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bro...
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That's why, up here, we take our OW certs in a dry suit.These brand-new cold-water-trained divers have typically spent so little time in the water that they never actually dived much. That is, they spent just enough time to get the skills done and swim around for a few minutes, and then the dive ended so that they could get out of the water and get warm.
I agree!That's why, up here, we take our OW certs in a dry suit.
My OW certification dives were 14-15C (sub-60 F) on the surface and 9-10C (~50F) below the thermocline. Neither of those dives were the way you described them, and I was lucky: I certified during summer. The warmest water I've ever dived here in Norway was 18C (64F) on the surface and 14C (57F) below the thermocline. The coldest was 3C (37F) on the surface and 4C (39F) below. My fingers were a bit cold after a stiff half hour in 3-4C water, but I've never felt the need to "get the skills done and swim around for a few minutes" and then end the dive so that I could get out of the water and get warm.
It's perfectly possible to get a decent certification in cold water. You just have to use proper exposure protection.
Personally, I see this whole 'cold vs. warm water' issue as an excuse for snobbery.
Cold water divers tend to be very committed to the sport of diving; willing to accept conditions that a majority of (vacation-only) divers are not. Being prepared to dive locally means that they enjoy more access to frequent diving.
Frequent diving helps promote accelerated skill retention and experience acquisition. That experience/skill acquisition is not the product of the environment, but the frequency of diving. Similarly high levels of skill/experience acquisition would be noted in warm-water based divers who had access to comparable frequency of diving opportunity.
Frequent diving tends to expose divers to a wider range of environmental variables. That is equally true of cold or warm water. Here in the Philippines, a 'frequent diver' will experience low visibility and/or rough water diving during monsoon season. I've encountered equally bad visibility, rougher sea states and stronger currents in the tropics than I did in temperate seas. Some of the wrecks I dive here experience very limited visibility as a routine. In contrast, I have memories of 100ft+ clarity diving on the north Scottish coast..
Again, an 'infrequent diver' might opt to decline from diving in (what they assess to be) less than optimal conditions - thus not gaining that varied experience, wherever they live or dive...
Divers who are based in cold-water environments, but only dive in warm-water locations (i.e. most divers) have limited opportunity to dive. They dive infrequently. This reflects in considerable skill-fade between periods of diving, serving to degrade their competency relative to more frequent divers.
Assuming equal frequency of, and commitment to, diving, what really differentiates cold and warm water divers? I'd rationalize that the only tangible and constant difference was the exposure protection used...
The use of thicker exposure protection, particularly gloves and hoods, only has an impact on the development of a small range of motor skills. I don't see any logic in using that small range of motor skills to justify an argument that such a diver is 'better'. Skillful diving encompasses far more aspects than motor skills and finger dexterity alone...
2 dives on Saturday, both at 43f / 6c. Dove wet. expect to dive 57f / 14c next weekend. It will feel positively tropical![]()
Honestly folks, moving any newly minted diver out of their training conditions will challenge any of them. Heck, likely so with seasoned ones too. I have trained and dove here in the cold of the Great Lakes for years. I can't say that a switch to the Carolina Shore, the Maine Coast, California Coast, Puget Sound, Florida, COZ, etc. would ever be "easy" compared to here. There is stuff I'm just not used to... I don't think you can/should differentiate entry level training based on region.
OTOH - you certainly could by instructor.... (opens the proverbial can of worms)![]()
I still don't believe it's valid to claim that cold-water trained divers are a priori 'better' divers than warm-water trained ones or that certification documents should distinguish between those trained in warm versus cold water.
I agree wholeheartedly with this, and while I'm not familiar with what sort of emphasis is placed on these points in the agency materials that support your teaching, PADI materials actually do stress this point repeatedly. For one thing, in all of the materials, including in the quizzes and exams, students are told and asked to reiterate the importance of getting some kind of mentor/guide/experience program every time they dive in a new place or in a new environment. In PADI parlance, this experience is called Discover Local Diving, though I don't know a single shop or instructor who sells any dive program under that exact label. Regardless, the objective of the DLD experience (or whatever it may be called by a particular shop) is precisely to get divers up to speed when they encounter new conditions. This could be something as simple as transitioning from boat diving to shore diving, or as involved as transitioning from warm water gear to cold water gear. Furthermore, as a condition of certification, every Open Water student must read and sign a statement to the effect that they understand that they are certified to dive unsupervised in conditions similar to those under which they trained. If conditions present challenges that they have never experienced, they must seek further training in some guise, whether that's through formal instruction or by way of a mentor. I make my students read this statement first silently and then aloud and then I ask them to paraphrase it. If any new PADI Open Water diver comes away from the course without having this clear in his/her mind, the instructor has failed in his/her duty. For this reason, I don't believe that certifications should indicate training conditions. That's what dive logs are for.There's a valid reason why the OW certification qualifies you to dive in conditions "similar to those in which you were trained". The differences have nothing to do with "better" or "worse" ... but it is valid to recognize that different environments will affect both what and how you learn. The whole point of training is that we're putting people in an environment they've never before been exposed to ... and the learning experience is as much about mental adjustments as physical ones. Change the environment, and even if the equipment stays the same, the mental adjustments are different. There could very well be some value in distinguishing those differences. But it shouldn't be in a way that categorizes those distinctions in terms of "better" or "worse" ... diving's not a contest.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)