Atticus:The only reason I can think of for the indian position hover is that it looks cool.
It's a great way to quiet the hands and feet of a student and force them to contriol their buoyancy.
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Atticus:The only reason I can think of for the indian position hover is that it looks cool.
Soggy:Why do you need to be in a lotus position to learn about the efefcts of buoyancy and breathing? Why not assume a useful position, like horizontal?
I think scubatexastony is right - people are getting obsessive about this horizontal position stuff. Is horizontal the right position the vast majority of the time? Absolutely. Is it the right position 100% of the time? Absolutely not. Many people do not equalize well on descent when horizontal. It is much easier and safer for them to be vertical. Vertical orientation is also appropriate on ascent, at least in open water (nobody but the DIR crowd is talking about caves here, so if you want to talk about cave technique, there's a forum for that).scubatexastony:Sure, students that are more comfortable can start horizontal, but in introducing the effects of breathing, sitting makes for easier eye contact. Vertical, inverted, or whatever posistion is needed to acheive a goal should be no problem for a seasoned diver testing for Dive Master. If you can make due with staying horizontal your entire dive life, great! Being a photographer, I have to use a bunch of contortions to not harm the reef while getting a good angle to the subject.
We're getting sidetracked on the all- mighty "you must be horizontal all the time" mentality, the OP asks why would he be required to do hovering in a lotus posistion. Well, maybe he just needs to do a bit of practice to be comfortable hovering, after all, it's just breath control.
divingjd:Vertical orientation is also appropriate on ascent, at least in open water (nobody but the DIR crowd is talking about caves here, so if you want to talk about cave technique, there's a forum for that).
scubatexastony:Sure, students that are more comfortable can start horizontal, but in introducing the effects of breathing, sitting makes for easier eye contact. Vertical, inverted, or whatever posistion is needed to acheive a goal should be no problem for a seasoned diver testing for Dive Master. If you can make due with staying horizontal your entire dive life, great! Being a photographer, I have to use a bunch of contortions to not harm the reef while getting a good angle to the subject.
We're getting sidetracked on the all- mighty "you must be horizontal all the time" mentality, the OP asks why would he be required to do hovering in a lotus posistion. Well, maybe he just needs to do a bit of practice to be comfortable hovering, after all, it's just breath control.
divingjd:I think scubatexastony is right - people are getting obsessive about this horizontal position stuff. Is horizontal the right position the vast majority of the time? Absolutely. Is it the right position 100% of the time? Absolutely not. Many people do not equalize well on descent when horizontal. It is much easier and safer for them to be vertical.
Vertical orientation is also appropriate on ascent, at least in open water (nobody but the DIR crowd is talking about caves here, so if you want to talk about cave technique, there's a forum for that).
But the particular point here is whether it is appropriate to hover vertically. Personally, I think the vertical sitting hover is a good exercise. As I said in an earlier post, as dherbman said a few posts up, and several other people have said (and the horizontal nazis have ignored), the lotus/buddha/indian/whatever-you-want-to-call-it-
sitting-vertically-while-holding-your-fin-tips-position forces the student to control position SOLELY by breathing control. It takes the hands, legs, feet, fins, and anything else out of the equation. If you can't get your legs into that position, there's probably some other equivalent. But the point is that you really have to do it all with breathing and if you can do that, it is really easy to transfer what you have learned to horizontal hovering.
Let's change the scenario a little bit and see what people think. Do you think it is useful, justifiable, and practical to be able to hover oriented vertically, head down? Or is this just a different heresy in the DIR religion? And, if a head-down vertical hover is OK, then why is a head-up hover sacriligeous?
Personally, I find uses for a vertical head down hover all the time. It is often the only way to get into position to observe or photograph reef creatures. (Besides, it really impresses the students.)
I agree with Mike's two posts above but these two paragraphs just really stand out as examples of what we should be getting across to new divers or those that are having problems related to bouyancy.MikeFerrara:As I already pointed out. A diver who has just learned breath control so they can hover absolutely does not necessarily know what they need to know to tranfer anything to horizontal. It is true the other way around though. A students who has gotten his static and dynamic trim under control can move from being horizontal to any position he chooses.
Once you understand the mechanics and techniques that give you control I'd say use whatever position that you need for the activity you're engaged or even just to have fun. What concerns me far more is all the divers I see silting and strugling along because they haven't been taught the very most basic mechanics and techniques of diving.
MikeFerrara:What concerns me far more is all the divers I see silting and strugling along because they haven't been taught the very most basic mechanics and techniques of diving.