Lizard Leg
Contributor
Wife, son and I were all certified last month. Instructor said we were the most studied group she had ever had. We practiced the underwater skills as best we could in the pool at home and read the books and quizzed each other until we knew it backwards and forwards.
A quick side note as to why we take this so seriously - I lost my right leg below the knee as a victim of a violent crime in August 2003. The leg was amputated August 2004 and August 2005 Katrina took everything we owned - so my family and I are very aware of just how fast life can throw random crap your way. Diving is an extreme sport, and in my opinion if you don't know how to handle an emergency situation, then you don't need to dive. I feel that even though we are "certified divers" that we have nowhere near the training or experience to call ourselves divers at this point.
My wife and I have spent years free diving. We are both very comfortable in the water. My son is as well, but not quite as much as us. All three of us have been practicing hand signals and popping random questions out to each other around the house to keep everything fresh in our minds until it almost becomes second nature. Nothing will compensate for practice in the water but I feel that after only 5 hours of bottom time, with nothing going wrong, is where a lot of divers get complacent and I dont want that to happen. We discuss what to do if X happens. Ill walk into my sons room with his dive table and a piece of paper with a two dive plan on it whats the minimum surface interval required for this and bring me your PG at the end of both dives. Not so much to make sure he knows the math behind it (he does but we dive computers) but to make sure he understands the significance of it. I dont want any of us to have to think about it if your buddy gives you X signal, youre giving the answer as soon as theyre done, automatically.
Im landlocked in Baton Rouge. We practice clearing masks, etc. in the pool, but think it might be a little extreme to rent tanks and jump into a 54 deep pool to practice buddy breathing, sharing air, etc.
I dont want to make it sound like I am an alarmist or scared of diving quite the opposite. In my mind the danger comes from being
unprepared and I want to ensure that we are all capable and aware of what to do *when* that situation happens, whether its out 20th dive or our 1,000th dive.
Any suggestions for skills practice out of the water?
A quick side note as to why we take this so seriously - I lost my right leg below the knee as a victim of a violent crime in August 2003. The leg was amputated August 2004 and August 2005 Katrina took everything we owned - so my family and I are very aware of just how fast life can throw random crap your way. Diving is an extreme sport, and in my opinion if you don't know how to handle an emergency situation, then you don't need to dive. I feel that even though we are "certified divers" that we have nowhere near the training or experience to call ourselves divers at this point.
My wife and I have spent years free diving. We are both very comfortable in the water. My son is as well, but not quite as much as us. All three of us have been practicing hand signals and popping random questions out to each other around the house to keep everything fresh in our minds until it almost becomes second nature. Nothing will compensate for practice in the water but I feel that after only 5 hours of bottom time, with nothing going wrong, is where a lot of divers get complacent and I dont want that to happen. We discuss what to do if X happens. Ill walk into my sons room with his dive table and a piece of paper with a two dive plan on it whats the minimum surface interval required for this and bring me your PG at the end of both dives. Not so much to make sure he knows the math behind it (he does but we dive computers) but to make sure he understands the significance of it. I dont want any of us to have to think about it if your buddy gives you X signal, youre giving the answer as soon as theyre done, automatically.
Im landlocked in Baton Rouge. We practice clearing masks, etc. in the pool, but think it might be a little extreme to rent tanks and jump into a 54 deep pool to practice buddy breathing, sharing air, etc.
I dont want to make it sound like I am an alarmist or scared of diving quite the opposite. In my mind the danger comes from being
unprepared and I want to ensure that we are all capable and aware of what to do *when* that situation happens, whether its out 20th dive or our 1,000th dive.
Any suggestions for skills practice out of the water?