You know, I don't know if training has gotten less rigorous, because I didn't train a long time ago. My husband has had two different classes, thirty years apart, but they were very different classes. One was a university, semester-long class, and the other was a commercial modern class, and they're simply not comparable.
And I don't know how training is everywhere, but I know what I saw in my class, I know what happened to me, and I know what I see at the dive sites where I dive -- often -- and the vacation sites where I go. People aren't coming out of training with basic skills. I agree with Mike about this. The ability to place yourself where you want to be in the water and maintain that position seems frighteningly central to diving to me, and yet few people can do it. That means they can't maintain contact with their buddies during ascent and descent, for example, and if they try to stop and look at something, they end up finning frantically and disturbing the bottom or damaging things. I also think a lot of people don't have a very good time diving at first (or maybe ever) because they just don't feel as though they're in control of very much underwater. I know I didn't.
I feel VERY strongly about this, which is why I try to reach out to new divers when I find them on this, or other boards, and offer to dive with them and share with them some of the great tips I got from Bob and others when I was starting out in this sport. Interestingly, I don't get a huge response. A lot of people say they'd like to go out, but then never seem to have time. It makes me a little sad, because I think more people would be utterly hooked by diving if they were just a little better at it. And it's not that hard to reach a point where you feel somewhat more in control of what's happening when you dive. It just takes somebody to help you figure out how.
And I don't know how training is everywhere, but I know what I saw in my class, I know what happened to me, and I know what I see at the dive sites where I dive -- often -- and the vacation sites where I go. People aren't coming out of training with basic skills. I agree with Mike about this. The ability to place yourself where you want to be in the water and maintain that position seems frighteningly central to diving to me, and yet few people can do it. That means they can't maintain contact with their buddies during ascent and descent, for example, and if they try to stop and look at something, they end up finning frantically and disturbing the bottom or damaging things. I also think a lot of people don't have a very good time diving at first (or maybe ever) because they just don't feel as though they're in control of very much underwater. I know I didn't.
I feel VERY strongly about this, which is why I try to reach out to new divers when I find them on this, or other boards, and offer to dive with them and share with them some of the great tips I got from Bob and others when I was starting out in this sport. Interestingly, I don't get a huge response. A lot of people say they'd like to go out, but then never seem to have time. It makes me a little sad, because I think more people would be utterly hooked by diving if they were just a little better at it. And it's not that hard to reach a point where you feel somewhat more in control of what's happening when you dive. It just takes somebody to help you figure out how.