Confessions of a newbie - My U/W Navigation Stinks!

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Steve_Dives:
I logged dives 11 & 12 today, with the assistance of a supportive buddy who logged # 50. I have to confess, my underwater navigation skills stink.

Does anyone have suggestions, games, or things to practice? (My searches weren't yielding anything obviously navigation related.)

Today we did squares, reciprocal, surface-sight-submerge-swim (max depth was only 27 feet, and we were surfacing from ~15). Some I would hit, some I missed (vis = small quarry + two OW classes). Keep doing the same?

You've had some good advice here, and all will take practice. I carry a compass on every dive, part of my console. And I use it anytime their is a flat featureless bottom. Most dives I make are from a boat with an anchor out. Because we hunt fish, we almost always dive a sloping bottom. With those conditions, I always check the anchor at the start of the dive, and remember the depth. I'll go away from the boat at slightly deeper depth. When it is time to return I'll return back at the depth of the anchor. Until I've told divers how I do this, they are amazed at my surfacing at my boat each time. If you don't have an anchor as a reference point, this tip will work if you stack rocks, trash etc. at a fixed depth. On the way back you can take the trash up for proper disposal.

Sometime in the future you may have the opportunity to join a diver competition within a dive club. The practice of a long swim on a compass heading, re-enforces your confidence. Even at the Underwater Society's national championships, there have been divers "MISS" by 180 degrees.
 
Practice, Practice, Practice....I didn't get it until about 50 dives.

I like the SLOW approach when looking for somehting. If in low vis (I just about always can't see more than 20 feet) look for shadows and go with your instinct.

We like to call it Navaguessing...
 
1_T_Submariner:
Practice, Practice, Practice....I didn't get it until about 50 dives.

I like the SLOW approach when looking for somehting. If in low vis (I just about always can't see more than 20 feet) look for shadows and go with your instinct.

We like to call it Navaguessing...

DUDE! You call 20 feet LOW vis?? We pray for 20 feet. In 5 foot vis if you look for shadows you see them in all directions. Ignore the shadows and trust the compass. When you think your compass is wrong, YOU are wrong (hold the compass level and smack it once in a while just to be sure).

theskull
 
I passed the navigation dives! Thank you ScubaBoard and everyone who passed along some tips.

Location was Natural Springs quarry. Surface water was 52F, air low 40's, and a lot of wind. Vis was low, but enough to pick up the murky outline of a rock projecting out of the pile from 5 feet. Topside we had low, dark clouds, and occassional rain.

Going slow, making small kicks, and really watching the compass helped. When I made my turns, I waited to make sure the compass had settled and shook it a little to make sure. We had to cross a rock pile on two legs of the triangular course. The square course was featureless.

Woo hoo!
 

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