Fundies... A hard course where you really learn how much you need to learn to be a competent diver.
It's a course where this is the first time many divers come across really sorted people in the water. People often learn in pile-em-high-sell-em-cheap resort "do your PADI" courses, then dive with divers who's aspiration is pure "recreational" diving. Putting it bluntly, quality dive skills aren't a high priority in that community.
After being exposed to high standards for the first time, the realisation dawns on how hard this is and how much it takes to be "good" in the water. The despair phase as core skills (buoyancy, trim, finning) take time to develop.
Nobody ever fails Fundies. Sure, you won't get a tick-it, but who cares about cards. It's the skills that count. Everyone comes away from Fundies armed with the knowledge of what good looks like. It's then up to the student to do something about developing those skill with endless practice and trying to find "good" divers to dive with who actually care about their skills.
Fundies is a means to an end. It shows you the way, but you have to put the hard work in to develop your skills to that standard. Once you've done that, the world is your lobster; diving is so much easier and safer.
The other benefit of Fundies is learning whether or not you actually want to continue down the GUE path. Many people choose to walk away from that style of diving. There's plenty of other non-GUE diving to be done which still requires excellent core skills.
It's a course where this is the first time many divers come across really sorted people in the water. People often learn in pile-em-high-sell-em-cheap resort "do your PADI" courses, then dive with divers who's aspiration is pure "recreational" diving. Putting it bluntly, quality dive skills aren't a high priority in that community.
After being exposed to high standards for the first time, the realisation dawns on how hard this is and how much it takes to be "good" in the water. The despair phase as core skills (buoyancy, trim, finning) take time to develop.
Nobody ever fails Fundies. Sure, you won't get a tick-it, but who cares about cards. It's the skills that count. Everyone comes away from Fundies armed with the knowledge of what good looks like. It's then up to the student to do something about developing those skill with endless practice and trying to find "good" divers to dive with who actually care about their skills.
Fundies is a means to an end. It shows you the way, but you have to put the hard work in to develop your skills to that standard. Once you've done that, the world is your lobster; diving is so much easier and safer.
The other benefit of Fundies is learning whether or not you actually want to continue down the GUE path. Many people choose to walk away from that style of diving. There's plenty of other non-GUE diving to be done which still requires excellent core skills.