CptTightPants21
Contributor
Fixed it - that came after trying to condense and get under the max words for a post
There are many instructors out there that teach differently and at the more advanced level, the methods of teaching can vary widely - just like the diving we all do.......
I forget who, but a tech instructor I believe recently talked about taking a deco class in a cave, he requires his students to complete one open water deco dive also - something to the effect that cave deco is easier than open water drift deco, something I never really thought about but it goes to the thought that diving can and is different - one system will never best case apply to all diving.
You the potential tech student that might be reading this - think for yourself as to how you plan to dive in the future, how is this new training going to help you see what you desire to see and see it safely. Search out an instructor that teaches in a way that will benefit you the most - the famous guy might not be it. Find an instructor that will focus on the things you feel are the most critical, I have to believe, the more comfortable you are, the more you'll learn.
That was Kensuf. There is nothing wrong with cave instructors who don’t require a blue water deco dive. In cave, buoyancy should be demonstrated throughout all dives, but there is nothing wrong if the usual deco methods are employed at 20ft. Cave instruction is about cave diving well—that means kicks, tie offs, lost buddy, lost line, OOA, etc. This IS the understanding that there are slightly different methods and conditions depending on location. If anything, this shows that Ken is an extremely thoughtful instructor who wants the to prepare his students to go out in the real world. When you are an instructor your students become your business card. Ken’s students would make Patrick Bateman blush…
Can we stop being vague, dodging the questions, and hiding in generalities? It is disingenuous to the those who have seen the video and misleading to future posters who will read the comments, but not necessarily see the video. We aren’t having a debate about variance in technique like ‘Should I my sling deco bottle on right or left side?’. We aren’t talking about breaking trim while preforming a skill, we aren’t talking about a diver being on their knees in the shallows when they first learn a skill. This is a tech instructor, on one of the final checkout dives of an adv. wreck class, who actively teaches and allows previously deco certified students to go fully on their knees at 130ft for the simple task of dropping and picking up a deco bottle.
If you, Doctor Mike, and a couple others are going to keep defending what we witnessed then you should all stop dillydallying around and have the decency to put it in writing.
“I,________, believe that going fully on your knees to pick up and drop a stage bottle is acceptable scuba behavior and can be actively taught in advanced scuba classes”