My 12 year-old is as good a diver as anyone could be with just 52 dives. I'm not going to wrap him up in bubble-wrap, but I'm not going to risk him, either. (See my thread http://www.scubaboard.com/showthread.php?t=191975 for why). At 10, he was fine to dive with his instructor in low-current, shallow Bahamian waters. The only other divers on the boat were his mom and me. After he was certified, we continued to dive that way for some time. I would NOT have put him on a boat with other divers (for his safety, not their convenience) and I would NOT have taken him to Cozumel.
He did go to Cozumel at 11, but we didn't go to Punta Sur or any sites with particularly fast current or walls with deep dropoffs. We worked out each day's dives with the operator ahead of time, which meant we were on the boat with the other beginners. He held nobody back - he always surfaced with more air than anyone except the DM. He also rescued a turtle from being repeatedly kicked in the head by a woman with no buoyancy control, prevented the same woman from losing her reg when her loose tank band nearly dropped her tank from her BC, and calmly replaced his mask when she kicked it off. Twice. There are worse divers out there than some kids!
This year, we did go to Punta Sur. Michael swam easily through Garganta del Diablo without touching a thing, managed walls and currents with no depth change, and didn't hold anyone back. Some divers who'd come from Poland admitted at the end of the week that they'd been terribly disappointed to find him on the boat, but by the end of the week had totally forgotten he was just a kid.
He did go to Cozumel at 11, but we didn't go to Punta Sur or any sites with particularly fast current or walls with deep dropoffs. We worked out each day's dives with the operator ahead of time, which meant we were on the boat with the other beginners. He held nobody back - he always surfaced with more air than anyone except the DM. He also rescued a turtle from being repeatedly kicked in the head by a woman with no buoyancy control, prevented the same woman from losing her reg when her loose tank band nearly dropped her tank from her BC, and calmly replaced his mask when she kicked it off. Twice. There are worse divers out there than some kids!
This year, we did go to Punta Sur. Michael swam easily through Garganta del Diablo without touching a thing, managed walls and currents with no depth change, and didn't hold anyone back. Some divers who'd come from Poland admitted at the end of the week that they'd been terribly disappointed to find him on the boat, but by the end of the week had totally forgotten he was just a kid.