Don’t be such a stranger Jim! We need MUCH more content from you. I enjoy your work and could learn much more.. I’m sure I’ve said that before. I agree, I think having a great instructor is ESSENTIAL! My open water instructor was fantastic. Calm, knowledge, and very professional. It helps with the learning process a great deal. Poor instructors probably don’t train competent, safe divers.
+1 for scuba regret. We all have that shame closet. Great questions and good convo! Good luck, Tammy! You’ll crush it, no doubt. Hopefully you catch the bug and keep blowing bubbles. I didn’t go for the advanced course itself. I got it by default. Meaning I did the full training for deep diver, navigation, night, nitrox, and wreck. At that point the training agencies award you “advanced” I think it’s way better to get dives in, and specialize in those things for the deeper knowledge if you’re into the sport. Biggest piece of advice; relax, breathe, have fun and just enjoy.
hope this helps Tammy with the price but there is a big range between budget and high end... im new to this and doing my padi confined water in October with a DC education centre. cost so far buying just above budget is $395 for padi course, $500 covered my personal equipment & rental of confined water equipment (this excludes wetsuit and computer that cost me another $500). still need to pay for the 4 open water dives and safety equipment. i bought a 3mm suit for warm swims and will get a 5mm for quarry /deep diving.
Good luck with the certification, as someone who is a northeast diver, and only certified 3 years ago , I will say this, it is so worth it! I took the courses at my local dive shop, but went down to Key West for the actual certification dives- took classes in November so diving here was out of question. You don’t need to spend a lot right away. I bought mine as time and funds permitted.
Cool video, definitely answers a lot of the questions I see popping up with aspiring divers! I'd have two bits of advice, that nicely contradict each other. First and foremost: don't overthink and enjoy the process! Diving seems like a pretty complicated sport, and especially the Open Water course, where you learn everything for the first time, can be a bit high on information. But in the end, diving gear and procedures aren't really that complicated. So don't sweat it, and have fun! The second would be to keep the basics of trim and buoyancy in mind. It takes a lifetime to master them and no one does it very well from the beginning. But if you at least care about them enough to realize they need work, it's not hard to get a little better every time. I see divers with hundreds of dives that swim around looking like a potato sack just because they don't care about it. But knowing you're stable in the water even when something happens makes it so much easier to enjoy all the rest :) Oh, and be aware of the addiction. I started a year ago and got my first tech certification last weekend... Once you get bitten stuff can go fast.
Hope this is helpful: to keep things fun and always interesting in my early diving days I purchased tropical fish book on amazon and would try to log interestimg species I see in each dive. Before you know it you’ll be identifying other aquatic and marine lifeforms. Even if we are not planning to be marine biologists fish identifying I find is quite satisfying and always fun.
Sorry Jim. You are really boring and not organized with your responses. I hope she actually takes the course and enjoys it in spite of you. My credentials? CD in Southern California since 2001 with hundreds of successful students at all levels. Challenging conditions from the beach but worth it. Catalina Island a veritable aquarium just 20 miles away! A dive light on every dive!
Don’t be such a stranger Jim! We need MUCH more content from you. I enjoy your work and could learn much more.. I’m sure I’ve said that before. I agree, I think having a great instructor is ESSENTIAL! My open water instructor was fantastic. Calm, knowledge, and very professional. It helps with the learning process a great deal. Poor instructors probably don’t train competent, safe divers.
Thanks for the support, Laminar!
Tammy could try pool diving after certification to work on using the gear.
+1 for scuba regret. We all have that shame closet.
Great questions and good convo! Good luck, Tammy! You’ll crush it, no doubt. Hopefully you catch the bug and keep blowing bubbles.
I didn’t go for the advanced course itself. I got it by default. Meaning I did the full training for deep diver, navigation, night, nitrox, and wreck. At that point the training agencies award you “advanced” I think it’s way better to get dives in, and specialize in those things for the deeper knowledge if you’re into the sport.
Biggest piece of advice; relax, breathe, have fun and just enjoy.
Thank you so much!
hope this helps Tammy with the price but there is a big range between budget and high end... im new to this and doing my padi confined water in October with a DC education centre. cost so far buying just above budget is $395 for padi course, $500 covered my personal equipment & rental of confined water equipment (this excludes wetsuit and computer that cost me another $500). still need to pay for the 4 open water dives and safety equipment. i bought a 3mm suit for warm swims and will get a 5mm for quarry /deep diving.
Yes it helps!! Thank you so much!!!
Good luck with the certification, as someone who is a northeast diver, and only certified 3 years ago , I will say this, it is so worth it! I took the courses at my local dive shop, but went down to Key West for the actual certification dives- took classes in November so diving here was out of question. You don’t need to spend a lot right away. I bought mine as time and funds permitted.
@@thomasw5430 awesome! Thank you so much for the info!
Cool video, definitely answers a lot of the questions I see popping up with aspiring divers! I'd have two bits of advice, that nicely contradict each other. First and foremost: don't overthink and enjoy the process! Diving seems like a pretty complicated sport, and especially the Open Water course, where you learn everything for the first time, can be a bit high on information. But in the end, diving gear and procedures aren't really that complicated. So don't sweat it, and have fun! The second would be to keep the basics of trim and buoyancy in mind. It takes a lifetime to master them and no one does it very well from the beginning. But if you at least care about them enough to realize they need work, it's not hard to get a little better every time. I see divers with hundreds of dives that swim around looking like a potato sack just because they don't care about it. But knowing you're stable in the water even when something happens makes it so much easier to enjoy all the rest :)
Oh, and be aware of the addiction. I started a year ago and got my first tech certification last weekend... Once you get bitten stuff can go fast.
Thank you 😊
Hope this is helpful: to keep things fun and always interesting in my early diving days I purchased tropical fish book on amazon and would try to log interestimg species I see in each dive. Before you know it you’ll be identifying other aquatic and marine lifeforms. Even if we are not planning to be marine biologists fish identifying I find is quite satisfying and always fun.
What a great idea!
If you have any other advice for Tammy, please write a comment.
Sorry Jim. You are really boring and not organized with your responses. I hope she actually takes the course and enjoys it in spite
of you. My credentials? CD in Southern California since 2001 with hundreds of successful students at all levels. Challenging conditions from the beach but worth it. Catalina Island a veritable aquarium just 20 miles away! A dive light on every dive!
What a boring comment