E. Can diving alone be done responsibly?
1. Diving without a partner requires experienced scuba divers willing to make the necessary commitment to train and equip themselves properly, and to accept the added risks involved.
a. A person must have the required attitude and aptitude to pursue responsible independent diving. This is true in other adventure sport activities such as independent rock climbing.
2. PADI Worldwide’s position is that responsible independent scuba diving is not for everybody, however, it does have a place.
a. To responsibly engage in independent scuba diving, a diver must first be highly experienced, have a hundred or more logged buddy-accompanied scuba dives, be absolutely selfreliant and apply the specialized procedures and equipment needed to engage in the activity.
b. This includes, but is not limited to redundant air sources, specialized equipment configurations, specific dive planning, and management of independent diving problems and emergencies.
c. Diving without a partner requires mental discipline as well as the right attitude and equipment. However, no amount of redundant equipment can effectively back up a diver’s brain better than another individual.
d. Photographers, videographers, dive leaders and others will find the principles of self-reliant diving useful when diving as a group, or when otherwise choosing to dive without a partner.
e. Experienced divers who typically dive with a partner will find the self-reliant diver course bolsters their skill and confidence when diving with unknown partners or those less experienced.
f. TecRec divers can apply the principles of the self-reliant specialty to team diving – learning to rely first on themselves before others.