Technical diving as an occupation.

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

deep_6

Contributor
Messages
95
Reaction score
0
Location
Taytay, Rizal PHILIPPINES
Hi, I really don't know if this is the "right" forum. Anyway, I'd just like to ask if technical diving can be an occupation. Right now I'm in a career that bores me to death. I'm a database specialist...sql and stuff. I'm looking to take up scuba training level by level until I get to be a "technical" diver. You don't have to tell me how much it pays, I'm more interested in the possible careers of technical divers aside from being dive instructors and the like. Thank you.
 
You could look into getting involved with commercial diving if your not interested in instruction but going the "technical" diver route will be an unneccessary expense towards that end.

There is also equipment maintenance or design, sales, writing, guiding...

Really depends on the market you intend to live and work in and your personal interests.

Jeff Lane
 
rmediver2002:
You could look into getting involved with commercial diving if your not interested in instruction but going the "technical" diver route will be an unneccessary expense towards that end.

There is also equipment maintenance or design, sales, writing, guiding...

Really depends on the market you intend to live and work in and your personal interests.

Jeff Lane

I'm not really sure if there's a market for commercial diving here in the Philippines. I'm looking to stay in these islands and probably get paid to dive while assisting a National Geographic team explore the caves in Palawan or go under and fix a boat's hull or something.

But thanks for the insight that you gave like equipment design, sales and the like.

Our family own a beach in Cebu and I'd probably use that as my starting point...teaching people to dive...there's nothing wrong in being a teacher, I just find it too scary as the lives of newbies are in your hands.
 
When I was getting ready to get out of the military I was looking into working for MWR doing equipment maintenance and instruction overseas. Definately worth looking into in your location...

Nothing wrong with scrubbing hulls either, set up some monthly contracts if you can and you only have to hit the heavy growth that first time...

What about supporting the Navy out there for commercial work?

Good Luck again,

Jeff
 
rmediver2002:
When I was getting ready to get out of the military I was looking into working for MWR doing equipment maintenance and instruction overseas. Definately worth looking into in your location...

Nothing wrong with scrubbing hulls either, set up some monthly contracts if you can and you only have to hit the heavy growth that first time...

What about supporting the Navy out there for commercial work?

Good Luck again,

Jeff

I never reliazed that "fixing a boat" would mean scrubbing hulls. But hey I still welcome that idea than what I do everyday. About the Navy...you mean join? No way. I mean no offense towards the Philippine servicemen but if you were a Filipino you'd get my drift.

I'm leaning towards taking cert for OW then progress to the levels where tech divers or commercial divers can actually get hired to do stuff underwater.

A long way to go but I'm on the road...so to speak.
 
scuba diving instruction can be a very "non-booring" ocupation, check out some of the dive schools in the philipines, there are some very respected ones, some of them even offer technical diving instructor courses, if that is your area of interest.

It is quite a long road though.
 
http://cavediveflorida.com/Rum_House.htm

Back
Top Bottom