OMyMyOHellYes
Contributor
Did he at least have on his life jacket?I hate that. Once I saw a guy dive in without his goggles.
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Did he at least have on his life jacket?I hate that. Once I saw a guy dive in without his goggles.
I have completed hundreds of dives in South Florida. I have never seen a dive there where no one does a safety stop. This past winter I heard several briefings in which divers were told that when coming up the line after a wreck dive they should space themselves out between 10-20 feet rather than having everyone trying to cluster at exactly 15 feet.South Florida
Fish have fins. Mammals have flippers. We're not fish, so...I am a real diver, I only use fins. Flipper died long time ago.
Exactly. "Fins" is not the proper term for divers. "Flippers" is. Fins, like the caudal fin, is in line with the dorsal fin. Fins propel a fish through the water with a side-to-side motion. Flippers [flukes, actually], on mammals are perpendicular to the dorsal and propel the animal through the water with an up-down motion. But mammals have flippers and flukes, not fins. The ignorance expressed in deliberately calling flippers fins - SMH.Fish have fins. Mammals have flippers. We're not fish, so...
Exactly. "Fins" is not the proper term for divers. "Flippers" is. Fins, like the caudal fin, is in line with the dorsal fin. Fins propel a fish through the water with a side-to-side motion. Flippers [flukes, actually], on mammals are perpendicular to the dorsal and propel the animal through the water with an up-down motion. But mammals have flippers and flukes, not fins. The ignorance expressed in deliberately calling flippers fins - SMH.
Exactly. "Fins" is not the proper term for divers. "Flippers" is. Fins, like the caudal fin, is in line with the dorsal fin. Fins propel a fish through the water with a side-to-side motion. Flippers [flukes, actually], on mammals are perpendicular to the dorsal and propel the animal through the water with an up-down motion. But mammals have flippers and flukes, not fins. The ignorance expressed in deliberately calling flippers fins - SMH.
Sure you can; you learn how and practice it in a solo class. After you enter and are sorted out, near the surface, just lay back in the water and pause exhaling; look for bubbles around you. If you see some coming from behind your head you can even see if they are a gentle fizz or a solid stream.the only thing that I can’t do for myself is a bubble check.
Nice!One of the things I have written on my wrist slate is a reminder to use the reflection on my computer to do a bubble check right after submerging. It works pretty well. Can see the 1st stage clearly.