Was a private class today with Bob Bailey aka Grateful Diver. (and follow up tomorrow)
Why you ask?
As a new diver (ok, I'm not new per se, but...) you might be able to tell things aren't right, but you don't know what to do to fix them.
Thats where a private instructor comes in. Someone who's job (yea job, cuz I'm paying for it, but in Bobs case, its a passion) is to listen to what you want to accomplish, and then create a class to achieve those goals.
Now being a former Navy SEAL (in a life long ago) puts me both at an advantage, and a disadvantage. Advantage, because I've alot of water time, disadvantage, because
a> It was a long time ago, gear etc has changed substantially
b> Military training is very different .
c> I know enough to know something's not right, but not enough recent experience to figure out how to fix it.
So I've done a number of dives after my OW cert, but I knew I still had problems, and knew things weren't right.
I thought I could figure/fix them myself, but then came to the realization thats its a crap load of work, guess work, and time to try and do it yourself, if you even succeed at all. I suspect its a good reason there are folks alot that just give up in frustration, or just deal with it, hoping to eventually figure it out.
I've been talking with Bob since I first even decided to get wet again, and he's been a great resource.
So I sat back, and decided what I wanted to get out of a private course.
My list was as follows.
1- Gear check, am I set up correctly. Is there gear I have thats just wrong, and I'm fighting it.
2- Buoyancy and trim, get my weight figured out. Trim also.
3- Gas Management. I know I'm not breathing correctly, but where is my mistake.
4- Am I donning/doffing gear the most efficiently.
5- Water movement.
Now with respect to <1> I spent alot of time listening to board members, my local LDS (Tacoma Scuba, Scuba Set, and GirlDiver), so I was pretty set on gear. But... I wasn't setup correctly on my BCD. I knew something wasn't right, but I couldn't figure out what. Turned out my BP wasnt set correctly, and was way too low. Plus Bob adjusted my wings, although I dont understand exactly how that helps/helped.
The result was the moment I hit the water, flipped on my back for a surface swim, I could instantly tell the difference. The surface swim was far more effortless than it had ever been.
For <2> we worked on my ascents and descents, how to properly descend, and how to ascend. Now Bob likes to do a horizontal ascent, and honestly, I'm not to hip with that, and its drives the little Navy SEAL frogman in my brain crazy going up horizontal. But its good practice at least for trim control. So I'll try it for awhile.
We spent alot of practice time maintaining a specific depth, and working buoyancy, trim and proper kicking. While I knew something wasn't right with my kicks, I couldn't figure out what. Once Bob showed me, I accidentally hit 1/2 throttle on my massively strong legs, and left him behind briefly
But what I did notice, is the effort I had to put into water movement has easily dropped by 1/2 just today. I'm still sculling abit sometimes, corking once in awhile, but I was able to hold depth reasonably well. I was able to drop my weight from 34 > 30, and be right on the edge.
I haven't downloaded my AI computer yet, I'm really curious to see my SAC, although maybe because of all our ups and down, etc, I may not get agood reading, but in the second dive, I wasn't too far away from Bob, so perhaps I may graduate from Hoover to just Air Hog
He watched my breathing, and provided input during our many surface intervals. Turns out I wasnt exhaling enough.
Bob gave me some trips and tricks on getting into my gear, out, and some routing tips.
The amount I've improved just today, is probably equal to 10x dives, if not more.
Tomorrow, the lessons continue, with working on frog kicks and helicopter kicks. I never liked frog kicks, and have totally forgotten how to do helicopter kicks.
I cant stress enough to new divers, you seriously owe it to yourself to get a few private lessons. You'll improve so quickly, you will truly be amazed.
Why you ask?
As a new diver (ok, I'm not new per se, but...) you might be able to tell things aren't right, but you don't know what to do to fix them.
Thats where a private instructor comes in. Someone who's job (yea job, cuz I'm paying for it, but in Bobs case, its a passion) is to listen to what you want to accomplish, and then create a class to achieve those goals.
Now being a former Navy SEAL (in a life long ago) puts me both at an advantage, and a disadvantage. Advantage, because I've alot of water time, disadvantage, because
a> It was a long time ago, gear etc has changed substantially
b> Military training is very different .
c> I know enough to know something's not right, but not enough recent experience to figure out how to fix it.
So I've done a number of dives after my OW cert, but I knew I still had problems, and knew things weren't right.
I thought I could figure/fix them myself, but then came to the realization thats its a crap load of work, guess work, and time to try and do it yourself, if you even succeed at all. I suspect its a good reason there are folks alot that just give up in frustration, or just deal with it, hoping to eventually figure it out.
I've been talking with Bob since I first even decided to get wet again, and he's been a great resource.
So I sat back, and decided what I wanted to get out of a private course.
My list was as follows.
1- Gear check, am I set up correctly. Is there gear I have thats just wrong, and I'm fighting it.
2- Buoyancy and trim, get my weight figured out. Trim also.
3- Gas Management. I know I'm not breathing correctly, but where is my mistake.
4- Am I donning/doffing gear the most efficiently.
5- Water movement.
Now with respect to <1> I spent alot of time listening to board members, my local LDS (Tacoma Scuba, Scuba Set, and GirlDiver), so I was pretty set on gear. But... I wasn't setup correctly on my BCD. I knew something wasn't right, but I couldn't figure out what. Turned out my BP wasnt set correctly, and was way too low. Plus Bob adjusted my wings, although I dont understand exactly how that helps/helped.
The result was the moment I hit the water, flipped on my back for a surface swim, I could instantly tell the difference. The surface swim was far more effortless than it had ever been.
For <2> we worked on my ascents and descents, how to properly descend, and how to ascend. Now Bob likes to do a horizontal ascent, and honestly, I'm not to hip with that, and its drives the little Navy SEAL frogman in my brain crazy going up horizontal. But its good practice at least for trim control. So I'll try it for awhile.
We spent alot of practice time maintaining a specific depth, and working buoyancy, trim and proper kicking. While I knew something wasn't right with my kicks, I couldn't figure out what. Once Bob showed me, I accidentally hit 1/2 throttle on my massively strong legs, and left him behind briefly

I haven't downloaded my AI computer yet, I'm really curious to see my SAC, although maybe because of all our ups and down, etc, I may not get agood reading, but in the second dive, I wasn't too far away from Bob, so perhaps I may graduate from Hoover to just Air Hog

He watched my breathing, and provided input during our many surface intervals. Turns out I wasnt exhaling enough.
Bob gave me some trips and tricks on getting into my gear, out, and some routing tips.
The amount I've improved just today, is probably equal to 10x dives, if not more.
Tomorrow, the lessons continue, with working on frog kicks and helicopter kicks. I never liked frog kicks, and have totally forgotten how to do helicopter kicks.

I cant stress enough to new divers, you seriously owe it to yourself to get a few private lessons. You'll improve so quickly, you will truly be amazed.