Tuesday, 27 November 2007

Instructor Foundation Course

I've recently done the Instructor Foundation Course (IFC) course in Pimlico.
The course was made up of classroom lessons and practical sessions in the swimming pool. First off we were asked to imagine the perfect instructor (i.e. someone we looked up to during our own training). The conclusion was that there is not a complete overlap between good diving skills and good teaching skills. The aim for the rest of the time was therefore to draw out the good instructing skills: patience, empathy, etc.

The classroom sessions taught about HOW to teach and HOW we learn. All interesting stuff. The main points were that we take in most information visually and therefore lessons should try to emphasise visual learning by using colourful visual age and with hands on props. After all - SCUBA diving is a practical sport.

The practical side of things involved being taught a couple of example practical lessons in the pool. Emphasis was placed on breaking skills down into small units that get repeated until they stick. This makes perfect sense to me- although I'm still baffled by people who can't clear a mask in the pool.

On the second day we were expected to teach a 10 minute theory lesson and a 20 minute practical lesson. I really enjoyed this part and it really brought home to us what skills we were expected to learn on the IFC - breaking down skills to small parts and checking for knowledge transfer during the theory lesson.

Now I will remember my acronyms STEP, PAVE, SEEDS, REAP, 3Ps, BAR etc. and hopefully get some practice teaching before going further and doing my open water instructor course and then the exams to become a Nationally Qualified Instructor!

Thursday, 27 September 2007

The City of Waterford

I've just returned from a fantastic day's diving out of Brighton. The timing was not too pleasant, with ropes off at 7.30am however. To make that bearable we went down there the night before and camped nearby, only having to get up at 6am rather than 4.30am. When we arrived at Brighton marina it was already fairly busy with a group of Polish people getting ready to go on a fishing expedition and another dive boat already loading up.

The slack on our first dive, the City of Waterford, was at 8.30am and it was about an hour away so I had a pleasant snooze after a cup of tea and sorting out my kit. I was woken at 10 past eight and urged to get my dry suit on. This I duly did and we entered the water right on time. The skipper had put the shot on the stern of the wreck. The highest point at about 26m. The sandy bottom was at about 35m but we were keen to get a decent amount of time on the wreck, and not do any deco (we were both diving single 12s). We descended fairly quickly down the shot and found ourselves greeted by a massive shoal of dab that almost obscured the wreck itself - stunning. I had already studied the wreck drawings in the Dive magazine guide (link) and new that most of the interesting stuff was near the bows so we headed slowly that way taking in the sights as we went.

Almost every surface seemed to be covered with tompot blennies of various sizes. I had previously been told that some of them like to be strokes (at least they don't scarper when you reach out to them). I tried this on several of them with the usual result of them running for cover. Then I came across one which didn't! It just sat there and let me stroke its back! Great fun!.

We soon reached what is apparently the most appealing feature of the wreck, the toilet. Isn't it strange how amusing toilets at depth are? We proceeded onwards past the cranes and reached the foreword hold. This was very easy to penetrate and contained an enormous lobster. We came back out of the hold and carried on, finding a hatch and steps going down into the black. I started to descend into the unknown when an enormous elongate fish swam across my torch beam. I stopped. Then another one did the same thing. I was very narked at this point (my buddy and I had already been talking to fish - "ooh, aren't you a pretty fish... hello etc."). And I got the fear. They were probably congers, but not knowing how big the area was down there, and whether I'd be able to turn around easily, I decided to back out. Instead, we went up and over the side catching great views of a large conger in a pipe as we did so. The sides of the bows are very intact, and covered with soft coral like dead man's fingers. It was fantastic to hover there looking down on the anchors (still in their hawsers) amongst the coral and large shoals of dab. We spent about 5 minutes looking in the holes in the side of the bows and observing our diving compadres. Time was drawing close to ascend so we headed back onto the deck and spent some time looking at the fittings and the two massive cranes. Then with 3 minutes till deco I decided it was time to blob off. My buddy just popped into deco but we ascended slowly and by the time we were at 6m the computer had changed it's mind. The 3-minute safety stop passed quickly with a game of scissors paper stone and then we were back on the boat via the lift with a cup of tea and some biscuits waiting for me. This was a pleasure as my previous 20 or so dives had been on ribs: no lift, no tea! All in all, this was an amazing dive - a huge profusion of life, several large congers, lobsters, coral and an interesting and fairly intact wreck. It ranks as one of the best I've done in the UK.

Monday, 27 August 2007

Pic of the day: Tom-pot Blennie, Weymouth


Tom-pot Blennie, Weymouth, originally uploaded by fractl.

Every so often I'm going to post a "pic of the day" featuring a diving related photo. Now, I don't have an underwater camera myself so I'm going to be taking them from Flickr (a great resource for this sort of thing). I'm in the market for a camera though and I'll write more about this later.

Today's photo is a beautiful tompot blennie (click on the photo for credits). They are my favourite UK fish and its always wonderful to see them - usually hiding in little nooks and crannies like this one. When I showed a picture of one to my friend she didn't believe that it could be from the UK because it was so "cute and colourful". Superb!

Welcome to the Bubble Under blog.

Hi there, this is the first post of the Bubble Under blog. I intend to use it as a place to talk about scuba diving matters and document my dives. I'd consider myself an intermediate diver. I've got about 70 dives logged so far in a mixture of conditions - tropical and UK waters.
My training was initially PADI, with whom I did the Open Water and then Advanced Open Water courses. I then lived with a BSAC girl who got me to join her club and so I crossed over to "Ocean Diver" and have recently finished "Sports Diver". I've really got the bug now so I'm carrying on with my training and am doing the "Dive Leader" training at the moment.
I'm also considering doing the "Instructor Foundation Course" so I can "give something back" to the club but it's quite expensive (would the money be better spent on going diving I wonder?). We'll see...

Thanks for reading - I'll try and update the blog as frequently as I can when I have something interesting to say.