DAY 2
I had troubles sleeping the night of dive 1 and 2. The free flow experience just kept going through my mind. When it wasn’t about the fear I had when it happened, it was me kicking myself for not reaching for my wife’s secondary right away. My wife and I had discussed the situation. She felt bad that she didn’t hand me her secondary. Apparently, the other students where all in shock and confused about what was happening. I was less enthusiastic to get to the quarry.
Due to the low numbers in our AM group, the PM class was asked to join the AM class for dive 3 and 4. The PM class only had three divers, so we were still not as I high as were supposed to be on day 1. The student who couldn’t clear her ears dive 1 did not return, so this left us with 7 students.
Day 2 did not start out well. One of the junior divers forgot his fins. Another diver forgot her snorkel. A different junior diver did not have a compass on their rental counsel (oversight by LDS). Luckily (maybe not so much) I had the XS scuba compass I bought since my personal regulator did not have a counsel on it. Since I was using the rental regulator I had no need for it, I loaned it to the student.
DIVE 3
The first thing we had to do was a surface swim via a compass. This turned out to be a lot harder for me than doing compass navigation on land. For the life of me, I could not swim in a straight line. I am not sure if it has to do with my fins (old jet fins from my dad that I have troubles kicking with), the wind, or if it was something else. My wife on the other hand, who was really worried about the navigation part had no troubles. She was the first to the float. After one course correction, I was the third to the float. I think we waited at least 10 minutes before the others arrived.
For the first decent one of the instructors was going to work with two students who failed the partial and full mask flood. The other instructor was going to have 4 of us do full mask removal, fin pivot with oral inflate, and underwater compass. The instructor started having us do our oral inflate fin pivot as the others descended. Three of us did it before the fourth made it down. I am still not sure when this skill would be used? The other instructor came down with his two students last. Our instructor looked at him confused. We were also confused since our group was missing one. Our instructor singled us up. We went up and learned that one of the students was having troubles equalizing. She was already on the shore when we returned to the surface.
Once everything was straightened out, we went back down to complete the full mask removal and underwater compass swim. My full mask removal went ok. I took my time and got it back on and cleared the mask. Our instructor moved to the next person. As we were waiting, I had a slow leak in my mask. I couldn’t keep it dry. Trying to do the underwater compass swim turned out to be difficult for me. I am going to blame my mask since it kept flooding making it hard for me to see the compass. I also had to keep stopping to clear it which just threw off everything. After a few tries, I completed the skill and it was time to surface. It turned out my hood was slight under the skirt of the mask. No-one notice underwater.
We waited for the other instructor and students. The last skill we needed to do for this dive was a CESA before doing underwater exploration. The cesa took forever. We were on the surface so long that my dive computer logged dive 3 as two separate dives. Doing the CESA was no problem.
The underwater exploration swim was not fun for me. My wife and I were behind the other students following a rope to one of the sunken vessels. We kept what I estimate 4 feet between the two divers in front of us. Everyone was kicking up the bottom so visibility was horrible. The new instructor was behind us. He kept pulling on us as if we were not keeping up. I will admit my wife and I got a little low to the bottom which I tried to adjust with my inflator, but at one point the instructor grabbed my inflator and proceeded to add air which caused me to rise too high. I did manage to release some air before getting too high.
Dive 4
The final dive is one we planned. In hindsight, I wish we would have planned it differently. I also wished we had new tanks. We were all using the same tank from dive 3 and I was down to only 1500 psi. My wife and the other student were at 1700 and 1800. We planned to explore some boats until I hit 1000. We would then ascend to a 15’ for safety stop before doing our controlled ascent. While I would have loved to dive longer, this dive only lasted 10 minutes before I hit 1000 PSI. We had three members in our team with one instructor. The other member was already very cold, so the shorter dive worked out well for her.
We first surfaced swam to the float. By now the wind picked up, so the swim was much more challenging than earlier. We all had to catch our breath at the float. We planned to free descent to a platform and then move towards a couple of sunken boats. We all had troubles ascending. I think I needed to exhale longer. Descending took way too much effort and I think that ate into my 500 PSI I had before turning the dive.
The boats were in about 20’ of water. When we did our safety stop at 15 feet my wife and the other diver kicked up a lot of sediment. My wife was below me about 2 feet. I think I kicked up a little as well but was able to trim myself out. Visibility dropped to a level in which we could hardly see each other. I grabbed my wife’s hand since I know visibility is her greatest concern. She was thankful I did. We waited for 3 minutes and then completed our ascent. When we surfaced, there was clearly a storm rolling in. The wind really picked up. Our instructor had my wife and I quickly remove and replace our bcd in the water. We swam to the shore with the other team. Before long, the storm rolled in and brought pouring rain with some lightning. I guess the short dive worked out for the best.
Swimming to shore I started to feel sick. It felt like motion sickness (the way I feel when swinging on a swing with my kids or scrolling to fast on the computer). I felt even worse while in the shallow water getting my fins off and climbing up to shore. I think it was a combination of the water movement and restriction from my hood. When I sat down with my BCD, I felt even more restriction around my neck. As soon as I got out of the BCD, removed my hood and sat down for a bit I began to feel better. One of my instructors asked if I was alright and I explained how I was feeling. It took about an hour to feel back to normal. It took about 3 hours to warm up.
CONCLUSION
I am glad we completed the open water certification but I will need many more dives to start to feel confident in most of the skills. We are signed up for advanced open water (was a package deal) in July, but we may need to push that out further.
I wish we would have spent more time on many of the skills. In the end, I felt we were being rushed through each skill for a check-off box instead of focusing on training good divers. Once again, I am not sure this is even possible with how PADI is structured. That said, as noted before, I am the type who prefers to master a given skill before moving on even if it means taking much longer to finish.
If I would have to do it all over again, I would have taken more time to meet the actual instructors who would be teaching the class. As you may recall, I chose this LDS because I spoke to one of the instructors. That instructor was not involved with our class at all.
This is probably the most thorough post-certification report I've read and, as wetb4igetinthewater said, it's also a very useful feedback tool for instructors, so thank you.
Sounds like you had some ups and downs, but with your clearly determined mindset you will be driven to hone your skills, which is a good attitude to have. Remember as well that some of the conditions you experienced will make you a more resilient diver not easily phased by the environment. That said, good viz, warm water, etc do not necessarily mean safer and there can be other challenges to manage such as currents and swell.
Regarding your AOW, many people do do straight to this after OW. There are pros and cons to this, but if your LDS does an open pool night, maybe you and your wife should do a couple of sessions just to reinforce and practice skills beforehand.