fins wake
Guest
... your children are already certified scuba divers? The elder one is already diving to the limits of her certification?
With the exception of a very few training agencies (SDI springs to mind) most agencies world-wide are more restrictive than PADI when it comes to children and diving. It therefore seems odd that one should want to push beyond 70 feet for the 12-year-old, something no training agency will train for or advocate. As for the 10-year old, it's even more strange. To be honest, any dive operation worth it's mettle should take action if they saw you and your children dive at 95 feet ... it breaks all standards world-wide.
Personally, and having dived with pretty young children (11-12 years old) in my "dive group" in tropical waters, I feel 40 feet is ample for most kids, and they'll turn out to be superlative divers at 15-16 in any case. By that time they can more safely descend deeper by their own invocation and you'll have great buddies for many years to come ...
EDIT: Typos
I gather you're now thinking of deeper dives, up to 90-95 feet, with both children? (Correct me if I'm wrong?)She is also advanced open water certified with about 15 dives up to 70 ft.
Now, Red Seal also mentioned re. PADI limits (and his daughters, not your children) thatSome of the things we are considering may go to 90-95, but not more (flower gardens, cozumel, etc.)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe the PADI jr OW limit is 40 feet (12 metres), not 60 feet (18 metres). This will change automatically the day the junior diver turns 15. It is my understanding, however, that the PADI jr AOW limit is indeed 70 feet (21 metres).They both know their abilities and limitations, and among those, they know that the OW limitation is 60 feet, AOW 70 feet.
With the exception of a very few training agencies (SDI springs to mind) most agencies world-wide are more restrictive than PADI when it comes to children and diving. It therefore seems odd that one should want to push beyond 70 feet for the 12-year-old, something no training agency will train for or advocate. As for the 10-year old, it's even more strange. To be honest, any dive operation worth it's mettle should take action if they saw you and your children dive at 95 feet ... it breaks all standards world-wide.
Most people in this thread have expressed this opinion and I concur. I think this is the core issue, not whether the risk of osteonecrosis or other ailments becomes larger at depth for growing children.Sure, you may be impressed with your daughters' maturity and ability (isn't every parent?) but what's going to happen when something goes wrong at 95 fsw and one of them freaks out?
Personally, and having dived with pretty young children (11-12 years old) in my "dive group" in tropical waters, I feel 40 feet is ample for most kids, and they'll turn out to be superlative divers at 15-16 in any case. By that time they can more safely descend deeper by their own invocation and you'll have great buddies for many years to come ...
EDIT: Typos