Tuesday 1 February 2011

At last I'm a PADI Advanced Open Water diver.

I would like to thank everyone at Aquatron in Glasgow for their help and patience while I was learning all of my skills.  I know I haven't been the easiest student as I'm afraid of water and have had the odd setback.


Sunday 30th January was a big day for me as I had the last two specialities to complete in order to become a PADI Advanced Open Water Diver, namely Underwater Navigator and Peak Performance Buoyancy.

We set off for Tearooms on Loch Fyne at some ungodly hour in the morning to get there for 9am.  I realised when it was too late to turn back that I'd left my jacket at home. Doh! Thankfully The Boy offered me his as he knows how feeble I can be in the cold.

I was looking forward to Tearooms as it's one of the more civilised dive sites having an actual, honest to goodness toilet on site instead of bushes.  I have no idea what the paying customers of the tea room and garden centre think of all the odd looking folk wandering around in diving gear looking cold. It wasn't too busy on Sunday so I wasn't on the receiving end of any funny looks.

Here we are getting ready to go into the water.  That's me in the middle at the back.

And here we go into the water for dive 1, walking down the smooth, gentle, grassy slope into the water.  No, I don't see a smooth, grassy slope either.  Someone lied to me.  Shame I don't remember who it was.   Tearooms was sold to me on the basis of an easy entry into the water.  Needless to say I'm at the back of the group again picking my carefully way through the rocks.



Dive 1 was underwater navigation.  My big worry here was my eyesight or lack of it when reading and I was going to have to be able to read a compass.  I had a practice on dry land with Allan then we went down to 15 metres for the real thing.

1) navigate a set distance and return to the start using only landmarks and underwater features.  Remarklably I managed this one just fine.  Luck? Probably.

2) Use the compass to navigate to a set point and then use a reciprocal heading (ie, do an about face) to go back to the start.  I've done it on a previous dive and I did it again.  2 down, one to go.

3) Use the compass to navigate in a square and land back at the start position.  This is when I realised that my compass didn't seem to have the same markings as the one Allan showed me with on the surface.  Oops.  Got there though, much to my surprise.

Here's The Boy, in between dives, looking far too cocky:


This is me in between dives looking slightly less than cocky.  The silver thing around my neck is the bottom of my hood which I turn up so it doesn't choke me.  The Boy calls it my bib.







Dive 2 was peak performance buoyancy.  I have to say my buoyancy wearing a dry suit has been a tad unpredictable so far so I could see potential for disaster with this as the whole point is to demonstrate that you are in control throughout the duration of the dive and complete some skills.

1)  Hover a reasonable distance above the bottom and maintain that distance using breathing.  I've done that before, badly, but this time, while it wasn't perfect, it was pretty damned good, for me. :o)

2) Swim through an obstacle without touching the sides.  As I was the only student for this skill there were no hoops set up underwater so I'd to swim through Allan's legs.  Poor man was probably afraid of what my tank might inadvertently collide with.  I don't know who was more surprised that I did actually manage to swim under him without getting close to any delicate parts.

3) Similar to skill 1), hover but while hovering knock a little rock off the top of a big rock using my regulator and without touching the bottom or the rocks with any part of my body.  I expected this to be my downfall but I did it at the second attempt.  Go me!



What was even more impressive in my opinion was that I didn't start panicking because my mask wasn't sealed properly and kept filling up with water.  However, as I emerged from the water at the end of the dive, it became apparent that I have probably been a bit tense at times while I've been diving.  I realised that I had almost bitten right through the mouth piece after only 9 dives. Look:

The rubber grips were hanging on by a tack at both sides.  Ok, so I haven't been as cool as I thought I was.  A stop off at Aquatron was required on the way home to purchase a replacement. :o(



This is me in the car park, sorry changing facitilies at the end of the dives trying to get a heat despite the biting cold wind:
My dive computer claims it was 6 degrees on the surface but the wind certainly made it feel much colder. At least the water was a slightly warmer 8 degrees.  Thanks to Sean for providing the majority of the photos. It's amazing that I didn't recognise myself in a single one the first time I looked through them.  I was probably hoping I looked slightly more attractive in my dry suit. :o)

I wasn't the only one with a new qualification by the end of the day.  While I was sedately doing my skills, The Boy was doing his PADI Rescue Diver skills.  This involves a lot of role play and messing about pretending to either drown / get lost or save a diver from drowning / find a lost diver.  He had a fun day even if he did complain that he needed his jacket back once he was dressed.

What's next?

Next Saturday we have a chamber dive.  That means a trip on a ferry to Millport to use a decompression chamber and simulate a dive to 50 metres.  As an advanced diver I am only allowed to dive to 30 metres.  Even after passing the Deep Diver speciality 40 meters is the limit.  The deeper you dive, the more likely it is you will suffer from nitrogen narcosis (aka the rapture of the deep) so this is an opportunity to simulate a deep dive in a controlled environment and find out how it affects people.  It will be funny to see whose behaviour is the most outrageous.  Let's hope it's not mine.

We also started our under water photography course on Saturday and we have a couple of dives in Loch Long next Sunday to prove we can take decent photos.  The session last night in the swimming pool was fun so hopefully the dives will be fun as well.

Take only photos, leave only bubbles.  That's the theory anyway.  :o)

6 comments:

  1. All I can say is....I'm in total awe....and ask...Why are you doing this????!!!!

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  2. Pat, I enjoyed it when we tried it in Mexico and there are so many other lovely places we'd like to dive, all warm water, so we can dive in just a swimsuit or a shortie wetsuit.

    If you learn in Scotland with the whole drysuit paraphenalia, surprisingly enough, just about everywhere else is considered easier because the conditions are harsher here. Now we're qualified as advanced divers it will be easier to dive abroad without having to pay for extra tuition.

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  3. I have a niece who is mad keen on diving. Don't think she's done anything in Scotland though. Lucky thing did all her training in Vietnam and Barbados courtesy of a dad who works all over the world.

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  4. That's an amazing achievement. You go girl!!

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  5. As I will never do anything as adventuress, [can't get off sofa today :-(( ] please have your next dive for me!!!!xxx

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  6. Well done on your award, well deserved this time of year!!

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