Sas
Contributor
You do not even have to ask that one man. Ever crusty diver in the world that has 5,000 dives asks me if I'm old enough to be there or if I just go certified. It's like a badge of honor to be crotchety in diving for some reason. I think it is because it is an activity where you can be older)) and maybe not in the best physical condition and still be "good" at it. Most other things if you are in poor physical condition you are immediately bad at them and if you are old
)) your body cannot endure the stress. Diving is one of those few things that you can hold on to as an elder elitist. I think it is also interesting that in things where you would expect people to look down their noses at you (climbing, rafting, hiking, etc.) very few people actually do. Even on here before I got my DM rating people used to immediately devalue things that I said because I was 29 and I was not an instructor, a DM, or a guy with over 1,000 dives. I think the really funny part is that unless you are all thumbs, diving normal dive profiles is pretty easy once you get the hang of it. We all make such a big deal out of it (myself included), and for the most part it is really quite simple. JMO.
Ok well I've read through all of this thread now and my experiences in diving are very far removed from yours - other than being sold a bunch of overpriced crap from the LDS I certified with (there are bad apples in every industry

I am never looked down upon for my age, non-professional diving status and my lack of experience in diving by older, more experienced divers (and quite honestly, experience is linked to better skill and knowledge most of the time so 5000-dive divers are within their rights to consider me a n00b if they want), the local charters run tech dives frequently for small numbers (though you have to do dawn trips


If most LDSs close, I really won't be bothered. I just don't feel they are really needed. Most things I buy I get online with the exception of groceries and shoes (shoes are hard to size online in my experience!!). If I didn't live within five minutes walk of a supermarket I'd get my groceries online too like many of my friends (inner city, not many of my friends have cars, me and my partner are an exception with two cars). Diving is another exception to my 'buying everything online' style of shopping but that is changing more and more towards online stuff now that I know what I want in gear. I mean, I have LDSs that I like and would be sad to see them close as I like and respect the owners/workers there but it won't stop my current diving. I'm in an independent club where I get training and plenty of equipment advice and loans, I can order stuff off the internet if I need gear, there are people who do equip servicing out of their garages on the side who are well respected that I could take my gear too or I could learn it myself (more realistically, my buddy could fix it, his nickname is Macgyver

I just don't think LDSs are needed (or probably some places can only support one or two shops that can provide everything, not just a poor level of stock, basic training, repetitive dive trips and air fills) and the market generally gets rid of what is not needed. I know this sucks for people who run shops/charters who are losing business. I've had friends who've had businesses have failed (and my partner runs his own business, so far so good, but I do know first hand that being a small business owner is precarious) and I know it is not something to take lightly but that is just the way the world works

People have mentioned making it competitive - there are plenty of areas where diving is competitive even at a basic level (i.e PADI collect them all specialties - a lot of badge collectors seem to do this to show them off

