A lot of divers, you talk about, would fall into some of the categories only because they are new divers and need time and experience to know the ropes. So I would add the judgy diver , who gets upset because a new diver dared to come on board.
@ThatCasualZach4 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 love it
@stucorbett4 жыл бұрын
That's a really good point. From what I've seen, the veterans are really understanding of novices . I once saw three clearly experienced divers forego their dive to look after an anxious couple who were basically brand new. These three were awesome. When the rest of us left for the dive, these women stayed back and were on the surface with the couple. The DM took the rest of us along the reef and back. When we got back to the boat, the novices were still doing their dive. We stayed a bit longer than expected and none of us had a problem with that. The novices came back and were ecstatic. A bit of patience and understanding made all the difference in the world.
@jamesbuckle60774 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. Every boat I've been on has been nice and chilled and everyone got on just fine with the odd newbie mistake. It kinda puts me off going to think some folks are as judgy and miserable as depicted here. 😂
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely true, Lidia! Thanks for commenting.
@jeremymcdonald69614 жыл бұрын
From personal experience, I have been shunned by a more experienced diver because I was new. I ended up getting buddied with two other guys who were pretty cool
@dh56454 жыл бұрын
🗣 How about the know-it-all-diver: I’ve been on 1.5 billion dives, my SAC rate is... my bottom time is... let me tell you about all my certifications... I once dove the Arctic and Antarctic in the same day... 🤪
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
True story!
@scubamarilu4 жыл бұрын
And at the end its the least experienced. 🤣🤣
@__-oq8gz4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I always roll my eyes at that. Lots of people have been doing things for a long time, and doing them poorly. Skill, awareness, etc. don't always correlate to experience.
@la5150hi-lophoto4 жыл бұрын
One woman pitched a hissy fit when I said my bottom time varies. I mean it does vary. She was twisted in the head.
@danflaherty11323 жыл бұрын
That's awesome!
@RockAvernus Жыл бұрын
Calculate an average tip through the season, adjust your price accordingly, advertise your service with "Don't tip, we pay our emplyees good wages" I'm gonna be the first one in line to use your service.
@illusionclassicrock67424 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a video created for new divers going on a charter dive for the first time. How to pack the gear, what to expect on the boat, etc.…
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Great idea! I can do this dead easy!
@MrWildapil4 жыл бұрын
@@DiversReady I just got back from a dive in Cuba. I would have loved to have seen this before I went... I saw all 14 divers in my 8 person charter... As a noob diver, I would also like to see how to best manage vacation dives
@illusionclassicrock67424 жыл бұрын
Divers Ready That’s awesome James! I’m going to be diving my first charter in about three weeks. I know it’s probably not realistic to hope you have a video put together by then, but that would sure be nice!! 😉 How to pack your gear, how to board the boat, how to store the gear, what to expect for the dive briefing, when to don the gear, entry and exit…etc. Pretty much a charter boat diving 101. I’m sure that would help not only me, but a lot of new divers!
@felixruben49554 жыл бұрын
I was very lucky on my first multi day boat dive trip to have a very experienced buddy who helped me out on how to behaive ❤️
@Findingmenno4 жыл бұрын
Love it James! One addition... Don't be the "I haven't been diving in 10 years but I don't need a refresher and now I'm a complete sh*tshow ruining everybody's trip ' diver. Just get comfortable, competent and confident first with a refresher if you've been out of the water for a while. You, your fellow guests, and your dive crew will be thankful for it!
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
True Story FindingMenno! I have one coming up on the power of the refresher...
@guillermopelaez58594 жыл бұрын
Absolutely!!! I met once a guy (old) who were pissed off for having to take the refresh after 5y without a single dive... he had and confessed always have certain apprehension (to put it mildly) for water inside the mask!!! And he was complaining about the refresh... Completely agree with you on this one. Better be prepared...
@adventureinc5174 жыл бұрын
Generally yes, but do take into account the rare former pro who got an office job 5 years ago... After countless dives as a DM on a working boat one probably won't need that refresher a few years later.
@Findingmenno4 жыл бұрын
@@adventureinc517 It is indeed not black and white, and you will have to use some personal judgement. Unfortunately experience has learned me to be cautious, as a lot of people tend to 'bend the truth' somewhat regarding their dive history. This can cause unsafe situations, or reduce the experience for other divers on the dive.
@nicolezhang53513 жыл бұрын
What I love are the older, more experienced divers forgetting that they were once new divers. Giving you that "look"...casting judgement on your relative inexperience. Believe me...I've seen and experienced it. Yes, they could pay up the cash for a charter boat, but they either are either too cheap or don't have the money. So, they go out on a boat meant for 30...and are "shocked" that there are divers with less experience than them, who do not yet dive to their standards. They don't own the oceans or the waters and diving is for everyone. As long as you dive safely and follow basic rules of diving etiquette..fuck the diving elitists who believe that the sport somehow belongs to to them....
@darrenoneill50302 жыл бұрын
100% spot .
@Dark-Star63A Жыл бұрын
Agreed... A lot of the "Old Digs" fail to even realize that their over inflated egos are actually quite repulsive, I give them open attitude back in their faces.
@nicholasmichaud59044 жыл бұрын
Loved the video. I would add "The Critic" diver to this list. "Why would you dive that brand when this brand is better." "That dive site was ok, it was nothing like this dive site on the other side of the world."
@wherecar544 жыл бұрын
As a past instructor who taught years ago I found a 1/3rd divers to be to fall in these categories and that’s too many. My greatest fear was the cocky diver who stretched his limits, and ignored all the basic safety rules they were the worst. Diving is very hard work if you’re teaching or being a Divemaster, and I always worried about those with minimal skills.
@originalkk8822 жыл бұрын
Talking about not blocking the marine head, years ago I was on a surface interval on a boat on Grand Cayman North Wall. A group of (Russian) divers decided to avoid blocking the head by doing their business off the ladder at the back of the boat. The problem was, it was a very calm day, so their output didn't move far from the boat. It attracted a lot of fish, but no-one was keen to jump in for the 2nd dive from the back of the boat, nor climb back aboard via the ladder.
@allisonbowman57244 жыл бұрын
You should make a another video suggests the ways dive professionals shouldn’t behave, your following might be able to see both sides of the coin better that way
@felixruben49554 жыл бұрын
Nr. 1: The no - briefer: „Dive briefing? Why you ask? 1st dive we go left, second dive we go right.“
@quickdry32 жыл бұрын
I understand that on a practical and immediate level, dive operators might grossly underpay their dive crew and thus they need tips - but it's a shame that bigger voices in the industry/around the industry can't be pushing towartds paying properly and having the up-front price to divers set appropriately. If I pay 80 for the dive and 20 as a tip, it's 100 all up - just charge that in the first place since it's what we're expected to cough up for the dive. Give the dive crew the dignity of not begging for scraps, and the divers the certainty of a defined price.
@daviddoyle93104 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the advice about Tipping. In Australia we dont Tip and would never Tip for something we have already paid for.
@loreseeker37834 жыл бұрын
I don't live in a country with a tipping culture, and initially had to make a mental switch as well. When diving abroad please realise wage standards can be low, and often dive guides, DMs, deck hands etc are having a very low income. That doesn't mean you have to go around passing a note to everyone that happened to be there. You'll be amazed to see the extra service you get when tipping (let's say 10% of what you paid the shop for the dive(s) if you enjoyed it. In many countries what we consider 2 beers at home is a day's income.
@PhilJonesIII4 жыл бұрын
Same for many places in Europe. If you cant make a living from what you charge/deliver then why are you in business? To suggest you get better quality from tipping means you have hoodwinked me into paying more. I have no issues paying top-dollar for quality service but tipping adds an extra tier that might cost my life.
@BenTvHowman4 жыл бұрын
Our minumum wage here is also much higher to cover the difference
@deepprey27764 жыл бұрын
Completely agree
@stunick15734 жыл бұрын
@@loreseeker3783 In the USA I can't speak for other places/countries and Florida more to the point the boats "Dive Master" is not paid. the tip jar is for the DM. It's that shitty just turned pro job that gets to secure the boat to the wreck, watch for mistakes and help out with loading un loading gear. Watch Divers Ready vlog about being a Dive Master and why it sucks.
@acemanev9644 жыл бұрын
The marathon swimming diver - diver who for what ever reason missed the whole point about the meaning of recreational diving, wants to cover 5 sq km area with one tank in less than 20 minutes... But my number 1 don't be that diver is the diver who has no space awareness and buoyancy control, always seems to crash into you or kicks you with their fins as they swim past you during the dive..
@AlexDerange4 жыл бұрын
oh man getting kicked in the face is the worst, even more when diving it could damame your breather or any gear, if it happend to me, the guy would certainly hear about it when we would be back to the surface
@leahyeahnah68663 жыл бұрын
Feel like this happens mainly with new divers who just have no spatial awareness yet. Yes it's annoying but we all start somewhere so don't explode at them maybe, just tell them nicely :)
@OceanPancake4 жыл бұрын
It's good to educate people about the etiquette, but for most of us who have had lots of experience, it's important to be open and accepting to them. Also, I have found a lot of people aren't a fan of tank bangers and rattles haha
@peakecentral4 жыл бұрын
Can't believe the diver with the tank banger didn't make an appearance James! Total PITA.
@1badsteed4 жыл бұрын
Are those frowned upon? I am assuming you mean the signaling device used on your tank.
@sameermohideen49134 жыл бұрын
1badsteed Banging for every single fish you see is annoying as hell. My view is, bang only if you see something that everyone would absolutely want to see. Or if you’re about to die.
@KyleBoise4 жыл бұрын
@@1badsteed people don't like to be troubled by your dying should you need to get their attention lol.
@guillermopelaez58594 жыл бұрын
Brillant!!! Perhaps I would add the judgy diver who gets mad with newbies... I have very seldomly seen it, especially among relatively experienced divers. In fact, is often the other way around with more experience divers helping the newbies. Great list. :)
@AlexDerange4 жыл бұрын
it's always the one with a bit of experience but want to act as pros that act like douches around newbies, to show them they are better or whatever
@lmlmd27143 жыл бұрын
"Wind and waves may tip the ship, but only you can tip the crew" - lol, love it!
@Cheakypuppy4 ай бұрын
Your tank blaster diver comment is interesting. When I was certified in the mid 80's That was what we were taught to do at the end of the dive. A quick blast, one second blast of air to blow the water out. Didn't realize it was now a "thing" lol
@speeddemon45796 ай бұрын
A tip my instructor gave me about the work shop diver part. I always carry a spare hose for my regulator, a spare inflator hose, as well as an extra o ring for both ends of my regulator hose, an extra o ring for my inflator hose, an extra o ring for my tank, and the couple of wrenches to remove and reattach the hoses to my 1st and second stage. All that fits in my small snack backpack which is about the size of a 1 gallon water jug
@antonioaguilar32574 жыл бұрын
I admit I may have been all 14 at some point 😆😆😆 but I’ve learned 😎👍
@bubblesandboats40104 жыл бұрын
We have all definitely fallen prey to at least one of these during our dive career, excellent reminder for everyone. Thank you for the entertaining video James
@JCM-rc8bv4 ай бұрын
Highly entertaining Thanks! I’ll make sure to do every one of them, next time round! You made my day ! lol 😂
@grene1955 Жыл бұрын
Amen, brother! I would add...be courteous to all. The captain and crew and the other divers. That alone would solve a lot of problems!
@jefferyschlicht59204 жыл бұрын
I love your channel I've been diving for 40 years. I have never laughed so hard as I had here. You're great! Divers ready!
@graememckay9972 Жыл бұрын
I'm a UK diver and have never seen a tip jar on any boat I've used in the UK
@dazzafett-gaming4 жыл бұрын
Great video and fantastic channel James. I certified OW in Jan so am starting out and it’s these sort of videos that are invaluable for new divers like me. The tank blast to dry your dust cap was the way I was actually taught as the correct way to do it on my OW course by the instructor! So glad I have now seen this so as to not start a bad habit before I have annoyed someone with it or It has become ingrained. Keep the great videos coming.
@michaelman83854 жыл бұрын
I remembered the very same thing when doing the OW course, though the instructor had advised about opening the valve just about you hear the hiss and place the dust cap right next to the tank outlet. Wonder if it's gonna help.
@tonyvelasquez67762 жыл бұрын
@@michaelman8385 sleepy Joe makes my stink hole leak brown sludge!
@misplacedmemories229 ай бұрын
The tank blaster one got me called out because the dive shop I trained with told me that’s what I am supposed to do. I was not aware that I wasn’t. So thank you for informing me on this.
@momoniji6439 Жыл бұрын
Lifting a couple tanks and cleaning seems very hard and deserves tips. Not like construction workers who work 8 hour shifts in the blaring sun non stop lifting all day hammering away is hard work or anything, they don't deserve any tips. But sure lets tip the person that walks the food a chef made out to you because that's so difficult, lets tip the crew that helped me lift my single tank.
@lipedivers414 жыл бұрын
You missed the im a Dive pro on holiday and can do anything i like diver. The ones that ignore the briefing of the Crew and disappear on the dive causing the guide/DM to panic and start the missing diver protocol .
@rontourage73844 жыл бұрын
I agree with pretty much everything you’ve stated--However!!! 14. Don’t be a money hungry Capn and over pack the boat 13. It’s 2020, have a better plumbing system on a boat-yes, I understood your point about doing the business before you get on the boat and I practice that method quite well, lol! 12. Don’t be an ass to the customer as a dive employee 11. Don’t be a crabby ass capn to your guests 10. Cancel the dive if it’s clearly to rough, unlike some boats I have been signed up with at 7-8 foot swells and have never been asked if I would like to stay on land and receive a credit for another day. It’s not like they will turn around when you are on the boat. 9. Don’t tease us by saying we are going to a particular wreck and only do drift dives. (Yes, I understand currents can change things). I am referring to the company who likes to save gas. 8. Be on time or early they say,....do you know how many times we have left late just sitting there? Lots. And, I am not the person who is never late. 7. I understand the tip thing, but that’s really not the guests responsibility to pay the crew if they didn’t understand the rules, especially when there is no clear sign of a tip jar. The company should pay the crew imo. And, the crew are in such a hurry that they disappear so fast you don’t have a chance of finding them to tip them. 6. Bubble watchers should be treated a little better especially when they pay just as much as the diver. Give them a bad experience and they won’t come back nor try to experience scuba. (If you don’t want bubble watchers on your boat, then don’t have it offered on your website), I have witnessed that one a lot. Granted some of them can get in the way, but with a nice verbal command, they will do what you need at the moment. 5. Stop packing in dive shops doing certifications with already experienced divers. 50% on one side, and 50% on the other. I do understand that is a great way to take in revenue that’s guaranteed! 4. Never argue over who has the best pizza on a dive boat! Chicago or New York. You could get thrown over, especially if you’re old. 3. Can u make sure both persons tanks are next to each other! Not one in the bow and the other on the stern on opposite sides please. 2. Can you explain what the shower spigot is for? I was literally yelled at for just rinsing my face. Really. 1. Never judge a diver throwing up overboard, it could be you one day!
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Rontourage! Thanks for watching buddy! I have to ask what kind of dodgy boat operators you've been going out with to come up with such a list!!! People actually pull this stuff!!!? Wow! Great list, but damn! James
@rontourage73844 жыл бұрын
Divers Ready it’s in your backyard so to speak and I would rather not say. I even gave them multiple try’s thinking maybe they were just having an off day. However, a couple of these were also from the keys. Over the years, I have learned that is how things can go I guess. At one point I even said to myself If I owned a boat and chartered it out that I would have so many referrals and comebacks as long as I didn’t do it that way.
@loreseeker37834 жыл бұрын
Ouch. Having experienced 14, 9, 8, 6 and 5. 14 and 5 is usually the dive shop and not the captain. #8 is usually those other dive guests being late, or boat breakdown bake in the sun for an hour while we try to fix this or while deck hand x drives to the other side of the island for a gasket. Don't agree on #7. #4: is simple to resolve. Good pizza you find in Italy, not the swimming-in-grease USA tomato sauce disks ;))))
@rontourage73844 жыл бұрын
LoreSeeker, just for the record, I tip every time. On average $20, or if in a group we all pool up. Chicago style pizza is the best, lol, but New York style is great after a few beers or drinks after a night out! Sorry, couldn’t resist. 🤣🤣
@WetSouls4 жыл бұрын
Nice, crisp and to the point! Enjoyed. Love the new cpu diver ;)
@BrianMasek2 жыл бұрын
Man this is great stuff. I’m recent AOW and I still rewatch this every couple months. On a dive last week a diver on our boat was a total disaster. New computer and gear he didn’t know how to use. When the divermaster said “this is a no deco dive!” And he said “what’s that I knew he was in trouble. I saw him at the safety stop sharing air and I think he came up basically empty. Luckily he was grounded for rest of day. Tip #15 (prob higher) if you haven’t dove in years take a refresher course! Holy shit he prob would have been in big trouble had it not been for his buddies. And this was a deep dive!
@DiversReady2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! We all have lessons to learn every dive.
@tonyvelasquez67762 жыл бұрын
Insane, most agencies recommend skipping safety stop in out of air situation.
@BrianMasek2 жыл бұрын
@@tonyvelasquez6776 good point. they were legit guides though. He prob was just really low. We were at 100ft
@christopher399 Жыл бұрын
@@tonyvelasquez6776There is no need to skip safety stops if you are sharing air with someone who has enough air. I've had to borrow air from someone, and I've had to let someone else borrow my air... on no occasion have we ever skipped safety stops. Although it would most likely have been fine, that's just a unnecessary risk. You skip the safety stop if you are out of air and you have no reserves. If you have 100 bars available, just take those extra few minutes on the safety stop.
@christopher399 Жыл бұрын
I suspect a lot of people who are new do not know what a deco dive is. That's fine, because they're not supposed to do those dives anyhow. They only need to know to ascend before the bottom time reaches its limits. (Though it would be nice to know how to deal with accidental deco. I learned how to do deco stops by accidentally ending up on deco and having to figure it out 😂)
@myoceanadventure33674 жыл бұрын
Wind & Waves Can Tip The Ship But Only You Can Tip The Crew Loved it james Another1 🌊🐳
@scottlauer74664 жыл бұрын
How about the guy who has every new gadget known to man clipped to every D ring. He is so proud that he can buy all this nonsense and justifies the purpose of everything to the point of over kill.
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
That diver definitely exists! But I don't think he has an affect on the Boat Crew's day. It doesn't annoy the crew... they may even get a laugh out of it! But yes, try to avoid looking like a one-man-band when diving.
@ginetteaucoin21724 жыл бұрын
And every single gadget is so shiny there will be nary a marine animal within 30 feet!!!!
@reedscuba4 жыл бұрын
On a trip to Belize, we had a whole dive club from NYC on our boat every day and they all tried to outdo each other with how much crap they could clip to their BCDs. when they got up to jump in, they all sounded like junk wagons.
@zacknelson89183 жыл бұрын
To avoid sea sickness to focus on one thing with the rocking of the boat keep looking around and talking and everything keep your mind working, Coming from a sailor
@mikkosport23004 жыл бұрын
You could simplify the message in form: take the others into account, both crew and fellow divers!
@ninjaswordtothehead Жыл бұрын
As someone just starting to learn to dive, so much of this sounds like common courtesy and proper preparedness that goes with any risky activity. That said, I'm watching all these kinds of vids in hopes of just looking ignorant and not stupid.
@Grayto Жыл бұрын
Ive only been on like 70 dives, and all these things happen to an extent, but I have to say, nearly to a person, everyone who was on the dive boat were pleasant and considerate people.
@ibrahimhaneef6684 Жыл бұрын
Very true, a very hard job to do. I salute to them all.
@karenjustice69634 жыл бұрын
I was certified in 1984 and had over 300 rec dives until health problems caused me to stop about 15 years ago. Things change, and I'm wondering: we used to do a "precautionary" stop at about 20 feet for 3 minutes, on non-deco dives longer than 30 minutes or depths over 60 feet (I trained pre-computer, using Navy dive tables, which explains those particular limits). Is this still done? I remember a trip to Fiji where we were "hanging 10--or 20--and a group of Japanese divers pulled themselves up the anchor line, literally hand-over-fist, one of whom stepped on my head!
@tonyvelasquez67762 жыл бұрын
Yes, it's called a safety stop these days. 3-5 minutes at ~15ft
@interestedbystander1964 жыл бұрын
One more you missed: 14. The Gear-Hound. "I see you're using the Gerber Floegelstrappengoffer. Nice choice. For myself, I use the U-Boat 9000. It has been specially designed by NASA to withstand typical dive conditions on Venus. True story, bro."
@pauldarnbrough93344 жыл бұрын
As always AWESOME JOB JAMES ... like to add one to the list ... the BULL HORN DIVER ... the person who talks so loud everyone on the boat hears every word ... usually telling their dive buddy how they do things or what they did yesterday .. Keep up the GREAT JOB
@loreseeker37834 жыл бұрын
I thought you were referring to the "I brought my rattle, bell, shaker, tank banger and underwater air horn for you guys"-diver :)
@pauldarnbrough93344 жыл бұрын
@@loreseeker3783 ... lol... some call it their OUTDOOR VOICE ... l dont need to know your mom called last week or what you had to eat on the plane 3 days ago ... Dive safe and dive quiet.
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Good call!
@Dreadlock122711 ай бұрын
Is tipping the dive crew customary everywhere? Or is it just a US thing?
@divingadventures1214 жыл бұрын
The guy that bought every piece of equipment u can think of and has to bring it with him on the dive. Had a guy do that on a drift dive. Tickle stick, snare, zoo keeper...etc. he was dragging all his crap all over the coral. The current was way to fast to lobster hunt. Not to mention THIS WAS A DRIFT DIVE.
@bernielucansky16452 жыл бұрын
Very embarrassed to have learned too late about tipping and the very marginal income of diving pro's. As hiddenmic1978 mentions in this thread, it should be a mandatory topic in all courses. Thanks much James for this and the other "less than optimal" examples here. You are a beacon.
@DiversReady2 жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing!
@DaveVT5 Жыл бұрын
I just experienced a tank blaster diver. Nearly blew out my eardrum doing it right near my ear. People three seats down were rubbing their ears after. 🙉
@johnw3914 жыл бұрын
I got sick one my four dive from bobing up and down waiting get on the boat but below the service I love it. But the other divers and crew helped me alot with ginger crows, peppermint oil , motion sickness bands
@JFHE834 жыл бұрын
Great video, just not suited for my lunch break 😳. You forgot the “I forgot to bring my (insert piece of dive equipment here), do you have a spare one? Diver”.
@jamesthompson27124 жыл бұрын
Oh... When you're watching the video with your buddies and they all look at you for diver 2. Thanks James! Great list.
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Hahahahahaha! We've all been there!
@adventureinc5174 жыл бұрын
How about the guy with his brand new 7mm semi-dry suit with weights for his 3mm tropical suit who then ends up head in the water but fins in the air? Conversely you get the guy wearing a shorty who hits the bottom like a lawn dart because he's packing weights like ammo belts in a war movie.
@karenjustice69634 жыл бұрын
saw something similar many years ago. Diving in Cozumel (before cruise ships ruined it), a PADI group on its first open-water checkout dive was on the boat. Divemaster said get in and hold at 60 feet, then we'll do a reef drift. My buddy and I, YMCA/NAUI/CMAS master divers (yeah, I'm a snotty bitch, but it's relevant to the story) agreed to get in first, as our observations of the other group was unnerving. So we're holding at 60', and these yahoos jump in and plummet directly to the bottom--about 90 feet--and start taking pix of each other! Divemaster is signalling to them by pointing to his depth gauge and thumbing "come up"; novices grin away but ignore him. I didn't know--still don't--how to salvage the situation but, needless to say, that dive was terminated prematurely!
@matthewborland90112 жыл бұрын
I guess I failed the vomiting one. Just the other day it was bad out at Jupiter, fla. I just got on to the boat after the first dive, deck hand secured my tank, I was trying early fast to get out of my gear but just did not make it in time. I hurled directly in front of myself twice.
@troymiller15244 жыл бұрын
Awesome video James....How about the diver who wants to put his hands on my rig...I've had this happen several times, My gear is assembled, tested and neatly taking up the least room possible..hoses all tucked on the inside of the webbing and such...everything is in its place where i don't have to look for anything when its time to dive....then get out of the way so others have room to assemble their gear..To my horror I look up to see some jackass with my second stage in his hand saying "Wow this is a cool reg" or something to that effect...DON'T TOUCH MY GEAR!!!
@megatrains Жыл бұрын
Great video buddy!!!!!!!
@johnbspringer6 ай бұрын
My friends want me to use my boat and take them on some upcoming dives to which I will be sitting out. What are some details that I need to know WRT driving a dive boat. I know I need a dive flag, O2, sat phone, but should I be expected to drive the boat to an emergency ascent driver, what happens if multiple divers surface in different locations to check on their buddy, seems like a potential to hit them. I feel like I want to anchor and not move until they are all surfaced. what do I need to know before I agree to this.
@rosco1pug4 жыл бұрын
it's the ones (always more than one of them on every dive) that just ignore their trim. Have their octo, SPG and sundry bits of gear dangling and banging on the coral, typically their fins too. Never mind how they approach a swim through ..
@apacheattackhelicopter81854 жыл бұрын
Did you know that there are diving agencies that allow decompression in recreational diving? Also, tipping on a day trip is not expected outside of North America (it is expected on a liveaboard though).
@dannyholden53614 жыл бұрын
Timofey Vlasenkov exactly. I’m a rec diver and been doing deco for years since my second qual.
@Sgyozo4 жыл бұрын
If the qualifications allow it, then OK, but this should be a planned dive, and not just a quick decision at 30m down. "Hm, what a nice shiny fish, i'll watch it for 5 more minutes, i'll do some deco what my computer says and it's fine."
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Technically speaking, going into deco means it is no longer a recreational dive. It's now a technical dive. There are different rules and protocols for going past your NDL and for good reasons. So no, I don't know any modern dive training agencies that allow deco on 'recreational' dives, because that is an oxymoron. But if the Captain says this is recreational, no decompression diving and someone goes into deco and makes everybody run late, they're the one I made this video for!
@tj50207 күн бұрын
Add to this, dont tip unless tipping is normal in that country, unless the service is next level above and beyond. Tipping in the US is expected always, tipping in the metric world is for exceptional service.
@stevesscubaschool53303 жыл бұрын
The fix it Felix (apocalypse) diver what always brings stairs and repair kits for everything
@DannyB-cs9vx3 жыл бұрын
Another way to look at a charter wanting tips Is they want to advertize a low price to attract customers, but inflate the price later. If you want an exstra $20 a piece, just charge it. Upfront honesty. if they do tip it is bonus, if they don't, you got a fair price for your service.
@robbiemurderingminion25563 жыл бұрын
I would only tip on a live aboard. As these people have looked after you all week. As an experienced diver I turn up set up and get in and out the water on my own. As a professional diver as well I never give in my professional qualifications. Normally my rescue diver card and any relevant qualification for that particular dive. I would however go on to say some boats charters pick you up and give you far to little time to set up.
@TheLastRoman00002 жыл бұрын
I saw a guy puke in the dead center of the deck. The best part was how he acted like it was someone else's mess to clean up.
@djl88412 жыл бұрын
This was great. I must say I broke 1 or 2 of these in my early days. Thanks for the content
@WordizbonDon Жыл бұрын
This one was informative and funny
@brandonbuell35192 жыл бұрын
#6 was great advice. LOL
@omegadivingacademy79374 жыл бұрын
Can't believe anyone would thumbs down this one?????
@neomasterc4 жыл бұрын
Highly recommend everyone read Scuba Exceptional by Simon Pridmore.
@nicholasmanuel4 жыл бұрын
I was literally taught to do number 9 in my open water course.
@aopa10704 жыл бұрын
Yeah I too was taught to do the same thing, even though I thought it was annoying.
@nicholasmanuel4 жыл бұрын
@@aopa1070 as long as you just do it really quick it doesn't annoy me. I've been on dives though where people open it up for like a minute.
@robkstatistics82242 жыл бұрын
Not quite sure what the reaction would be if I tried to tip a skipper in the UK....
@zorankos9883 Жыл бұрын
Where can I get a T-shirt like yours, with a diving helmet?
@sirpatte4 жыл бұрын
Great movie :). Met some of them nice personalities. So I will take you up on a Sea sickness movie and how to avoid or just calm it down that will be great.
@kimm.55144 жыл бұрын
Jus take sea sickness meds before any chartered dive. I heard this from an instructor that did charters. It's better to be safe than sorry!
@leeshdee92694 жыл бұрын
I work on boats. Best advice I can give you to help calm sea sickness: First of, prevention is always better than a cure. Take sea sickness tablets, and make sure you take them correctly! Sea sickness medication needs to be taken at minimum half an hour before the boat starts departing (ideally one hour before). This allows for the medication to kick in. By the time the boat starts moving the trigger for sea sickness starts so often too late to take it, and by the time you start to feel sea sick is really is far too late and no point taking it. Any questions about sea sickness medications talk to your pharmacist about the best ones for you. Other tips to help calm sea sickness: - Make sure you eat, and eat "neutral" foods. A lot people think if they don't eat, they can't get sick because there is nothing to vomit up. But sea sickness doesn't work that way and that is the exact opposite of what you should do. Eat a hearty breakfast, and the best things to eat are dry toast (maybe a bit of peanut butter or butter), bananas, crackers and apples. Avoid dairy products, and its best to skip that cup of coffee as coffee has a compound that triggers sea sickness. - Take along some ginger biscuits/cookies. Ginger is a great natural remedy that helps quell nausea, and the act of chewing helps with sea sickness too. Ginger tea is a great alternative to your coffee in the morning. - The best place to sit on a boat for motion sickness is the lowest deck towards the rear, and face sitting in the same direction the boat is traveling. - If you do start to feel a bit queasy and funny, do not fight the feeling. You can not fight sea sickness. As soon as you start feeling a bit unwell, the best thing to do is to go outside to the lowest deck of the boat, at the very back (the stern). The lowest deck and the back/stern of the boat is the most stable part, and being outside in the fresh air helps. Suck some ice cubes, and place a cool damp cloth around your neck.
@dh56454 жыл бұрын
🧔The-Single-Guy-Diver who wants desperately to buddy up with 👩 The-Unicorn-Single-Girl-Diver and annoys her and everyone on the boat by hitting on her. 🙅♀️
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA I love that you used the bearded guy emoji for the single guy! HAHAHAHAHAHA James
@Teampegleg4 жыл бұрын
Single girl divers exist?
@dh56454 жыл бұрын
Team Peg Leg 🦄 yes although slightly more rare then diving with a Great White shark off Palm Beach, Florida and slightly more exciting 🦄
@YuriyDel4 жыл бұрын
@@Teampegleg I've met only one from what I can recall. Family dive trip (theirs). The unicorn is accurate. Edit: Her brother ended up being my keeper for lionfish hunting on one of our rides, nice family.
@peakecentral4 жыл бұрын
@@Teampegleg Several in our local club!
@hawkeye54694 жыл бұрын
👏 Great video, James! You hit on this a little with the space hog but it may be with mentioning that Tec diver that brings their full technical diving rig w/ long hoses + stage on board for a pair of recreational, no-decompression dives? As an instructor and hopeful future dive boat captain, this one grinds my gears too. It can take up tons of unnecessary space on a small boat and usually this diver will need extra help in/out of the water, which costs the crew time. Strap on a single and enjoy the scenery! Your knees, back, and crew will appreciate it. 👌
@hawkeye54694 жыл бұрын
If they keep it to just a set of twins and can manage their kit without assistance, it's really a non-issue. However, experience has shown me this person is often out of shape, too - which adds to the conundrum 😬
@BulldogRockandSoul4 жыл бұрын
James, Love your videos.
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Carl!
@calebcoale8962 жыл бұрын
Can you do one about liveaboards.
@MrSonnyProductions3 жыл бұрын
I know I'm late but, number 11 was great 😂👌
@MatthiasLebo4 жыл бұрын
Great video James 👍🏻 and so familiar... 😉
@stevefischbein61544 жыл бұрын
As usual damn good video and too funny!
@tomtownsend72732 ай бұрын
Good stuff
@TreasureDivers4 жыл бұрын
Hey James, Great channel , keep it up mate :-)
@Plantandpeoplecarer3 жыл бұрын
You don't need to tip in Australia..... We have a decent minimum wage....
@grumpycricket3 жыл бұрын
You're funny & informative ... subbed!😊
@SuperWhatapain4 жыл бұрын
LOL. Good info.. funny format
@azymasger90884 жыл бұрын
You missed the diver who complains about everything or the faultfinder 😂
@sunnyadventuretravel32842 жыл бұрын
You are great!!! Thanks a lot.
@DiversReady2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome! Dive safe.
@TheMarkbergeron2 жыл бұрын
What is customary tipping procedures. Is it 20% of total cost or is there an average amount per tank/dive orrr is it something specific for captain, dive master, deck hand, etc.
@sarahcarey20842 жыл бұрын
Generally $10 per tank, which can be given to any crew member if there is no tip jar, since they pool the tips. I tip more for night dives or dives that require much more effort to set up--like a shark dive or manta ray dive.
@starfleethastanks Жыл бұрын
+1 for Picard cameo
@sharkman49284 жыл бұрын
Happy to report that I am not "that" diver. I am very prone to seasickness and I do all I can to keep it under control. However, we were on a very small boat once in some very big waves and I did puke....I fed the fish like you suggested and all was good. Another good video would be the top 10 things divers hate about dive boat captains and dive masters.....I have a few things I would add to a list like that.
@karenjustice69634 жыл бұрын
get to the center of the boat and downwind (stern, usually, if boat is in motion)--puke goes in ocean instead of landing in the boat and causing everyone else to yak.
@ABCDiver6 ай бұрын
I agree with everything except the last point. Why WHY can we not set the prices such that everyone gets compensated properly? In the end you're paying the same amount anyway, except there's the added pressure and guilt. Why can't we just have a pleasant transaction, I give you whatever you ask up front and I don't need to worry about keeping bills dry in the middle of the ocean? There is another type of diver: the bragging card collector, he will make sure to tell you about his altitude dry suit ice diver deep speciality card while you're out on a 40ft reef in the Caribbean.
@Big_Un4 жыл бұрын
James, great vids, thank you. Love the content, love the film clips that you add for effect. But PLEASE for goodness sake!! Give a list of the film titles they come from so that I can go watch the danged film!!! LOL (Case in point, the clip at 4:00!! Among others! Please.)
@itsyaboimat23934 жыл бұрын
hey James do you have any videos for dive buddies because I'm going to be taking my adaptive diver OW course (I have Cerebral palsy) and my sister is going to be my dive buddy and has never dived before and a video from you would help greatly
@alolangi50074 жыл бұрын
I was almost all in those list and its true,is expencive to learn mistakes by your own,i wish i watch you video before that,thank your for great video,im your new subsriber (sory english) 👌
@petrahulett3 жыл бұрын
The space hog diver🤣 1:50
@chefwarthog4 жыл бұрын
Like your video the way you do it… perfect!!
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! Appreciate you, Chefwarthog. James
@roboppers2 жыл бұрын
What annoys me most is that the crew ask’s me to carry a new diver while i payed a lot of money for relaxed dives. This happened at least three times but i stopped taking them.
@stevesscubaschool53302 жыл бұрын
Yep I leave my instructor certs at home now lol
@DiversReady2 жыл бұрын
THanks for sharing. Dive safe.
@zakaria6003 жыл бұрын
DIVE TALK did a video about this it was hilarious 🤣🤣🤣
@texas_guy_853 жыл бұрын
James, I am new to you channel. I have learned loads of information already in 2 days. Thank you. While many, and myself appreciate this and agree. The individuals you refering to, sadly aren't the kind to watch videos ahead of time to prepare. You know they just think " oh, that's the dive groups responsibility to do all this for me." Again, thank you for your high level of passion. I would trust you, amd your class. Personally, that is why I haven't got certified yet, is I am hesitant to trust an instructor. I've came across some horrible instructors, and classes that have made headlines in a very bad way. I do not trust my life to just anyone. Sorry about the long comment. I'm slowly buying high quality gear one piece at a time. Thank you for this channel.
@b-rollstudiovideographypho69544 жыл бұрын
What would a good to Tip be ? Rodney Barrett
@DiversReady4 жыл бұрын
I have that video coming up! But for now, check where you are in the world but here in South Florida a 'typical' tip is $20 for the half day in the Crew's tip jar and they split all the tips at the end of the shift.
@freethepeople13953 жыл бұрын
What is an appropriate amount to tip?
@BenTvHowman4 жыл бұрын
I was only late because we were standing by the wrong boat on a snorkle trip. The Ticket had the wrong boat name on it
@gibanez13 жыл бұрын
Do you have a diving outfit that you recommend in South Florida, most specifically the Key largo area or Miami?