OP
Eric Sedletzky
Contributor
I can’t explain it.I think of other brick and mortar retailers that have also closed in some part the ease of purchasing on the net. Book stores to amazon. Sports authority to online. And others.
There are 6 scuba shops within 30 miles of me and 5 are within 15 miles. The closest diving is an old mine or a very popular quarry neither of which is hardly the diversity of California diving. It’s surprising we have so many. Yet these shops have been mostly stable. Each shop has a different feel and dynamic. One seems empty all the time so I wonder how he stays in business. The other shops are friendly and helpful with questions. So I say customer focus and attention wins
You’d think that California would have a ton of dive shops all thriving with 38 M people but we don’t.
Maybe you guys have a larger population of vacation divers that go to Bahamas, Florida, Mexico, ? Who knows.
California diving is cold. Most divers don’t like cold and go to warm.
We have a very small population of divers here relative to the population.
Don’t ask me why, maybe cost of living is so high there’s less money for fun activities?
Maybe most of the population here isn’t wired for water sports and the diving life isn’t in their culture?
There are no caves or wrecks per say so not much tech diving if any. Most shops here have no tech gear at all. From what I’ve seen all of our shops up and down the state tend to have the general open water dive gear, the cookie cutter representation of either a Scubapro shop or an Aqualung shop. All of them are sitting right at full retail.
If anybody here want’s snything beyond a jacket BC or a set of solit fins they need to go online and buy it from the midwest or east coast.
It’s totally backwards.
And California is where it all began???
But we still have the best basketball team, go Warriors!
