Wish more would follow your lead …. Lots of silt kickers out there ;(
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Wish more would follow your lead …. Lots of silt kickers out there ;(
The DM offering suggestions for a more unbalanced weight distribution to take you out of easy horizontal, or any orientation, trim is wild.Back on the boat, the DM came over to give me some helpful tips. He had noticed my posture while diving and offered to help me get my feet down.
This discussion boils down to: What is comfortable for you, and is environmentally friendly? Do what is comfortable and do what is low impact on everything around you. There is not a 'one and only one' right way for all. As The Chairman regularly points out, we are best served with a 'Dive and let dive' approach.As a rec diver, my trim is better with my entire body on a straight line, my fins, calfs, thighs, aligned. I am more efficient streamlined doing flutter, frog kick rather folding my knees. And frog kick does not disturb the silt. I even do reverse without folding my knees. What is the point of folding knees as a rec diver?
But you do agree that in a 90° calves position, you use your ankles and your calves but not so much your thighs which are the most powerful parts of your legs, right? I am a lazy diver so I am a big fan of kick and glide. Not so much glide with the cave diver position and pretty much drag.
Unless you're in a course that you want to be in and an instructor is asking you to bend your knees to achieve the goal of that lesson, what does it matter what you or others do?
Because this is not my camera and I am still waiting for my friend to bring the cable so that I can upload the files on my laptop.Several people have answered, and you can see in the videos that all parts of the leg are used in different phases. Since the knees don't drop, it isn't as obvious.
I am also a lazy diver. Slow, relaxed, effortless, watching everything, that's a good dive. I find the modified frog kick very relaxed, with an effortless kick and nice long glide.
I don't think there's a lot of drag. In the videos above, notice that their fins are within the slipstream of their head/tank/body. No drag.
You mentioned that you already took video and discovered that you looked different from what you saw on videos. Why not post that one?
I'll ask again what I asked in my first post:
Because this is not my camera and I am still waiting for my friend to bring the cable so that I can upload the files on my laptop.
Pete, a great way to explain it to a diver who is trying to unerstand the frog kick!Often, the frog kick is not intuitive to divers. They try it for a few minutes and then give up because they want to go fast. . . . . . . When it comes to the frog kick though, you should be feeling the pressure on the bottom tips of your toes and especially your big toe. . . . . you really have to commit to the frog kick for a while to really get the hang of it, and then you'll never lose it.