Carribeandiver
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but dont you need a bunch of cards to achieve buoyancy? I mean, with enough cards, you wont have to carry lead.
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Glad to see NAUI joining the rush to quality. Can a frequent buyer cert be far behind?drew52:If you call a skill level of 50 dives an instructor level then possibly.
Not similar, same!drew52:Not a NAUI Instructor so can't comment on the skill level required for Master Diver but yes the theory would be similar to that of an instructor.
A NAUI MD should only have to learn the teaching theory, presentation and "crowd control" material to become an instructor. A NAUI MD is held to a higher level of knowledge and performace (as an individual diver) that a NAUI DM is.drew52:Minus the stuff you actually learn in the instructor and dm courses. Or are you saying that NAUI instructors and dm's don't learn anything after master diver.
Theyve moved some stuff about and made nonsense of it.drew52:as far as I know NAUI DM's are required to do the NAUI Master Diver. could be mistaken. But that was how it was in the NAUI shop I worked in.
Ok from NAUI website:
For DM Certifcation:
Certification - Certification as NAUI Master Scuba Diver and NAUI Scuba Rescue Diver or their equivalent. Divers with evidence of equivalent training and experience may be enrolled provided they pass the NAUI Master Scuba Diver written examination with a minimum score of 75%.
Experience - Documentation of diving experience with a minimum of 25 logged open water dives. Dives shall be varied in environment, depth and activities.
Waterskills - Ability equivalent to that of a NAUI Assistant Instructor. Skills from the Assistant Instructor standards shall be evaluated if the candidate is not already certified as a NAUI Assistant Instructor
Tough call. Experience is great, but is by definition, more or less random.[LEFT:skywalk[/left]]I actually spoke to my instructor who's a course director & ex commercial diver, and he gave me the impression that diving experience is worth more than any course. Hey, who's to say that we can't get tips and pointers from other more experienced divers on the trip for free, which will improve our buoyancy amongst other things?
so you see my dilemma. do a course and learn a few nifty, useful things, (but spend $$$ which may or may not be worth it just for a title) or just gradually learn over the years
Thalassamania:Cards be damned, they don't mean anything anymore anyway. In my experience the farther you step out of your own niche the more you learn. I'm basically a diving scientist, but over the years I've gone out of my way to work with, study under, and dive with folks from many other communities, wreck divers, cave divers, commercial divers, military types, recreational operators, etc.
I don’t often go out on dive boats (When away from work and going diving I usually dive off friends’ boats, rent a boat or charter the whole thing). When I do go out on a dive boat it’s always funny because that means that I really didn’t plan, so I either have gear that a friend scraped together for me, a old ratty set of my own that’s been kicking about in the trunk of the car or sitting down at the beach house for god knows how long or I have a complete set of brand new (all the same brand) gear that makes me look like the newest diver with the shiniest gold card ever. Couple that with the fact that I usually try and dive on my lest revealing C card, NAUI Basic Card from the 1960s or Paper TDI Nitrox Card from when the agency started or CMAS Scientific Diver Brevet, well it can get a little weird.loosebits:Something I've always noticed. There's always that person on the dive boat with the shiny gear that goes out of their way to let everyone know that they are a DM or whatever. There are two reactions to this.. "Ooo, Ahhh" and "that figures". The competent divers may have the cards but they generally won't talk about it.