Got it. You agree with it because it supports what you have already decided is true.wow FANTASTIC POST BOTH PARTS. It really supports the opinions of a lot of people over the years..
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
Got it. You agree with it because it supports what you have already decided is true.wow FANTASTIC POST BOTH PARTS. It really supports the opinions of a lot of people over the years..
Got it. You agree with it because it supports what you have already decided is true.
You can replace most aspects of a buddy with equipment, but you can't replace the extra brain. I always dive in a team, but I've got the equipment and experience to, at least in theory, do the dive on my own. And that's how most dives go down. The only real interaction is "hey, look at this thing" or "time to head back" or "yep, that's your O2 bottle, switch". But on the few occasions where things have gotten sticky for various reasons, it's always been my buddy's brain and ability to problem solve independently of me that's come in handy.
A properly equipped and extremely experienced diver may well be better of alone, than buddied with a new diver who has 0-5 dives in the local environment.
However,’the “average” recreational diver is not equipped for solo and is often not that well trained or practiced. It probably makes more sense to promote better buddy diving skills rather than throwing out the whole buddy diving mindset- for most casual, recreational divers.
Confirmation bias - WikipediaI believe that is the root of why one says they agree or not.
If by chance you do not agree with the posts ,,,,, then your same comment slightly modified would relate to you.
When writing about how how poor the training and application of the buddy system is today, I don't think I'd add how I was an instructor for 20 years. The problem with the buddy system is that it takes time to teach to be effective, and with abbreviated dive training there is not time to fit it in, and a lot of instructors don't feel it's worth teaching, since there may be issues, as pointed out by this instructor.
Don't get me wrong, I'm a solo diver and prefer it that way, however I was trained to buddy dive and can do a decent job of it when necessary. The largest issue with buddy diving now is that there is no commitment to it by divers since it was not treated as important by instructors.
If one looks, there are instructors and agencies that actuLly train for buddy, and team, diving and they don't seem to have the issues, and lack of resolution the author discusses.
Blaming the system for not working because it is not being taught is an interesting concept.
Bob
- (I happen to believe that a far better rule for safe diving than "never dive alone" is "never dive deeper than twice the depth you can skin dive to").