wmperry
Contributor
[ I've been meaning to write this for a while, so some of the skills and days they were introduced might be a bit off. Blame my 47 year old brain, not Jon or Lauren. ]
Thought I would add to the list of course reports. I recently finished my GUE Fundamentals course and upgrade to a tec pass, after ~5 months of hard work, practice, and endless patience from both Jon and Lauren of Kieren Technical.
Some quick background on me - I had ~1200 dives at the beginning of class, SCUBA instructor for a variety of agencies, trimix certified, thought I really had my **** together.
I was more nervous for Fundamentals than I had been for any SCUBA course over the previous ten years of diving. Completely overthinking it and paranoid about the swims.
I started off with Lauren in mid-November in High Springs for a four day course. Lots of great information while at Extreme Exposure for the classroom portion. Everyone at the shop was very accommodating. A quick trip over to the run at Ginnie Springs for our swims at the end of the day. It was a little cool for the swims at first, but my team-mate and I warmed up quickly.
Day two was at Blue Grotto -- Great facilities, and we had the place practically to ourselves on the weekday. First up was getting the basic finning down around the big platform and on the picnic tables. My flutter kick was an absolute disaster. During the video debrief I could see my fins bending in half - time to start looking at Jets I guess. Lots of work on basic 5 as well. Humbling to say the least - lots of buoyancy work needed. I have alway had a hard time just making myself STOP MOVING while I'm in the water.
Towards the end of the day we bled our tanks down and discovered that even in a 5mm suit and AL80s and no extra lead I was significantly overweighted with my steel backplate. Another GUE instructor was nearby and loaned me a Halcyon carbon fiber backplate which was almost perfect. Just a hair negative even with mostly empty tanks. Yet another upgrade waiting to happen.
Day three back at Blue Grotto. Kicks and valve-drills and S-Drills oh my! The carbon fiber backplate made a huge difference in my stability and buoyancy skills. Lauren was very patient with my S-Drills since I was used to using a cordless light and kept screwing up the ordering of cord manipulation. There may have been eye rolls (hard to tell in a mask), but at least there was no face-palming. Working on team communication and got a stern talking too after I let my teammate get ahead of himself in the GUE-EDGE without reminding him of a step he missed.
Day four also at Blue Grotto. More S-Drills, and moving into blue water for everything. The dreaded maskless swim went reasonably well. SMB deployment went okay - a bit different than how I had done it up to that point, but can definitely see the benefits. Still could not nail my flutter kick and a few timing issues with the S-drill at the end.
COURSE 1.0: Rec pass and a promise to be back after some practice. A lot of really great knowledge dropped upon my head over the 4 days, countless tips and cues from Lauren on how to improve, and a great time getting to know my team-mate and helping each other progress.
Giving up the carbon fiber backplate was particularly painful!
Thought I would add to the list of course reports. I recently finished my GUE Fundamentals course and upgrade to a tec pass, after ~5 months of hard work, practice, and endless patience from both Jon and Lauren of Kieren Technical.
Some quick background on me - I had ~1200 dives at the beginning of class, SCUBA instructor for a variety of agencies, trimix certified, thought I really had my **** together.

I started off with Lauren in mid-November in High Springs for a four day course. Lots of great information while at Extreme Exposure for the classroom portion. Everyone at the shop was very accommodating. A quick trip over to the run at Ginnie Springs for our swims at the end of the day. It was a little cool for the swims at first, but my team-mate and I warmed up quickly.
Day two was at Blue Grotto -- Great facilities, and we had the place practically to ourselves on the weekday. First up was getting the basic finning down around the big platform and on the picnic tables. My flutter kick was an absolute disaster. During the video debrief I could see my fins bending in half - time to start looking at Jets I guess. Lots of work on basic 5 as well. Humbling to say the least - lots of buoyancy work needed. I have alway had a hard time just making myself STOP MOVING while I'm in the water.
Towards the end of the day we bled our tanks down and discovered that even in a 5mm suit and AL80s and no extra lead I was significantly overweighted with my steel backplate. Another GUE instructor was nearby and loaned me a Halcyon carbon fiber backplate which was almost perfect. Just a hair negative even with mostly empty tanks. Yet another upgrade waiting to happen.
Day three back at Blue Grotto. Kicks and valve-drills and S-Drills oh my! The carbon fiber backplate made a huge difference in my stability and buoyancy skills. Lauren was very patient with my S-Drills since I was used to using a cordless light and kept screwing up the ordering of cord manipulation. There may have been eye rolls (hard to tell in a mask), but at least there was no face-palming. Working on team communication and got a stern talking too after I let my teammate get ahead of himself in the GUE-EDGE without reminding him of a step he missed.
Day four also at Blue Grotto. More S-Drills, and moving into blue water for everything. The dreaded maskless swim went reasonably well. SMB deployment went okay - a bit different than how I had done it up to that point, but can definitely see the benefits. Still could not nail my flutter kick and a few timing issues with the S-drill at the end.
COURSE 1.0: Rec pass and a promise to be back after some practice. A lot of really great knowledge dropped upon my head over the 4 days, countless tips and cues from Lauren on how to improve, and a great time getting to know my team-mate and helping each other progress.
Giving up the carbon fiber backplate was particularly painful!