psionicdfw
Registered
sheck33 once bubbled...
welcome to the board. No i for one didnt feel attacked, you can think what you want. What is currently being ommitted that is lacking in the most basic of skills that people need to dive SAFELY are bouyancy skills, buddy awareness, air management and personal fitness. As for mom & pop that dive to 50 feet once a year, those divers are scary, they lack proficiency and confidence to be safe divers. GUE has stringent rules for diver fitness for good reasons, these rules should be more universally applied. Certifying that smoke so much they are panting by the time they have walked to the waters edge is ridiculous, i see it happen all the time. Certifying 10 year olds that can just barely carry their own equipment is insane, they cant help themselves let alone anyone else.
so, have fun diving
Sheck -
Actually, I addressed this question to Detroit Diver, since he was the one that made the statement concerning training agencies. However, since you commented I will respond.
As someone earlier in the thread mentioned - it's all about epidemiology. If PADI, NAUI, et al were teaching dangerous, and, or seriously deficient classes there would be much higher rates of diver accidents, but the numbers just aren't there. Sorry! Thus the statement that current popular diving instruction "is lacking in the most basic of skills that people need to dive SAFELY." is not only exaggeration, but is also incorrect as the facts do not bear this assertion out. DAN estimates the rate of diving accident as 1 in every 25,000-100,000 dives. Hardly rates indicative of training that is grossly negligent.
People on this board appear to be very emotional on these issues, and seem to be speaking from a place of emotion rather than one fully governed by logic. Yes, safety is much more important than debating over buying from Leisure Pro vs. LDS, or what color mask glass to buy. ANY training can be made more rigorous. Does this mean in every case it should be? Of course not. Driving a car is an inherently dangerous activity, and we would all surely benefit from increased instruction. Society has made a decision about what the proper level of training is. Its cost vs. benefit. There will always be compromises between safety and expense - essentially "what is a life worth?" It's not a pleasant discussion, but it is one that has been held in many arenas; from EPA cleanup levels, to Detroit with car safety devices.
To bring this back to scuba - do I think that the popular agencies are teaching classes "lacking in the most basic of skills that people need to dive SAFELY." No - show me the bodies. You can't because they aren't there.
And this is what brings me back to my original comments about the attitudes that are pervasive on this board. The herding instincts and absolutist attitudes are sheer childishness. Very few things are purely good and very few are without any redeeming qualities. For MOST people PADI teaches an adequate class. If someone is a chain smoker and wants to dive that is their poor choice to make. I do agree with the age comments however. I think pre-teens lack the maturity necessary to handle crisis situations. I took my first dive when I was 12, and in retrospect I don't think it was wise.
In closing - think for yourself people. Just because a bunch of people on here love Apeks, doesn't mean it's the end all be all reg; just because GUE provides excellent advanced training doesn't mean it is for everyone,
Think with your brain, not your heart.
Peace,
Pete