Scuba Diving Classes

Many scuba diving classes will try to teach you confidence, a rudimentary knowledge of your equipment, and some quick and easy survival tips that will give you a fighting chance of making it back to the boat alive. Perhaps the failure of so many scuba diving lessons to delve deeper and teach more aspiring divers how to rescue themselves and others rather than just knowing the basics has to do with the fact that most newbies want to hit the open water quickly rather than spend even one more lesson in the deep end of the instructor’s pool. The resulting scuba diving class is short, to the point, highly condensed, and sadly lacking in the meat and potatoes of the diving reality. Interestingly, most divers will never know what they are missing until either they are caught in a mishap, see someone else in distress during a dive, or learn about the military New York scuba diving classes. The latter are no cheap scuba diving lessons – or even the highly questionable online scuba diving lessons – but instead they are the kind of scuba diving classes advanced divers will gladly attend to hone their skills.

Here are some of the down and dirty tricks you could pick up in these scuba diving classes:
• Train yourself to drop your weight belt and any additional weights you are carrying. When you are in distress and need to get to the surface quickly, you will get there faster without the weight – obviously – but in a life and death emergency you most likely will not remember this step. Even though it is mentioned in passing during a scuba diving lesson, the only way to truly remember to do it is to practice it each and every time that you come back up. You will want to place the belt and weights on something, of course, but more than that you want to create the awareness that you are carrying them and the awareness that you need to rid yourself of them.
• It is rare to find a free scuba diving lesson that will cover the emergency gear needed during a dive. Yet any advanced scuba diving lesson in survival will tell you that you need to carry with you knives, signaling implements that will alert those in the boat should you break the surface after drifting, and a strong light source that will cut through underwater murkiness. This is especially important if you get entangled and need to figures out where you are caught. Thrashing around wildly will make matters worse!
• Rarely will scuba diving classes address the need for a pony bottle, but most advanced scuba diving classes will harp on this point over and over again; it might seem redundant, but if you have that extra five minutes of air that can help you to calmly extricate yourself from a bad situation and rise to the surface from the deep, a bit of extra gear is well worth the slight inconvenience!

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