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- I'm a Fish!
Any dive I would have considered a Scooter for....to cruise over a large area looking for something specific...I would like the Dol-fin for.
If I was just out sight-seeing on a reef, the Dol-fin would be great.
While a helicopter turn or reverse kick , is nice in the arsenal of a cave diver, or a photographer, they did not exist in the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's, and I don't recall seeing even cave divers doing them in the nineties. In other words, a huge number of divers had a great time diving for many decades, without these specialty kicks.
So there are specialty fins like Jetfins or F1's, that are good at helicopters, frog kicks, and reverse kicks....and horrible at flutter or dolphin kicks. And there are "specialty" cruising fins like the Dol-fins, that are for exploring miles of reef.
I don't see the horror in these becoming commonplace
---------- Post added October 12th, 2015 at 08:53 AM ----------
As a videographer, I would purposely choose a Dol-Fin to shoot :
I could go on ad nauseum with this, but I think the point is made that divers do not need to be plankton....we actually CAN get around at the speed of cool marine life, to commune with them..and why shouldn't we? This is the Tao of the Dol-Fin
If I was just out sight-seeing on a reef, the Dol-fin would be great.
While a helicopter turn or reverse kick , is nice in the arsenal of a cave diver, or a photographer, they did not exist in the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's, and I don't recall seeing even cave divers doing them in the nineties. In other words, a huge number of divers had a great time diving for many decades, without these specialty kicks.
So there are specialty fins like Jetfins or F1's, that are good at helicopters, frog kicks, and reverse kicks....and horrible at flutter or dolphin kicks. And there are "specialty" cruising fins like the Dol-fins, that are for exploring miles of reef.
I don't see the horror in these becoming commonplace

---------- Post added October 12th, 2015 at 08:53 AM ----------
As a videographer, I would purposely choose a Dol-Fin to shoot :
- Dolphins, of course
Because of their normal behaviors and typical speed while foraging... https://youtu.be/04rfYqs9ZSE Dolphin video I shot where Jetfins or typical reverse kick type fins would have been a massive Fail for getting ANY footage......said another way...with Jetfins NO One could get this footage...no way, no how.
- Sailfish --- https://youtu.be/wVzPTCKXrD0 Sailfish footage I shot with DiveR freedive fins...Using Dol-Fin propulsion instead would have been far superior for more and better video!!!
- Goliath Groupers......https://youtu.be/K9rDHzfj2Js clip from a program I shot on Goliaths at the wreck of the Castor...the Dol-Fins would have been perfect here, as they would have allowed me to get into position for each shot with much less use of gas, and to follow the herds of fish with much less effort. With the DiveR fins, I can get "into" a large herd, and stay with them as long as I want, but with the Dol-fins, the ease would be so much greater that I would gladly pay the difference
- Manta Rays ---- https://youtu.be/qHFkQrPtlJM Manta shows up over top of Castor wreck at 1:10 into video.....with DiveR's it was ok to catch him...sort of...with the Dol-Fin I could have gotten right up by him, and stayed with the Manta...at 100 feet deep, you can't exert, so just a small speed advantage with the Dol-Fin would have been all I needed to stay with the Manta....You can see he is just moving a lithe too fast for me with the DiveR's
- Spotted Eagle Rays.....I have plenty of these in video clips, but the Manta swims the same way.
- Sting Rays ..ditto
- Whale Sharks..... https://youtu.be/SMY9eJrp8Zw One of Jim Abernethy's friends shot this....I was not on the dive.....I will be getting my own Whaleshark footage in Belize very soon
The speed they swim at would be comfortable with a Dol-Fin
- Cuberra Snappers ( large ones can have personalities of a sort, and will often interact on an extended dive, so to speak). I don't have any footage handy....Sorry
- Mola Mola.... https://youtu.be/JqYdboC55dI I shot this with doubles, as it is around 210 feet deep ..Around 2:05 in to the video, Action I see in the corner of my eye, gets me heading quickly to a Mola Mola about 80 feet off the side of the ship. My DiveR's got me part way there, but they could not move me with doubles on, fast and efficiently enough...so I never got the footage I would have wanted. With the Dol-Fin on, it would have been easy to reach the Mola Mola, without a big increase in breathing rate. On a wreck like this..the Ande....my interest is in filming cool marine life on and around the wreck. Any time I have penetrated into wrecks like this, is has been a profound waste of time...little to see inside, it's all been stripped by other divers, and you waste massive amounts to time to see nothing.....but hey, if you need to use a reverse kick to justify the purchase of a Jetfin or F1, then this is the place to knock yourself out. I would rather see the marine life. Everyone has a right to see what they want to see, and the guys doing the technical penetrations, are EXACTLY as right to enjoy this, as I am to enjoy the large marine life outside the wreck.
I could go on ad nauseum with this, but I think the point is made that divers do not need to be plankton....we actually CAN get around at the speed of cool marine life, to commune with them..and why shouldn't we? This is the Tao of the Dol-Fin

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