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learning to dive
Hey, I want to learn how to dive for my vacation this year. How does this look? Any other suggestions or recommendations?
http://www.contiki.com/Tour.asp?TourID=24 |
I would reccomend taking the dive course localy or at least the classroom/pool part.
That way when you are on your holiday you are not trying to do a bunch of learning you can just concentrate on diving and having fun. This is what I did and it was great, I took all the classroom/pool sessions here and did my open water dives in Jamaica :) This made for a realy nice holiday. Joel |
looks pretty cool. I got certified here at Kochers Dive Locker at 4th and McDonald. They were awsome. I really suggest getting certified here first so that you can do better dives when on vacation. If you learn to dive here( and the diving here is awsome) you will be very qualified for warm water diving, because cold water diving is a differnt animal.
Joel |
I would also recommend taking your classes locally.. once you do that ytou can get certified (PADI) where ever you want. I have been certified now for 10 years (I did my open water in Waterton National Park <grin>)
My wife took all her classes here (Calgary) and when we were in Jamaica last year did her open water dives and got certified there. Its much cooler having your PADI Dive card show where you were certified.. Jim |
Sounds like a plan. I'll take classes here before going to dive there. What do I look for when picking a diving school locally?
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The guys at Kochers Dive Locker on 4th were GREAT! (736.2681) ask for Josh..good guy, he can set you up.(owners son) Tell him I sent you, maybe I'll get some good discounts.lol.
Joel |
Something else to keep in mind after you are certified, you have some of the best diving in the world in your back yard. :biggrin:
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Is it just me or does the water around here seem a bit on the murky side? I think I'd like to dive in warm clear water. :lol:
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If only I knew how to swim :(
Cheers, Vic [veng68] |
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Steve |
Off Hornby Island you can dive to a spot where you can (apparently) sometimes see six-gill sharks. This (to me) is interesting because it's apparently the only spot where they're found in water as shallow as that and it's the only spot in the world where they come into non-tropical waters or something like that.
Sam, I looked at the Contiki site, it looks like the learn-to-dive trip will be the Great Barrier Reef? That's probably worth it. Last time I made it down to GBR was 2001 and I can't wait to go again. Truly magnificent stuff. Only drawback to GBR is that you have to boat it out to the reef, along most places of the shoreline it's solidly offshore (e.g., an hour's boat ride) (there are parts where the reef touches the coastline but those places are closely guarded secrets, plus very inaccessible and treacherous accesses usually). As opposed to some good dive destinations (Cozumel, Fiji, Carribean) where you can walk offshore and see reef. But the reef is probaby one of the most amazing sites you'll see in a lifetime, so it's totally worth it. Man, I hope I can go back there soon. (Sigh....... :exclaim: ) |
samw i just picked up the new prodiver mag and it has a hole section on great vacation dive spots in the world.
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It's true, IMO, Canada's west coast some of the best diving in the world. The soft corals, anemones and sponges are incredible. To see the giant Pacific octopus of have the wolf eels greet you and come out to play is beyond belief. Yes the water is cold and yes it can be murky but the abundance of live in the nutrient rich water makes it all worthwhile. You have to see it to believe it. |
Definitly dive here!! Even something as basic as Whytecliff park in West Van can be an incredible dive..We did our advanced there and had a seal do the whole dive right beside us..really cool considering it was night time and pitch black..Side note: the girl who died off of Campbell River a few years ago, got certified in warm waters and died on her first cold water dive here in B.C. It is a totally differnet way of diving, weighting yourself, potential problems, currents, visibility,..etc..I definitly recomend getting certified here. Diving anywhere else in the world will be a cake walk. And YES, being face to face with 6ft wolf eels and diving through massive white plume anenomes, and getting chased by 40lb breeding Ling Cod is an absolute thrill, and only experienced on our beatiful West Coast.
Joel |
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