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You're welcome. However, I wouldn't even assume she HAS had a "good introduction." I would assume NOTHING. I would make my own assessment and would not rely on the assessment of a non-professional with relatively few dives to his credit.Quero,
Thanks for your response. I agree that my daughter's future instructor should go over A-Z and not assume that she has had anything more than a good introduction to Scuba.
I have recently purchased all new gear for my 19 year old Daughter.
She has finished the PADI open water book including doing all of the quizes.
We have also gone over test questions etc. She is busy going to Colledge
so her official ow training is planned for a few months from now. In the
meantime, we have have done over 8 dives in our swimming pool and she
can perform all of the drills very comfortably. I am a PADI
AOW diver with a CPR card and working on rescue. Does anybody have
any issues with me working with my daughter in our pool? I am definitely
not going to take her in the ocean until she is certified!
As for working with her in the pool, I've never seen you dive, and you may be an excellent role model, or you may still have residual skill glitches that you are transmitting to your daughter without realizing it. Instructors are required to have "demonstration quality" skills that are role-model perfect for student divers to emulate. I would be concerned, personally, that you are unwittingly instilling undesirable habits in your modeling of skills since a good number of AOW divers are still developing and perfecting their diving techniques and skills.
"Fault"??? Nobody's. It's simply a question of learning curve, which by definition takes time and experience to climb. A diver with 50 dives typically hasn't got enough experience/time in the water to have dialed in skills to a degree that the diver can serve as a mentor. It's also not a question of training standards, unless standards were to require all divers to attain professional-level skill sets before becoming certified.And who's fault would those "residual skills glitches" be? IMO, if agencies had higher training standards O/W divers would also have demonstration quality skills. Instead they get passed along with "good enough" skills. IMO the "glitches" would be transmitted anyways because as soon as the certification class is over the newly minted O/W diver is going to be diving with her father and trusting him to be her mentor anyways.
So true. I've heard of a few close calls, even on scuba, in just a few feet of water. I myself, stumbled while flooding my wetsuit on a hot day. I hadn't turned my air on and fell in a 6-10 foot deep hole. I had a steel tank on and I was sure I was going to drown. Nobody saw it happened and it was all I could do to swim my tank to the surface with no air in my lungs. An Instructor and DM within feet of me on the surface and nobody even knew anything was wrong.Now thats the way to whack a hornets nest.
My daughter was away in college when the SCUBA bug bit her and was certified without my involvement.
On the other hand, my dad and I learned to SCUBA dive with a book and minimal dive gear, one set for both of us, so I have little or no room to comment negatavily. Be carefull, one can drown in a few inches of water.
Bob
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I may be old, but I'm not dead yet.