Don Burke
Contributor
If you have your open water certification, the guide will not need to be a divemaster.KathleenR:Thanks again for the many helpful replies!
Sorry, I'm not sure what you mean. If you're asking whether we're taking our vacation with divers, the answer is no. We're traveling as a couple, and will not be with a tour or group of any kind. We plan to hire nature guides and such along the way. We are, obviously, not planning on diving alone -- my thought was that we'd do some sort of training, then go out with someone who can rent us gear and tell us what to do.
Every resort course I know about is not valid after the diver leaves the resort. That means you have to start over at each place. At the fifty dollars or so for a resort course, that could add up pretty quickly.KathleenR:I'm willing to consider learning here if that's what is best. I'm sure that Monterey Bay, which is nearby, would be a great place to learn if one had the right instructor. But it would be a very big decision for us because of the expense -- I don't think we plan to dive enough on vacation for it to actually save us money, as we only plan to dive in about 4 places. It looks as though most places around here are about $275 per person including books, and I'd definitely need to save up to afford that. If we decided to go ahead and take the course here, would there be lots of hidden costs for gear? And how much help would we need during diving after finishing the course?
The cost for a divemaster/guide (or a divemaster and a guide) instead of just a guide needs to be considered.
The hidden costs for equipment vary widely. Some shops include everything except boat rides in their price. Some beat you up on rentals. Ask first.
Being certified may give you more options on which shop you deal with since you can go through a shop that does not offer a resort course. You may save a bit that way.
How much help you are going to need when certified depends mainly on the site. I have sites here in Virginia that I will send nearly anyone down to. There are others where I want some idea of what you can handle. Every place I have been has some version of that variety due to current, temperature, visibility, boat traffic, and things like that. If you practice until you get very good at setting up your gear before you leave for your trip, you will be well ahead of most passport divers.
I would go OW, get in as much practice before the trip as I could, and dive within the OW limits on the trip.
On the trip, make the decision about whether to take AOW when you get home.