NAUI Wowie
Contributor
They don’t really try to train people to be long term proficient divers nowadays, they teach people just enough to know how to use scuba gear and just enough personal skills so they don’t kill themselves. Before boulderjohn jumps me about standards not being changed in PADI training, that might be true, but I’ve been witness to OW training being so minimized and barely grazed over that it’s a miracle more people aren’t getting hurt. Basic OW standards might not have been broken but the effort to thoroughly implant a solid foundation is too time consuming and would cost too much money for most people. Maybe they were taught everything in the book, maybe they weren’t, who knows? What’s the percentage of classes taught worldwide that skip over stuff?
So the result is you get a bunch of bottom crawlers who kind of know how to huff and puff on a second stage and kind of remember what a BC is for, and they know they should never hold their breath, but there are other classes for learning anything above that.
Will they ever take those classes? I don’t know the stats on that, but I doubt the majority will.
how good was training in the 1960s? on average? id bet a lot of misinformation was around.
and on the flipside the best scuba training was the YMCA , my father was a scuba instructor there in the 60s. NAUI operated the YMCAs at least in PA at that time.
its all a mixed bag whatever era you are from. pluses and minuses everywhere. I will say my equipment is five thousand times better than the scuba tanks my dad built and had hydroed and the wetsuits he made by hand. .....serious..... he took 50cf firebottles and made them into twins and his buddy was so tall and gangly ...basically a basketball player....that he had no wetsuit that would fit him so my dad made him one.
before casting stones at current times or the past realize that its the individual and not the training agency that makes a great diver or a really bad diver