drrich2
Contributor
A few follow up thoughts.
On the social end, diving is heavily pushed as buddy system dependent. For solo you need over 100 dives and are then still regarded as a risk-taking maverick. As an only child who spent most of his childhood in a very rural setting, I'm sensitive to the fact a hobby needs to have solo accessibility (especially if you're an oddball introvert who's not into hunting or school sports).
You can hop on a bike and ride around the neighborhood. For the warm water coral reef diving so many love, it's hop on a plane, stay at a hotel, and pay a charter boat op. $125 or so to take you out for 2 dives, and either bring your own buddy or get put with an insta-buddy.
Also on the social side, ScubaBoard is a big part of keeping me in the diving loop with a sense of being involved. If it weren't for online scuba interaction, it'd be easy to drift away. I don't dive with anybody I work with these days, and I think that's true for a lot of people.
It might help to market online scuba communities to OW students, to get them engaged in the larger scuba community.
On a darker note, this forum also shows us that divers can be pretty critical of each other. The typical new OW diver is apt to be PADI or SSI-trained, pretty limited in confidence and ability, wearing a jacket BCD and split fins, might have an SPG dangling, and can go through air pretty fast. Oh, and often doesn't own, use or know how to use tables (or forgets real fast) and trusts riding the computer (and is thankfully limited by gas supply; the 80 cf tank as an industry standard probably helps prevent a lot of bases of DCS in my opinion, vs. handling out 120's).
Now, how would that diver be regarded if he posted on the forum? Or worse, someone filmed him and posted the video on the forum as an example of incompetent divers produced by dangerously dumbed down training by morally corrupt profit-driven agencies in their 'race to the bottom' in diver training? Probably nobody would say anything on the charter boat trip, but on the forum?
Richard.
On the social end, diving is heavily pushed as buddy system dependent. For solo you need over 100 dives and are then still regarded as a risk-taking maverick. As an only child who spent most of his childhood in a very rural setting, I'm sensitive to the fact a hobby needs to have solo accessibility (especially if you're an oddball introvert who's not into hunting or school sports).
You can hop on a bike and ride around the neighborhood. For the warm water coral reef diving so many love, it's hop on a plane, stay at a hotel, and pay a charter boat op. $125 or so to take you out for 2 dives, and either bring your own buddy or get put with an insta-buddy.
Also on the social side, ScubaBoard is a big part of keeping me in the diving loop with a sense of being involved. If it weren't for online scuba interaction, it'd be easy to drift away. I don't dive with anybody I work with these days, and I think that's true for a lot of people.
It might help to market online scuba communities to OW students, to get them engaged in the larger scuba community.
On a darker note, this forum also shows us that divers can be pretty critical of each other. The typical new OW diver is apt to be PADI or SSI-trained, pretty limited in confidence and ability, wearing a jacket BCD and split fins, might have an SPG dangling, and can go through air pretty fast. Oh, and often doesn't own, use or know how to use tables (or forgets real fast) and trusts riding the computer (and is thankfully limited by gas supply; the 80 cf tank as an industry standard probably helps prevent a lot of bases of DCS in my opinion, vs. handling out 120's).
Now, how would that diver be regarded if he posted on the forum? Or worse, someone filmed him and posted the video on the forum as an example of incompetent divers produced by dangerously dumbed down training by morally corrupt profit-driven agencies in their 'race to the bottom' in diver training? Probably nobody would say anything on the charter boat trip, but on the forum?
Richard.