elgoog
Contributor
Wifebuddy and I completed the classroom and pool portion of Fundies 1 last night. Here's a little bit of info from our class.
Equipment configuration, pre-dive drills, team communication started us off (very briefly went over gas planning, min gas, ascent strategies, min deco - the meat of it is in Fundies 2 but we had a little time before the pool opened and it was helpful to get the gist of these topics and some tables+numbers we could use). In water, it's exclusively trim, buoyancy and propulsion with basic 5 thrown in for minimal task loading.
As far as certification, there isn't any requirement to complete Fundies 2 within a certain period of time after Fundies 1. Also, you can switch gear between the 2, eg: change from wetsuit to drysuit. This requires a check out dive with your instructor to make sure you're good to go with the change. You can do the corresponding primers for the new gear but it's not required. You do get certified as Fundies 1 but the only GUE course that has that as a pre-requisite is Fundies 2. Everything else requires full Fundies.
I'm also going to wholeheartedly endorse the decision to split Fundies this way. Based on our extremely tiring, frustrating and demoralizing pool sessions, I would probably have quit if I was in full Fundies as there is no way I would have been able to proceed with the remaining skills in any meaningful fashion. For a diver at my level, I definitely felt like I was in over my head - even wifebuddy was not a happy camper. This is not at all a knock on our instructor (Beto, who was absolutely fantastic) or the GUE style, but I was questioning why I wanted to do this style of diving. More than a few times.
Anyhoo, didn't mean to derail this thread - after our ocean dives on Jul 26, I might post about our experiences in the class overall. That's assuming I'll still want to keep diving and have a reason to log in to SB
Equipment configuration, pre-dive drills, team communication started us off (very briefly went over gas planning, min gas, ascent strategies, min deco - the meat of it is in Fundies 2 but we had a little time before the pool opened and it was helpful to get the gist of these topics and some tables+numbers we could use). In water, it's exclusively trim, buoyancy and propulsion with basic 5 thrown in for minimal task loading.
As far as certification, there isn't any requirement to complete Fundies 2 within a certain period of time after Fundies 1. Also, you can switch gear between the 2, eg: change from wetsuit to drysuit. This requires a check out dive with your instructor to make sure you're good to go with the change. You can do the corresponding primers for the new gear but it's not required. You do get certified as Fundies 1 but the only GUE course that has that as a pre-requisite is Fundies 2. Everything else requires full Fundies.
I'm also going to wholeheartedly endorse the decision to split Fundies this way. Based on our extremely tiring, frustrating and demoralizing pool sessions, I would probably have quit if I was in full Fundies as there is no way I would have been able to proceed with the remaining skills in any meaningful fashion. For a diver at my level, I definitely felt like I was in over my head - even wifebuddy was not a happy camper. This is not at all a knock on our instructor (Beto, who was absolutely fantastic) or the GUE style, but I was questioning why I wanted to do this style of diving. More than a few times.
Anyhoo, didn't mean to derail this thread - after our ocean dives on Jul 26, I might post about our experiences in the class overall. That's assuming I'll still want to keep diving and have a reason to log in to SB
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