DevonDiver
N/A
Saw this article online. I'm often baffled at why scuba diving is the only training-related industry where low price and volume sale seems the sole focus of course design and agency targeting. A 3m/10ft depth qualification following some brief online study, a questionnaire, one pool session and a single training dive?!?
Not sure about it being "internationally recognized"...
Basic scuba more affordable than ever - Divernet
Not sure about it being "internationally recognized"...
Basic scuba more affordable than ever - Divernet
Basic scuba training more affordable than ever
7 July 2013, updated 8 July
A substantial price cut has been announced for a one-day scuba training course which qualifies people to dive in shallow water.
The Microdive RYA 3-Metre Basic Diver course has been reduced from £249 to £149, with the charge per head dropping even further to £120 in a block booking of four people or more.
The pricing represents the lowest British cost available for learning to dive in safety and obtaining an internationally recognised scuba diving qualification.
The course is administered by HSE-approved scuba training agency Microdive of Canvey Island in Essex, which sells the Mini-B miniature and enclosed scuba system.
It is being taught by Andark Diving in Southampton, Hampshire and by the National Diving Centre at Stoney Cove, Leicestershire. Students can choose between Mini-B or conventional scuba equipment.
Certification qualifies a diver to explore to a maximum depth of just 3m. The course is greatly simplified by the fact that extensive decompression theory is not required for such diving.
Students receive a training pack which they read in their own time before completing a questionnaire to show that they understand the main theories of shallow water scuba diving.
A pool diving session is followed by an open-water or lake dive, successful completion leading to certification.
For established divers, the course represents an inexpensive, gentle way of introducing family and friends to diving, with more advanced training always an option for those who get hooked.
The Royal Yachting Association has adopted the course as an RYA training option, given the benefit of Microdiving to boaters in being able to inspect and maintain their hulls.
The RYA also stipulates the qualification as a requirement for powerboat racers who may need to extricate themselves from a craft that has flipped.
All Microdive courses include accident and civil liability insurance through Lloyds of London for the duration of the activity.