This is entirely impractical in this location. THe DM is a guide and needs to lead the dive to keep the other people on the reef which may extend over one mile long. If the DM rushes to the surface to escort every clown who can't handle basic diving skills, the other clients are left unprotected by the float.
The DM does NOT need to lead the dive if safety will be compromised! It's something called a pre-dive briefing. If divers "can't handle basic diving skills" this says something about the caliber of instruction they receive.
It ticks me off that people disagree with me when I point out the low standards and say: "Hey it's good for the diving industry." "Why stop divers from getting certified who can't swim; give them the experience." And at the same time note that people are diving without the basic skills. You can't have it both ways...
Leaving a group of people in a 2 kt current for a couple of minutes is a big deal. How do you expect the divemaster to make a safe ascent re-locate the group and re-descend under these conditions in a couple of minutes? In 10 minutes the group could be hundreds of yards away and might possibly be spread out or start popping to the surface all over the place since they no longer have a dive guide. So in order to re-drop the dive guide where the capt thinks the group might now be, he has to drive the boat quickly over the exact same area where the other customers will be ascending.
I expect the DM to do his job! Divers who need supervision shouldn't be in 2 knot current to begin with! Hello?
Your advice for a Dive guide seems like it is right out of a PADI book, but has very little applicability in the real world. These are not some tourist dives with the boat anchored in 60 feet of calm, clear, still water.
You train divers for the real world. If the PADI book doesn't cut it, throw it out and get training that's designed for the real world. I dive the North Atlantic, so please don't talk to me about 60' of clear warm water. There is not ONE diver that I certify that couldn't receive a briefing and do this dive with a competent buddy. If the diver doesn't have the training, don't take his money in the first-place.
The OP still thinks his Instructor was "great", but he expected a DM to babysit him, check his air, and be responsible for his gear as well. I find this attitude to be very common, most all new divers think their instructor was "great" and it takes some time for them to understand that most instructors (that teach to standards and follow an extremely abbreviated course) have delivered instrucion that is often inadequate for real world, independent diving. Try asking a brand new diver what he will do when his BC power inflator sticks in the "on" position. Even though this is a pretty common scuba failure, most don't have a clue. Failure to completely understand what to do can easily kill a diver when they shoot to the surface.
Exactly my point. If the certification standards suck, they are inadequate. Enough of certifying divers who can't dive as responsible members of a buddy team. Like I said, you can't have it both ways.
Ideally, the DM and the captain should have designated that this guy buddy up with someone other than the DM, since the dive guide's responsibilities make him unable to provide 100% attention to the diver.
Absolutely correct. The DM screwed-up big time!