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| DIR: Discuss Diving in threes in the Technical and Specialist Diving Forums forums: The common denominator being Mr Oliver perhaps he just wants to be alone However I had a lovely dive with ... |
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| OK, OK so it was all my fault
__________________ Paul Oliver Canterbury Divers DUE - Dover Underwater Explorers 2 Rules - 1. You books you pays. 2. Always return to the shot |
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__________________ Paul Oliver Canterbury Divers DUE - Dover Underwater Explorers 2 Rules - 1. You books you pays. 2. Always return to the shot |
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| One way of 'diving as a three' when it comes to inexperienced divers is for two inexperienced (e.g. OW)to be a pair. The third (eg DM) then essentially oversees the pair. The inexperienced divers only have to worry about one other person. It gives them experience in diving with an equally qualified/experienced buddy in a non-training situation, but also gives them a 'comfort blanket'. All three need to be happy with the situation, and all three need to know the roles of the others. In a separation situation, if the pair lose the blanket, they can carry on if they are happy to, but if either of the pair disappear, then normal missing buddy procedures apply. NB this will only work if the experienced diver is self sufficient enough to get themselves out of a problem, and is on a fairly 'easy' site i.e not a roaring drift or deeper than about 15-18m. and within all the parameters of the least experienced of the pair.
__________________ Morag YD Coven Witch One RNLI - YD Charity 2008/2009 Tin Rattler The Diving Club, Reading Shark Trust - Conservation through awareness I believe in Dragons, Fairies, Good Men and other mythical creatures Anyone can make a mistake, said the Dalek, as he climbed off the dustbin |
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My club here in Tassie frequently does thjis, with no clear guidelines and it's a bloody nightmare (for me at least) as on a number of occasions, I've found myself piggy in t'middle trying to link two divers each going their own way, sooner or later, I have to pick who I'm going to stick with so it's usually the one who owes me petrol money or else the one who's car I came down in. And that's in waters where we commonly have 15-20M visibility. Yes I know, I know. But unfortunately the buddy culture is fairly weakly imbued here, athough everyone pays it lip service. People here train with a local or interstate PADI/SSI school and then that's it. It's pretty free enterprise and most club members, not to mention committee/DM feel fairly inhibited from openly discussing/criticising the practices of others. Thing is, I've been told that I'll likely be nominated to our Committee this year, and I'm already involved in putting together a comprehensive diving SOP (something we've never had). Our club is somewhat different from most UK clubs, it's a bunch of individuals who dive (and socialise) together but no training, other than providing liaison with local schools offering courses is provided. Anyway, I'd be really grateful to see how you deal with this. When you've sorted it, well if you remember, could you PM me. Richard M. |
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