Thanks for the answer. I'm still not convinced.
First picture : I have no idea what it represents.
Kona manta night dive. Try an SB search.
I sure wouldn't hover for half an hour (yawning shark pic) and kneeling was appropriate for the octopus shot, but those are hardly what I would call numerous reasons to kneel, even for a photographer.
I never said kneeling for a photograph was "numerous reasons." Completely fine with "photography" being one reason, and "white tip reef shark, Hawaiian cleaner wrasse behavior study" as another.
I dove with a photographer for a week in Cozumel, the currents were sometimes ripping, yet never saw him put any body parts on the bottom except for a couple fingers on rare occasions.
You could dive for a week with me photographing at Molokini and see me only rarely single finger touch non-living bottom, with current + Reef's End surge that significantly rips (combined I mean). Are there protection regulations for those Coz' sites?
I've had my teeth cleaned several times underwater, first time I think I had 20 logged dives, didn't kneel or feel like it would help in any way (and I am definitely not some sort of Superdiver, trust me).
Great! Perhaps our shrimp are a little more skittish than the ones you experienced. Especially with more than one diver, like photographer
not taking self portrait, the surge at most cleaning stations will usually cause enough hovering photographer movement that the cleaner shrimp will not climb into a strange mouth.
"When in Rome…" is a false argument. Fish crap in the water, turtles eat up the coral… should we do that as well ?
First off; which turtles "eat" up the coral? Perhaps you meant to type "beat" up the coral; I have seen more than a few broken coral incidents by 300 lb turtles settling or surging at cleaning stations.
The dolphin "chose" to lay down next to my scooter, apparently as a way to interact with us. My marine naturalist guide training is to not block an air breather's path to air. My 2 students at that time were on their 4th OW training dive and perhaps one reason we had a quality 10 minute interaction with 3 bottle nose dolphins, in the wild, is because my students and I first showed "mastery" of "calmly settling to the bottom."
And it's beside the point. The kneeling argument for me isn't just about preserving the environment (although it drives me nuts when I see someone kicking in the coral or crashing onto the reef). It's about safety. What if you're diving at 50 feet deep over a 100 ft reef and you (*) need to solve an issue and only know how to do it while kneeling ? What if you're offgassing at 20 ft towards the end of a dive ? Are you gonna descend to the bottom or surface in a hurry just because you can't fix your problem while maintaining your equilibrium ?
The opinion I am trying to express is that I see little evidence "initial skills firmly planted" has any relationship to divers "needing to kneel" to solve a dive problem as a certified diver.
I think sloppy, lazy teaching accounts for part of it, but not by any means all of it. Look around; in general humans are sloppy and lazy (forgetful too).
Divers who don't care about diving well are what I consider to be the reason for most of the bad diving and accidents.
My training in golf stresses that only playing 3 rounds per week
might maintain my current level of play, but to get better I need to play more than 3 rounds per week. I think you could say that about many "skill" activities.
As I said before, I am not against short courses (as long as the student is made aware that his certification card is in reality no more than a permit to do more practice and training, not a proof that he can safely dive the Galapagos the next day), and mine did start out with doing the skills while kneeling. But we did them as well in mid-water, and I don't think that it added any significant length of time to the class (my course lasted 5 days – don't remember if that's including theory or just the diving part – and it was one on one as I was in a remote location with barely any tourist around)
Any and every typical recreational Open Water training cert card is "not proof that he (or she) can safely dive the Galapagos the next day" no matter the instructor or the agency. I thought the "current" conversation was the validity of "initial skills" on knees?