| | |||||||
|
Welcome to the YD Scuba forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
| Commercial Diving: Discuss phase two weeks 8 & 9 ( all finnished ) in the Technical and Specialist Diving Forums forums: Kogeko. some of the places i have worked, you would be lucky to get an ambulance there in 30 minutes &... |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| Kogeko. some of the places i have worked, you would be lucky to get an ambulance there in 30 minutes & thats if they could find you. there are plenty of 'civilisation' jobs and many that are remote. you might also find yourself boat diving in civils and the sail back to a safe harbour could be an hour away. if i owned a civil dive company and had to choose between 2 guys, one having a DMT and the other only having FAAW, i would probably go for the DMT. but then again, he might be useless at diving... all depends on how much cash and time you have i suppose, but not a bad investment if you can afford it. might just put you ahead of the other 11 guys on your course going for that one job you all know about. sorry, just noticed you directed that question at BHA as spongey says, work wont come to you. not easy getting it at times, but when you get there, do your best and they might keep you or invite you back. i'm jumpin between 2 companies at the moment getting work...just wish it was more consistant and i would stay with one or the other.
__________________ http://youtube.com/scubadooby |
| ||||
| Quote:
Also, assuming something goes wrong with your dive and you are pulled from some canal/lake somewhere, not breathing, by your friendly (and by now brown suited) standby diver. The ambulance is 10 minutes away. Would you prefer: A. Someone who had a bit of a laugh on a 3 day First Aid course B. Someone else who had resuscitation drills hammered into them over and over again for 2 weeks To come to your aid? I'd recommend the course to any new diver, it's jolly good fun and very interesting. Last edited by BigHairyAl : 26-03-08 at 07:55 AM. |
| ||||
| Thanx for the response, Stew and Al.. Am pencilled in for a course in May. |
| ||||
| Dunoon, May Quote:
He's doing his drysuit measurements this week ![]() |
| ||||
| Anyone have names/phone/website details for DMT providers? |
| ||||
| DDRC in Plymouth Diving Diseases Research Centre (DDRC) - Home NHC in Aberdeen The National Hyperbaric Centre And The Murrayfield Hospital on the Wirral hyperbaric medicine decompression illness recompression chambers Personally as a new diver I don't think spending even more of your cash on this course is going to increase your chances of getting work. I've worked with 1 person who had it and he only did because he worked offshore in the Middle East quite a bit. He also got an extra £10 a day for having it but he could never dive if the other DMT onboard was in the water. Hope that helps.
__________________ " I don't grow up. In me is the small child of my early days" www.rebreathertraining.net http://www.predator-wetsuits.co.uk/Drysuits06.htm www.yorkshire-divers.co.uk |
| ||||
| Quote:
best of luck mate...
__________________ http://youtube.com/scubadooby |
| |||
| id rather have a de-fib on the job cause with cpr you have so a slim chance of bringing anyone round whether you be a first aider or medic and as someone once told me a medics ticket is not enough to be of any use but just enough to be some harm with some exceptions. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| | ||