DIR Divers
#1
Posted 28 August 2006 - 02:43 PM
"For the diligent diver, closed circuit rebreathers are actually safer than open circuit scuba." Tom Mount
#2
Posted 28 August 2006 - 02:46 PM
You don't have a "haven't learned, not interested in learning and wouldn't use it!"
I'm perfectly happy with my PADI training and being a warm water wus of a resort diver!
#3
Posted 28 August 2006 - 02:49 PM
I am not anywhere in your poll.
You don't have a "haven't learned, not interested in learning and wouldn't use it!"
I'm perfectly happy with my PADI training and being a warm water wus of a resort diver!
How do you know what you don't know until you know? If someone hasn't even learned what something is, how do you know that it is not for you?
"For the diligent diver, closed circuit rebreathers are actually safer than open circuit scuba." Tom Mount
#4
Posted 28 August 2006 - 02:58 PM
How about haven't done the training but have still learned about it and use some of it.
#5
Posted 28 August 2006 - 03:27 PM
"For the diligent diver, closed circuit rebreathers are actually safer than open circuit scuba." Tom Mount
#6
Posted 28 August 2006 - 04:25 PM
I haven't learned about it, but I AM interested in learning about it
#7
Posted 28 August 2006 - 05:16 PM
Both suggestions are now added.
It still doesn't cover me. I don't intend to take any DIR classes. I have learned about it and use some of it but don't intend to take any DIR classes. This is a big category in the general public.
#8
Posted 28 August 2006 - 05:40 PM
By all that is wet, I do hereby swear, (politely), and attest, upon pain of never diving again, (real or imagined), that I understand and affirm, that I agree to the above.
_________________________________________(log in name signature)
Signed and Dated
#9
Posted 28 August 2006 - 07:43 PM
Both suggestions are now added.
It still doesn't cover me. I don't intend to take any DIR classes. I have learned about it and use some of it but don't intend to take any DIR classes. This is a big category in the general public.
"I haven't done the training but have still learned about it and use some of it."
"For the diligent diver, closed circuit rebreathers are actually safer than open circuit scuba." Tom Mount
#10
Posted 29 August 2006 - 07:25 AM
I'm sure there are some things I could take away from a class like that, but I don't like the mentality they have (at least the divers in my area have). They are of the mind set- You don't dive our way you have no business diving at all.
#11
Posted 29 August 2006 - 09:32 AM
#12
Posted 29 August 2006 - 09:41 AM
I would love to learn it!! But not from some zealot who tells me I HAVE to do it their way or I'm gonna die....
I'm sure there are some things I could take away from a class like that, but I don't like the mentality they have (at least the divers in my area have). They are of the mind set- You don't dive our way you have no business diving at all.
Actually, my understanding is that the "zealot issue" is more of a factor with a few vocal students coming out with that mindset than the instructors presenting the course that way.
I dive with a few DIR types around here and have no problem with them. There are others at the quarry that I avoid like the plague.
The reason that my gear (aside from some issues like having a deco bottle on the right side when I dive two deco gases and having a quick disconnect on my left shoulder of my harness) looks close to DIR at times is that they have gathered good ideas and simply wrote them up as a system and named it. I took some of this from my nomoxic instructor, who dives caves when he doesn't dive deep wrecks and some from the DIR types that I dive with on occassion. Keep in mind that all DIR really consists of is concepts from cave divers that have been collated and given a name.
This goes under the category of a class that I might have taken, but I am likely going into CCR next and that is definitely not DIR . I might take it one day and simply not worry about the provisional pass as I have no desire to take any DIR course above DIRf. I already have technical certs through another agency and they cost me a money and time. I don't care to repeat them.
The clinics that we had going where perfect for me. No cards were involved. The exchange of infomation was priceless though.
#13
Posted 29 August 2006 - 03:11 PM
I have never went up to another diver and said his gear was all jacked up and the configuration was wrong; conversely, I’ve had numerous divers come up to me on a boat defending their gear set up right off the bat.
My main and underlying rule is “Never dive with an unsafe diver.” Will I dive a recreational profile with someone in a recreation BC—sure, if they follow rule number 1; will I dive a technical dive with a deco obligation with that same person—probably not. But then I plan those dives with a dedicated buddy, who dives DIR and shares my beliefs
#14
Posted 29 August 2006 - 03:58 PM
#15
Posted 29 August 2006 - 10:42 PM
.Unfortunately the few "zealots" you mentioned gave DIR a bad rep early on. And now when most people here the term or see a DIR diver on the boat they automatically get the wrong impression.
I have never went up to another diver and said his gear was all jacked up and the configuration was wrong; conversely, I’ve had numerous divers come up to me on a boat defending their gear set up right off the bat.
My main and underlying rule is “Never dive with an unsafe diver.” Will I dive a recreational profile with someone in a recreation BC—sure, if they follow rule number 1; will I dive a technical dive with a deco obligation with that same person—probably not. But then I plan those dives with a dedicated buddy, who dives DIR and shares my beliefs
Vinny,
I know that you are one of the open-minded types that I like to dive with and would like to dive with again. If you saw some of the people at the local quarry, you would know the types that I avoid.
That was my point. I can't give you a percentage, but I will say that the vast majority of the DIR types that I spend time around are open-minded and cool. The ones that aren't wouldn't dive with me and that is fine because I don't dive with people that I can't have fun with . Unsafe divers are a different story as I know very few of them. I dive with them until I find out that they are unsafe .
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users