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#1
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![]() The wife and I have booked tickets to Japan in March and we are planning to do some diving in Okinawa.
Since we are only planning to have 5 days on location, we would like to get certified locally for Open Water so we don't have to waste time there and can do some diving right away. I don't have any previous diving experience except snorkeling years ago, and wife is even less water-worthy than me. We did consider just snorkeling at Japan but it seems that the experience will be much better if we are diving. (yes/no?) The initial investment is quite expensive so cost is certainly a factor. Anyway, does anyone have recommendations for scuba schools in the GVRD area? And while we're at it, any good pointers regarding diving/scuba/learning in general for a newbie? Thanks! |
#2
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![]() I don't know much abut the reefs in Japan, but I am SO jealous!!!
![]() Around here it's about $300 for the certification and you have some pool dives, some class time, and then you have to go to open water (a lake) and do the "Completion". When you do the completion you need to own your own mask, snorkel, and fins (about $200-300 for a decent scuba-worthy set). Here the lakes are freakin cold, so you also have to own wet suit gloves and boots (another $100). The rental for the gear for the completion (wet suit hood, 2 pc wet suit, tanks, BCD, weights, etc) is another $200. I just did the Advanced Open Water a couple weeks ago. The deep dive we went to 86 feet (we're at elevation here, so it's an altitude dive and considered deeper), and it was 13C. Froze me arse off. I saw some big Lake Trout in the night dive too. ![]() |
#3
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![]() It's not like you won't be seeing anything getting your open water overseas.
Did my classroom and pool work here then open water in the Philippines. Did the skills checks then swam around the reef, same on second dive.
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my tank |
#4
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![]() I was certified at The Edge Diving in North Van, but it has changed ownership a couple of times and is operating under Sea to Sky Scuba. I'm not sure what it's like now as far as courses. Generally your experience will depend on the instructor(s) you end up with. If you can get into a smaller class, the better you off you are. Getting a little more personalized attention is not a bad thing. Karen and Otto who trained me and my wife are still as Sea to Sky and they were awesome.
The cost is a factor and it's something that if you aren't going to commit to diving locally afterwards, don't buy a lot of gear. Stick with a proper fitting mask. There is nothing more frustrating than having your mask leak constantly on a dive. All your other gear is easily rented and most shops keep it in great shape. If you are planning on diving a great deal, especially if you travel, consider your own regs. That's your lifeline underwater and you want to ensure it's in proper working order and has been serviced. Other than that, the only thing I can say is to relax. You don't need to swim marathons and you'll miss a lot of small or interesting things. In Hawaii in January, if I had kept up with the dive guide I would have missed an epic battle between an octopus and a moray eel, who won. |
#5
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![]() Kidding aside, the place we're planning to go is Zamami, an hour's boat ride from Naha, Okinawa. Has anyone dived there or around there? Thank you everyone for your suggestions and advice! |
#6
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![]() I buy lots online (don't tell OPD
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#7
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![]() Quote:
And I too am all about helping the local dive shops. But the reality is, they have ridiculously high margins on their products because they specialize. I've purchased used and new from every dive shop in the Vancouver area. I've done my part. ;D |
#8
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![]() I'm all for supporting the local dive shops and they got a good chunk of my money for the courses (and will get more) and will also get my money for service and air fills etc. But I'm on a single dad budget and can't afford to buy a bunch of new gear at full Canadian retail prices. So I save where I can buying online or getting deals on used gear from other divers so I can enjoy an activity that I love.
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#9
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#10
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![]() Closest to you would be Dive and Sea Sports. if you want to dive locally as well (I highly recommend it as we have some amazing life and diversity in our waters too) then I would add on the drysuit certification. The costs are actually more, about $500 to get your open water cert and another $140 or so for the drysuit cert I think? But check with the shop. I did mine with Ocean Pro in South Surrey and they had a Groupon so it saved me $150.
The cool thing about learning in cold water is that it is more equipment intense etc so when you do go dive in the tropics you will find it much easier. |
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