DavidHickey
Contributor
- Messages
- 196
- Reaction score
- 0
- # of dives
- 50 - 99
Well I went out this weekend with 4 OW certification dives and 2 quarry dives under my belt. It was the 1st time me and my girlfriend have been diving with no assistance it was just us. We went to a quarry in Ohio called White Star to meet our neighbors who were doing some training there. Well our 1st two dives by ourselves were GREAT!!!! Visibility was awesome. My Fiancee who was getting real down on diving especially after our last 2 dives in almost zero visibility was thrilled and actually as excited about diving as I had ever seen her "she was actually talking about the new equipment she wanted to buy" did hell freeze over and I missed it!!!!! By the way I did the deepest dive I've ever done which was not much but hit 61 feet which was a little spooky till I was there and realized it was no different than 15 feet. ANYHOW enough of that, our neighbors finished their training and we did one last afternoon dive with them. I averaged sucking 800 psi more than all 3 of them. Sunday we all got up and did another dive, same thing again!!! At this point I'm feeling a little self conscious about it and the neighbors are kinda rolling their eyes when I signal my remaining air. So we all get out and of course the Hoover jokes start rolling. We then did one more dive and I did a little better, I had used about 600psi more than the rest and our total bottom time which averaged 45 feet deep was about 40 minutes including safety stop. Just wondering how much I can hope to gain with experience? I'm 6-1 and 245 my fiancee is about 5-4 and 120 and the neighbors are about 185 and 160 pounds each. Does my physical size pretty much indicate I will always be a hoover compared to them??? Or is their still hope? At this point all I can think of is I need a bigger tank? Any thoughts or advice? And also my neighbor is going for his Master Diver Certification which doesn't mean a whole lot when your still under 50 dives. But he kept telling me what I need to do is take a breath of air and hold it in as long as I can and when I think I can't hold it anymore hold it for just a few seconds longer and then blow it all out at once and take another breath and hold it. I may be 35 dives behind him but it seems to me that is the absolute wrong way to control your breathing under water. Any comments on that?
Well if anyone has some air saving advice I'd be more than happy to hear it. At this point when under I'm always thinking about my breathing, just wondering if my consumption will go down when I'm comfortable enough underwater that I do not even think about breathing.
Thanks
Dave
Well if anyone has some air saving advice I'd be more than happy to hear it. At this point when under I'm always thinking about my breathing, just wondering if my consumption will go down when I'm comfortable enough underwater that I do not even think about breathing.
Thanks
Dave