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| DIR: Discuss Buddy Diving done well in the Technical and Specialist Diving Forums forums: Does any know of any good solo diving courses? (prefereably not GUE ones- no offence) I would think it's ... |
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__________________ Phill www.divingniknaks.com DIRZONE kit, Salvo HID & LED Dive Torches and FROG dive gear in the UK Leisure Audio Books Online Wanna Talk Turkey on Torches? Skype us - it's FREE ! |
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Solo Scuba Diving
__________________ "No one is more effectively enslaved than those who think they are free" - Charles Sullivan |
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| I dont want to turn this into a solo diving/buddy diving debate. But, my view is that the skills needed to be a good solo diver are very simillar to those needed to be a good buddy diver. Bob mentioned situational awareness as key to buddy diving, I agree with him but it's also key to solo diving.
__________________ Mark Powell Dive-Tech: Technical Diver Training http://www.dive-tech.co.uk GasDivers Visit the online technical diving shop: Analox, Fourth Element, Narked at 60 and now Apeks and Greenforce |
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I don't advertise it, but I also teach this course - to promote self sufficiency rather than to give people a ticket to dive solo.
__________________ Mark Powell Dive-Tech: Technical Diver Training http://www.dive-tech.co.uk GasDivers Visit the online technical diving shop: Analox, Fourth Element, Narked at 60 and now Apeks and Greenforce |
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The exercises or scenarios you perform on a GUE course, encourage you to be more aware of your buddies, and yes, I believe this is slightly different to some other agencies. Losing a mask for example, results in a need to rescue or guide that diver to the exit or surface, whereas with other agencies it may just mean you need to get your spare mask out and put it on, with less emphasis on buddies, but more on 'self-sufficiency'. As you state, resolving issues early is also important in buddying. Another GUE instructor (AndyK) simply stated it as 'sorting your shit out'. It is better to sort an issue before it becomes a problem, sort a problem before it becomes a nightmare. The trick is in spotting the issues, as some of them are not very noticeable, unless you are looking for them, and this emphasis on skills and standard equipment creates a nice platform to do this. Andy |
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| This may be a bit semantic and picky but I think that buddy diving done well is to abide by the level of commitment the buddies have agreed to before the dive. That agreement may range from "I´ll salvage your gear if I find your body after we noticed that you didn´t surface" to "team". For me the preffered way to buddy-dive is being part of a "team" or to "buddy-dive well", which to me, means commiting yourself to attaining/keeping a skill-level that enables you to be self-sufficient as well capable to help your buddy should he need it. It also means paying attention to your buddy and actively communicating (being proactive) during the dive to avoid, minimize and solve problems before they become life-threatening... Having said all that, there are quite a few situations where to dive at all, the "best/safest" kind of buddy-diving, is the kind where the only person you´re responsible for is yourself. I am somewhat hessitant to call it buddy diving but I think it´s commonly referred to as "same ocean buddies"... |
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| Interesting, I agree with everything you said but just put it together in a different order. Quote:
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This is why I don't think being self sufficient in anyway stops you from being a good buddy. In fact I think that two (or more) self sufficient divers who have got their 'shit sorted' and have several spare braincells on the other diver make a good buddy pair (team).
__________________ Mark Powell Dive-Tech: Technical Diver Training http://www.dive-tech.co.uk GasDivers Visit the online technical diving shop: Analox, Fourth Element, Narked at 60 and now Apeks and Greenforce |
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Being really self sufficient works hand in hand with good buddy skills IMHO. In fact I don't think it is possible to be a good buddy without a high level of self sufficiency. Andy |
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However self oriented is not related to self sufficiency or solo diving in any way, it's an individual trait. (I've dived with a few self oriented buddies as well |
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