Billyo
Well-Known Member
Ah sorry thought this would be a year round thing. I spent a while diving in Oban, mid winter can be a fairly unpleasant experience!
I have a miniB system: probably the salesman at the boat show saw a mug (me) coming. But I did do a PADI course for their minimum qualification not really because I respect paper but because I thought that I might as well get some practice.
I think having the dive kit on board is potentially useful, certainly for inspecting moorings. 10m is about the limit I'd like for the miniB system, or for solo diving come to that. Cost about £600 new (but for that price I got the fancier version with dual DVs etc).
Course cost iirc about £400 but doubtless you might find cheaper.
There is consensus that BSAC is better than PADI. Well, it is much better I believe in the thoroughness and level of its training, but on the other hand (a) you probablly won't need that for your mooring inspections so don't spend the months in cold and dark gravel pits doing the training, and (b) BSAC is almost completely unknown abroad. Unless and until BSAC start to get their quals onto lists, let alone recognised, in other countries you're better off with a PADI qual imho. I say this with some experience: my sailing partner is a BSAC 'dive leader' and had dived hundreds of times all over the world, is nitrox trained etc. I've dived a handful of times and have PADI 'open-water' (the lowest qual). Yet it's me that has to present a certificate if we want to get a bottle filled or go diving when abroad. BSAC gets 'que?' and a shrug. Sad but true (BSAC members on here please do something about this! Write to the bufties in charge and demand an international publicity drive. It's just so British to be smug about how our system is better while meantime foreigners beat us in the real world despite an obviously inferior system.)
You might look at the RNLI stats for an indicator of how many 'failed divers' they recover from our waters each year.
But you'd need to look at what sort of diving they were doing. A high proportion of those getting into trouble are involved in deep, technical diving and/or a long way from shore.
Being in 10m of water is pretty safe if you have taken on board the basic training and use some common sense.
I'd suggest getting a try dive at a PADI centre as a good starting point. I did this, followed by a 5 day course, which I really enjoyed. It cost a few quid but paid for itself with a few hull cleans.
lw395 you obviously have no idea what you are talking about. to suggest that most accidents involve deep technical dives or off shore is totally ill informed. There are a number of incidents involving inshore sites look up "Vobster" for a start.
Suggesting that shallow diving is "Pretty Safe" is typical of someone with little dive experience.