Charlie99
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IMO, the boat diver course is just fluff. No real useful info that you can't get through a combination of mentoring and the school of hard knocks. Much of the boat related stuff varies region to region and even boat to boat, which makes practical experience more important than a course.
Having the instructor along for your first boat dives /first ocean dives is a very good idea, but the formal course doesn't have any value -- other than as you noted, that you may have to have the right punches on your ticket to get a DM cert.
If I were in your position, I'd get all of the relevant books ahead of time and study them. Then take the wreck course and discuss any questions you have on the other stuff with your instructor. Wreck dives are often deep dives. Hopefully, your instructor would cover in a wreck course a lot of the stuff from a deep diver course -- gas planning/rock bottom calculations, NDLs, ascent procedures, etc.
It sounds like your original plan is pretty good .... but do go ahead and look at the other stuff and use your instructors knowledge to the fullest. Be an active participant in your learning rather than passively being taught.
Having the instructor along for your first boat dives /first ocean dives is a very good idea, but the formal course doesn't have any value -- other than as you noted, that you may have to have the right punches on your ticket to get a DM cert.
If I were in your position, I'd get all of the relevant books ahead of time and study them. Then take the wreck course and discuss any questions you have on the other stuff with your instructor. Wreck dives are often deep dives. Hopefully, your instructor would cover in a wreck course a lot of the stuff from a deep diver course -- gas planning/rock bottom calculations, NDLs, ascent procedures, etc.
It sounds like your original plan is pretty good .... but do go ahead and look at the other stuff and use your instructors knowledge to the fullest. Be an active participant in your learning rather than passively being taught.