Next step / possible training to pursue

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My experience of Tech instruction was ******* awesome - probably one of the most rewarding courses I've taken, and not necessarily a 'now you must continue to tech' type deal - in fact, half the class just took the courses so they would feel more safe diving redundant on rec dives.

As a quick rundown, I took about a year of training that was 'Sidemount/Overhead Sidemount/Intro to Tech' basically taught as one course - We had a mixed team of sidemount and backmount divers (they did 'Doubles/overhead doubles/intro to tech'), and covered stage handling, deco procedures, blind navigation and emergencies, blind OOG situations, general problem solving and so on.

I expected, coming from rec diving, that there would be like... distinct parts of these courses, with a card at the end of each (i.e you do 6 dives and now you have a Sidemount card) but actually it all basically ran together, and for about a year, with maybe 25 class dives and 80 odd 'training' dives we just continued building skills more and more and more, and the 'problem solving' components got harder and harder - dive 1 of sidemount was like 'here is how you share air', whereas class dive 25 was more like 'ok you and your buddy are placed inside a sunken VW Golf and blindfolded. The instructor shuts off buddy's air, and now you have to figure out how to get out of the Golf, recover the stages left outside clipped to the line, follow the line back to the training platform while air sharing, then do 3 levels of simulated deco stops' 'oh and your stage regulator just broke as well'

If you'd told me that I was going to do the activities from dive 25 on day one, I would have just laughed. but a year later we just kinda shrugged and did it because we knew how to.

Obviously when I took Cave 1 straight after, a lot of the diving skills were already ingrained to the point where we were able to focus a lot more on just specific cave skills instead of basics, which is exactly WHY our instructor teaches intro to tech like that.

I would absolutely recommend taking such a course if you want a bit of a challenge, and to KNOW that you know how to solve problems underwater - as well as to get the most out of your sidemount rig... :)

I bet that wasn't taught by an Open Water instructor!

That sounds brilliant. A year after and you'd come out as a really sorted diver ready to move on to your next adventures.
 
I bet that wasn't taught by an Open Water instructor!

That sounds brilliant. A year after and you'd come out as a really sorted diver ready to move on to your next adventures.

Haha - well depending how you look at it. Certainly not your average OW instructor! He was my fiancee's open water instructor (She met him when I was taking training and was like OMG I have never wanted to dive before, but want to learn from this dude), and all through the summer teaches rec/rescue/etc with PADI (he's a course director for them) then out of 'tourist season' teaches deep cave/trimix/rebreathers/anything you can imagine under SDI/TDI/ERDI/PFI PSAI, and several other agencies, as well as being an instructor for the Slovak Police, Special Forces and Firefighters... and in the daytime he is a key part of Slovakia's Coronavirus taskforce, in his position as the country's head pathologist.

A year later and I feel... qualified-ish for next adventures, but it's difficult to feel qualified when diving in the company of the divers that his club and his instruction produces :)
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/swift/

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