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Moderator Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Moderator) |
Since I'll be moving to the Bahamas next year, I've been thinking of getting SCUBA certified while there. I've always been interested, but one thing has often held me back. How good of a swimmer do you need to be?
I can swim, but I'm not a great swimmer. It would seem to me that underwater things would be so much different it wouldn't matter, but maybe there are certain requirements to be certified? |
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Travel Deity (Moderator) |
You just need to be able to float.
Well, actually, I guess you won't be wearing a wetsuit with in that warm Caribbean water, so you'll have to kick around a bit. But keep in mind you'll be wearing giant fins. You'll be fine. BTW, is this an admission that you can't swim? |
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Moderator Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Moderator) |
I can get in the water and propel myself about a bit. I think it is something like swimming. Fortunately, I'll have two years in Nassau to perfect my form.
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Ectomorphic Hegemony |
So, you can't swim and you're afraid of raccoons. Don't tell the raccoons, they may launch a nautical attack while you're scuba diving!
I think you're fine with the propelling yourself around bit. It seems the hardest part for non swimmers is that they frequently freak out about putting their head under water- kind of a necessity for scuba. So the question is: is it that you can't swim or are you afraid of the water? Its rhetorical, we don't need to know more of your phobias, but think about it. Either way Nassau should be a great place to perfect swimming and scuba. I just don't understand how people make it to adulthood without really being able to swim. Swimming is the bestest! --------------------------------------- I don't want to be fearless, I want to be brave. |
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Street Food Connoisseur |
It is true that having a pair of fin hanging off your feet means it is easier to propel yourself. I see a few issues here.
From my experience dive instructors require that their students are able to swim a certain distance before they will teach them about scuba. It sort of makes sense because if you happen to have been in a situation where you have to swim on the surface to get back to your boat and / or had to shed all you gear then it is nice to be able to swim. Even if you have no intention of doing anything like wreck or cave diving (where gear shedding is more common), once you have that first certificate - instructors tend not to ask if you can actually swim. I suppose what I am trying to say is that your first scuba course is the platform from which you can go on to do other courses. If something as basic as the ability to swim is missing here then it is probably not a good idea to go into deep water - with or without devices. In my humble opinion it is worth spending a few weeks improving yur swimminf before you go for the scuba course. More than once I have gotten myself lost underwater, only to surface and just be able to make out the boat on the horizon. In that situation there is buckleys that anyone on the boat will be able to see you so you gotta ba able to pedal hard! |
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Moderator Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Moderator) |
Wait...you have to go under water for scuba? What's that thing where the half naked women box each other? That's what I wanted to do...
I can swim. I'm just not a great swimmer. I guess I'll have plenty of time to practice. Mim -- thanks for the advice. By the way, I have no idea what "buckleys" means. Crazy Australians... |
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Lost in Place |
You're thinking of Tennis Instructors are supposed to make sure you can swim before letting you go through the certification course. That's probably not going to be an issue for you. The only problem you might have is not being completely comfortable in the water like Callilucy said. Doggy paddling around a pool on vacation is a lot different then taking your mask off 20 feet under water and having to put it back on and clear it without freaking out and bolting for the surface. Just make sure you find an instructor that will let you take some extra time in the pool to practice the basic skills. ---------- "Friends, Family, Religion... These are the three demons you must slay in order to succeed in business" C.M. Burns |
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Vagabonder |
When I got certified you had to be able to swim 200 meters without stopping. There was no time limit, but you had to keep going. It is really just a test to see that you are relatively comfortable in the open water.
When you're diving and something goes wrong, it won't be because you can't swim, and being able to swim won't save you. You'll have a BCD on, so you can just float until the boat comes to get you. Unless of course the boat doesn't come. Then you're like a floating lunch box for all the big fishies with sharp teeth. _______________________ "Neato Burrito." |
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Evil Kumqwat |
In theory, I think PADI requires you to swim 500 meters in open water. In practice, this is the requirement that tends to be overlooked most often. Dive shops don't have much incentive to fail someone on the first day of the class, and 500 meters is notoriously hard to figure in open water. It often looks more like 100-200.
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Knows What a Schengen Visa Is |
I think you might really want to take swimming lessons.
I'm sure you would be fine diving without being able to swim very well, but I've been diving lots of times where I've been miles away from the boat. If you came up with very little air, so not much to fill your jacket you'd be on the surface having to rely on your limited swimming ability. Or if you had to dump your gear for whatever reason, you'd be on the surface again without any help floating and the sea can get very rough. Swimming lessons would be a good idea I would have thought |
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Street Food Connoisseur |
Buckleys = no chance BTW - Enjoy the Bahamas - lucky bugger!! From your Crazy Australian |
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