we purchase collapsible bags?

Is solo diving permitted with the proper certifications and gear?

Does the boat carry a full service dive shop for regulator repairs, o ring replacements, batteries, etc? I usually carry a spare 1st and 2nd stage regulator and all the tools necessary to fix them but I'm thinking leave it home this time.

Are reef gloves allowed, or even necessary for protection from cold.

Thanks!
Sit back and relax a bit! It's a vacation.

All LOBs (as well as most dive shops) offer courses. They are easy money for them. You will be busy enough trying to find some relaxing down time during the week. No need to add courses.

Onboard camera gear may be more myth than reality. This is a boat. Things break and get lost. There may not be any working rental camera when you get there. This goes for all LOBs. She should practice using your current camera way before you head on the trip. learn before you go so that she does not waste valuable dive time learning.

Same comment for equipment service / rental gear. The boat will have lots of spare common sized orings and plenty of tools (hidden away by the engineer - it is a LOB - the engineer has a complete set of tools used to service the boat on a continual basis). Many LOB I have been on have performed a gear rescue repair during the week. Simplest form of repair is oring replacement, more complex is a frankestein reg using rental parts and owner gear. There will always be a few rental regs available, but if some one else has already rented them...(umh... how often does your gear fail?). In thirty years of diving I have never taken spares or needed them (well 1 hose failure was fixed in about 15 minutes between dives)

This boat has lots of storage space for your luggage (hint: look up top in the lockers at the front of the boat...)

No need for gloves or hood. This is warm water. I do see lots of divers in ill fitting wetsuits trying to stay warm by adding a hood. Wrong answer. Very little of your body heat is lost through the top of your head. You best bet is to make sure you have a properly fitting wet suit.
 
Except for my OW and AOW, I did all of my other courses while on scuba vacations. Some of them, like Fish ID and Deep Diving, were really just a lark that gave me an excuse to do something besides just dive and look at the pretty fish. Rescue Diver was both work and fun, but I did all the course study at home, along with the CPR and AHA classes, before going to Belize to take the written exam and do the pool/open water work. I would have taken Enriched Air at home--my god that was a boring course--but no one around here offered it at the time. Along the way, I became qualified as a Master Scuba Diver, which of course means very little except when I dive with a new guide then he or she has at least some idea of my experience level and hopefully won't be bugging me about my air every five minutes.

EAN and RD required the most work and were the most worthwhile. EAN because you have to have to stay awake long enough to work through the manual if you want to dive with nitrox. RD because it makes you more capable to handle emergencies so hopefully you're not just standing around wringing your hands and crying, "Omg, what do we do?". The other classes not so much, but I enjoyed them all and learned some stuff along the way.

If I have time after I retire, I may just do the Dive Master Course on an extended vacation. Not because I'll ever work in the industry. I'm too old for that. But because it would be an enjoyable challenge that would make me a better diver and, imho, a great way to spend a vacation.

Not sure I would do any of this on a liveaboard, though. That's quite the schedule, lol.

As far as water temp, I would take more than you think you will need just in case. I almost never wear any sort of wet suit in Belize but that's because I'm from a cold water state. I always bring a 2mm shorty but can't remember ever wearing it except on night dives and that's mostly for the trip back. My wife, who never dives locally, is cold-blooded (in more ways than one) and always wears a 2mm full suit and a hood. I see a fair number of divers wearing hoods there but gloves not so often. Better to have it and not need it.
 
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In 9 liveaboard trips I've seen failures of an SPG spool, an inflator, and a near miss with a second stage reg. I also had the cheap AA battery in my new Perdix AI draining rapidly on this last trip. A few spares won't take up much space and could save you some stress. The boat should have any tools that you need.
 
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Thanks for all the great responses.

In summary:

- Don't bother with courses, not enough down time and it's not like they're any better than anywhere else
- Bring my spare 1st & 2nd stage regulator and maybe a hose or 2
- Don't bring my tool box
- Hard luggage that doesn't fit under the bed can be stored elsewhere on the boat
- As far as water temps, gloves not necessary, hood might be necessary for the very cold intolerant, but probably not
- Solo diving is don't ask don't tell
 
I would add a spare inflator, OPV, O-rings, and SPG spools if needed. (Most wings and BCDs use standard inflators and OPVs, but a few, like Apex, don't.)
 
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All diving we did was in a group with a DM. There was no option to go solo or even with a buddy.
 
All diving we did was in a group with a DM. There was no option to go solo or even with a buddy.

I hope this isn't the case. I'm going in May. While I don't expect to dive solo, my understanding is they put crew in the water, but my buddy and I can dive our own plan within the limits of the dive briefing if we choose to. To me, that's how "The Know Before You Go" document reads. o_O
 

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