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Rock Climbing Scuba Diving

The PADI Open Water Diver Course

The following is a semi-detailed account of the PADI Open Water Diver course I took last weekend. Anyone considering taking the course, or just curious about diving, may find it useful.

The Open Water Diver course offered by PADI is an entry-level course designed for people who are not familiar with diving. The course provides you with the basic knowledge of skills, equipment, and theory to safely dive to a depth of about 18 meters (60 ft).

Pre-class homework

After signing up for the course, I was given a packet containing the Open Water Diver Manual, the Recreational Dive Planner (RDP), a diver log book, and various other fliers and informational material. I was told I had to read all five chapters in the book and complete all five knowledge reviews before coming into class.

The book material was interesting and covered a wide range of topics, including scuba equipment and usage, the effects of changing air pressure on the human body, and even things like the ocean tides and types of waves. While the book covered more than I expected and left me feeling a bit overwhelmed by all the information, once I understood the concepts and actually got in the water to use the equipment, everything made perfect sense.

Class – Chapter Quizzes and Final Exam

The first four hours of the class consisted of our instructor, Beth, taking turns asking us to read our answers from the knowledge reviews. She then explained any answers we got wrong and made sure we understood the answers. We then took short 10-15 question quizzes on each chapter as we finished reviewing the knowledge reviews. Once again, Beth explained to us any answers we got wrong. The whole quiz process was very informal.

After reviewing and taking multiple-choice quizzes on all five chapters, we took a final exam (also multiple-choice). The final exam was 50 questions, 25% of which consisted of dive table problems.

The dive tables were probably the most difficult part of the coursework, but once you understand how to use them they’re really quite simple. A separate book that came with the RDP explained how to use the dive tables. (The dive tables basically let you figure out how long you can stay at a particular depth underwater and how much time you need to wait before a second or third dive. The longer you’re underwater, the more nitrogen makes its way into your blood. Eventually the nitrogen becomes dangerous to the human body. The dive tables help you avoid the danger by planning your dives within safe limits.)

Once the final exam was done, Beth had me find a BCD and a wetsuit that fit (BCD stands for Buoyancy Control Device; it’s usually a vest that holds the scuba tank and contains inflatable pockets to control your buoyancy in the water). She then had me put all the gear and two scuba tanks in my truck and gave me directions to the pool.

Pool time – Finally in the water!

When I arrived at the pool, Beth told me it was just me and her; the other student said she wasn’t feeling well (she also didn’t do so well on the final exam; she had trouble with the dive tables). After unloading the gear and changing into my bathing suit, I had to do an 8-lap swim in the pool without touching the sides or the bottom, followed by 10 minutes of treading water on the deep end. These tests are required as part of the course and are done to prove fitness and comfort level in the water. You’re allowed as much rest as you need in between the two tests.

Next came the fun part. I learned how to assemble the scuba gear: attaching the scuba tank to the BCD, attaching the first stage of the regulator to the tank, connecting the BCD inflator hose, and finally turning on the air and checking the Submersible Pressure Gauge (SPG). As required by the course, I had to assemble and disassemble the scuba gear a total of five times before the course was over.

The next four hours consisted of various activities of increasing difficulty. I learned how to flood and then clear my mask underwater; how to breathe using an alternate air source; how to make a Controlled Emergency Swimming Ascent (CESA); how to remove the gear under and above water; different methods of entering the water wearing scuba gear; and various other techniques and exercises.

By the end of the night, I was very comfortable with the scuba gear. The diving manual had given me the impression that the equipment was complicated, but once I had used it and seen the purpose of each piece, the equipment was really easy to understand and use.

Normally the pool work would have been spread out over two days, but because it was just me and the instructor, everything went really fast (four hours vs eleven hours!).

Swimming in Real Water

While the confined water dives (in the pool) are an important part of the course, I also need to complete a total of four open water dives to actually get my Open Water Diver certification. The open water dive locations are chosen by the instructor and can be done on a lake or in the ocean.

Unfortunately, I took this course late in the season and winter is fast approaching. This means I will most likely have to do my open water dives next spring. From what the instructor told me, I will basically be doing the same exercises I did in the pool. Each of the four dives must last a minimum of 20 minutes and will most likely be at a depth of 20-30ft.

Taking my First Breath Underwater

One of my 2009 resolutions was to become a certified scuba diver. At the time of writing my resolutions, I didn’t even know what “certified scuba diver” meant; I just knew that scuba diving was something I’ve always wanted to do.

A few months ago I realized it was getting late in the year and time was running out, so I visited Northeast Scuba, a local dive shop in Chelmsford, MA, and spoke to the guy behind the counter. He explained the Open Water Diver certification offered by PADI allows a diver to use scuba equipment down to 60 feet and that it’s a very popular entry to all other diving certifications offered by PADI, such as Rescue Diver, Deep Diver, Wreck Diver, and Advanced Open Water Diver.

After signing up for the course, I was required to complete homework before coming into the class. There were five chapters in the Open Water Diver manual, each with a knowledge review at the end. After reading the first chapter and completing the first knowledge review, I procrastinated until a day before the class was scheduled and spent eight hours straight (until three in the morning) reading the remaining chapters and completing all the knowledge reviews (not recommended!).

The Open Water Diver manual contained lots of interesting stuff: everything from scuba equipment, to dangers of pressure underwater, to ocean currents and wave types. It did a great job explaining topics that would’ve otherwise been difficult to understand.

The day before I was scheduled to take the class, I sprained my ankle bad enough that I had to reschedule the class. A few days before the rescheduled class, I got a call saying the instructor had an emergency and that the class had to be rescheduled again.

Finally, this past weekend the stars aligned and I took the class. The class took place in the back room of the dive shop and was very small: only myself and another student (an accountant in her mid to late 40s). The quizzes and final exam were easy, but time consuming.

After the classwork, I loaded up my rented scuba gear and two scuba tanks, went on a one hour lunch, and drove to the pool, which was located in a fitness center in Boxboro, MA, about 20 minutes away. When I arrived, I learned that the other student wasn’t coming (she didn’t feel well and had trouble with the dive tables on the final exam), so it was just me an the instructor.

My first breath underwater was pretty much what I had expected. What I had not expected, however, is what came next. After being under for longer than I could hold my breath, I literally felt as though I had entered a new world! When you’re in scuba gear, everything happens in slow motion underwater. Once you obtain neutral buoyancy there is very little affect from gravity; you’re basically weightless. It’s hard to explain how this affects the way you perceive your environment and I think it’s something you have to experience first-hand to really appreciate.

I had so much fun going through all the different diving exercises and learning about all the scuba gear, including how to assemble and disassemble everything. I practiced things like flooding and clearing my mask underwater, various emergency ascents, finding neutral buoyancy, and various methods of entering the water (one big leap, going in backwards off a boat, entering from the shore).

With all my pool work done, I now just need to do four open water dives (in a lake or ocean) to become a certified Open Water Diver. Since it’s so late in the season, there’s a good chance I’ll have to wait until next spring to complete the four open water dives, but once I’ve got my certification, I’m definitely going to work towards other certifications (like the Advanced Open Water Diver and Rescue Diver).

I’ve long suspected that I would love diving and I can already feel myself itching to go back under. I know the confined dives aren’t quite the same as the open water, but I expect the open water to be even more incredible.

Falling to Earth from 12,000ft

12,000ft above the Earth

One of my 2009 resolutions was to complete the Accelerated Free Fall (AFF) program which meant my first jump would’ve been solo. However, when I called Skydive New England to schedule the AFF jump, they told me the season was over and I’d have to wait until next spring. My girlfriend Jessica had already committed to jumping tandem and, although it was a little hard to accept the change in plans, I quickly got over it and decided to also jump tandem.

“For once you have tasted flight
you will walk the earth
with your eyes turned skyward,
for there you have been
and there you long to return.”

- Leonardo da Vinci

It was absolutely incredible. We jumped at 12,000 ft. Everything happened so fast and it’s still hard to believe it really happened. The staff at Skydive New England were awesome. Big Jim, the guy I jumped with, was really fun (he has completed over 6,000 jumps!) and the videographer (I forgot her name) was pretty good at getting me to make faces and talk.

I was surprised that I didn’t feel more fear as I jumped out of the plane but I have a suspicion that jumping solo will be a little different. (With tandem, you’re attached to an experienced skydiver who has had thousands of jumps and who pushes the two of you out of the plane. Going solo however, it’s your own muscles that are pushing your body out of the plane.) I’ve already started saving for the entire AFF program (25 jumps) to get my A license next spring (that will allow me to jump solo anywhere for around $20!).

The photos are awesome (click the photo at the top to see the whole album).

Rock Climbing

I spent three hours today taking the Skilled Top Rope climber course at MetroRock in Everett, an indoor rock climbing gym. I took this same class last year (and even bought a harness, climbing shoes, ATC, and carbiner) but never did anything with it because I had no one to climb with. This year I’m serious about climbing (and bouldering) even if that means making new friends. I’ve already signed up for The Rumney Tour in June.

My Foray into the World of Firearms

My only experience with firearms prior to this weekend occurred when I was twelve or thirteen years old. I remember my dad taking me to a firing range and shooting a .22 handgun, a .22 rifle, and a 9mm handgun. (I remember the 9mm being so heavy that I couldn’t even hold it up!)

Neither my dad nor myself shoot regularly, or for that matter own any firearms (he rented at the firing range) and I haven’t shot a single round in the past fourteen years. I assume we visited the range those few times when I was younger only because it was something he wanted me to try, and for that I’m grateful. The experience most likely helped with my respect and total comfort with being around guns, despite having no real knowledge or experience with them.

Growing up vegetarian, hunting was not exactly a family tradition and, at least I suspect, my mom hated (and still hates) guns enough to have never allowed one around the house anyway. The most we were allowed to have (much to the disapproval of my mom) were tiny hand pump powered BB guns — so harmless that my younger brother was able to shoot me in the butt and thigh with nothing more than an angered response from his victim.

A few hundred years ago, nearly every person living in the United States was expected to know how to use and operate a firearm. I’m someone who believes that possessing a vast array of skills and experience helps us grow as individuals, and I decided that experience with firearms was one of those must-have skills. A gun is a tool, nothing more. It can be used as a weapon, yes, just like your kitchen knife or screwdriver can be used as a weapon, but guns don’t kill people. People kill people.

I spent most of this weekend taking a National Rifle Association (NRA) course on basic handgun usage and safety, taught by Thomas Brown at the Manchester Firing Line range. The course was split into two days, the first of which was eight hours of classroom time where we watched a few videos and got comfortable dry-firing a mix of various handguns, including revolvers and semi-automatics. The second day (that was today) consisted of four hours of range time, where we fired 200-300 rounds from a variety of different handguns. We also got to shoot a 9mm rifle and a 20-gauge shotgun (that’s got quite a recoil!).

Everyone had a primary weapon that they used for shooting during most of the range time. I chose a handgun used by those in the military and many U.S. government agencies, the SIG Sauer P229, a .40 caliber semi-automatic (its got a lot more kick than a 9mm):

SIG Sauer P229

Towards the end of the class, the instructor and his assistant set up a fun competition: a timed drill. One at a time, a student would approach the bay and stand in front of his chosen handgun with the magazine loaded, but separated from the gun. The instructor would tap on the shoulder of the student to indicate the start of the timer and, as fast as possible, the student loads, racks, and decocks the gun. He then fires at two targets, steps around a corner (maintaining proper gun safety) and then tries to hit a third target with a single shot.

The first two targets were rigged so you had to shoot at a specific (hidden) area in the center to pop a balloon hidden behind the target which was holding up a piece of cardboard. When you hit the center of the target the balloon pops and the piece of cardboard being held up by the balloon drops to display a red X. You can then move to the second target. After the second target has been hit in the same manner as the first, you need to step around a corner and shoot a third plain target with a single shot.

The winner of this timed competition (the lowest time) won a free t-shirt. Most of the eighteen students completed the run in 25+ seconds. The second and third fastest times were 12 and 18 seconds. I completed my run in 9.25 seconds and won the t-shirt. (After this, several people came up and asked me if I was in the military. If I was in the military, why would I be in an introductory firearms class?)

New Hampshire is one of the few states in the United States where no license is needed to legally purchase and transport a handgun (however, a CCW license is needed to carry concealed, which, inside a vehicle means anywhere within reach). In Massachusetts, to purchase, posses, or transport a handgun or ammunition you must have a proper LTC license and, unlike most of the other states, it does not recognize any out-of-state firearm licenses. The firearm laws in Massachusetts are very strict, compared to neighboring New Hampshire (or Vermont, which has virtually no gun laws!).

I had lots of fun learning and firing various firearms. I plan to attend more advanced classes at MFL in the coming months and to practice somewhat regularly at the firing range. If you’re in the area, I highly recommend you give it a shot (pun intended). And if you’re curious but hesitant and uncomfortable, I’d be happy to show you around the range where we can fire a few rounds (you don’t need to be an NH resident, and no permit/license is necessary to shoot on the range).

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