sian_f
New
I'm a newly certified OW diver, who is very excited to be part of the wider community of divers, but who has some reservations about her training!
As a new diver I quickly realised that there are many skills that a new diver will not encounter in the OW training, and that further practice and training are essential if you want to be safe and to make the most of your new skill. However, this post concerns skills that haven't been covered in the course, which really should have been practiced in order to become certified.
I've just "passed" my OW certificate in Turkey. A colleague of mine, who has dive master training, recommended the instructor to me. They dive together often, and the instructor has years of experience. I thought, therefore, that the training I would receive would be thorough. Unfortunately, I have the feeling that in other places, I would not have passed given my performance in some areas of the course.
One issue we have here is that there are few pools where people can do their confined dives. For that reason I did all my skills in one pool session, which took around 2 hours. There were a few skills that I couldn't manage. I had issues with full mask clearing (though I have no problems clearing a half-filled mask) and the freeflow exercise. I wanted to try these again, but the instructor told me that the session was over, and that we would practise these again the following weekend in the open water dives. Throughout the week I was apprehensive, as I did not feel ready to go straight to the open water without having "mastered" these basic skills.
In general, I feel comfortable under the water, and enjoyed my open water dives. I am almost there with my buoyancy, can equalize, use alternates etc. I can even swallow and burp with the regulator (as I'm sure you wanted to know that!) However, I still had a problem clearing the full mask, as I tend to inhale water through my nose, and it takes a few tries to clear it. I had the same issue again during mask removal and replacement. This left me quite tired and out of breath, and while doing the CESA, I totally ran out of breath just under a metre from the surface. I also asked the instructor if we were going to practise the freeflow exercise, and he said I could while he helped another girl having issues clearing her mask, but after the dive he just told me to go back to the boat.
As well as these things, I also noticed that we didn't complete buddy checks (I asked other, experience divers to check for me), we didn't perform sitting back rolls, we didn't use the dive table to plan dives or try any freedives.
My boyfriend is a diver in the navy, as well as a recreational diver and underwater photographer, which has made me both very keen to start diving, but also to train to the point where I feel I could cope in emergency situations, so that I can enjoy diving safely.
I'm going to take a refresher course while I'm back in the UK for a few weeks to work on these areas. I wanted to know whether others had had the same experience, and how they were able to "fill" these gaps through further dives. Did you ask to do emergency skills at the end of a dive with the dive leader? Were others sympathetic to your beginner status and were you able to take things slowly on your first post-certification dives?
Any thoughts or advice would be appreciated!
As a new diver I quickly realised that there are many skills that a new diver will not encounter in the OW training, and that further practice and training are essential if you want to be safe and to make the most of your new skill. However, this post concerns skills that haven't been covered in the course, which really should have been practiced in order to become certified.
I've just "passed" my OW certificate in Turkey. A colleague of mine, who has dive master training, recommended the instructor to me. They dive together often, and the instructor has years of experience. I thought, therefore, that the training I would receive would be thorough. Unfortunately, I have the feeling that in other places, I would not have passed given my performance in some areas of the course.
One issue we have here is that there are few pools where people can do their confined dives. For that reason I did all my skills in one pool session, which took around 2 hours. There were a few skills that I couldn't manage. I had issues with full mask clearing (though I have no problems clearing a half-filled mask) and the freeflow exercise. I wanted to try these again, but the instructor told me that the session was over, and that we would practise these again the following weekend in the open water dives. Throughout the week I was apprehensive, as I did not feel ready to go straight to the open water without having "mastered" these basic skills.
In general, I feel comfortable under the water, and enjoyed my open water dives. I am almost there with my buoyancy, can equalize, use alternates etc. I can even swallow and burp with the regulator (as I'm sure you wanted to know that!) However, I still had a problem clearing the full mask, as I tend to inhale water through my nose, and it takes a few tries to clear it. I had the same issue again during mask removal and replacement. This left me quite tired and out of breath, and while doing the CESA, I totally ran out of breath just under a metre from the surface. I also asked the instructor if we were going to practise the freeflow exercise, and he said I could while he helped another girl having issues clearing her mask, but after the dive he just told me to go back to the boat.
As well as these things, I also noticed that we didn't complete buddy checks (I asked other, experience divers to check for me), we didn't perform sitting back rolls, we didn't use the dive table to plan dives or try any freedives.
My boyfriend is a diver in the navy, as well as a recreational diver and underwater photographer, which has made me both very keen to start diving, but also to train to the point where I feel I could cope in emergency situations, so that I can enjoy diving safely.
I'm going to take a refresher course while I'm back in the UK for a few weeks to work on these areas. I wanted to know whether others had had the same experience, and how they were able to "fill" these gaps through further dives. Did you ask to do emergency skills at the end of a dive with the dive leader? Were others sympathetic to your beginner status and were you able to take things slowly on your first post-certification dives?
Any thoughts or advice would be appreciated!