A great intro to novice divers and advice for instructors
I read this part way through my scuba diving training on holiday as I had real trouble with my neutral buoyancy on my first sea dive and realised my instructor hadn’t spent that much time on it during our pool sessions.
Whilst it’s billed as a kind of expose about the dive training industry, it’s really not. John covers that in later chapters and it helped me realise I’d actually had really good instruction compared to the ‘pile it high, sell it cheap’ outfits.
I’d bill this book more as ‘What they don’t tell you on your introductory dive training’. It’s a really useful book for anyone thinking about scuba diving training (to help you select the right centre and be wary of shortcuts to look out for during your training) or anyone part way through or immediately after training to help you ‘get it’ before you spend a lot of money on additional dives that you won’t get maximum enjoyment from if your skills are not what they should be (particularly around buoyancy and air consumption).
Putting into practice what John explains helped me perform much better on my second sea dive and now I’m really looking forward to continuing my scuba diving journey and, hopefully, becoming a reasonably skilled diver in around 10 dives instead of the 20-40 it can take doing it the hard way without John’s knowledge.
I also think this book has a role to play for new (or experienced) diving instructors to highlight the importance of their role and their attitude to their trainees. Hopefully, it will also encourage the better ones to not tolerate some of the oppressive practices big operators seem to put instructors under.
I’d recommend this book for anyone just starting their journey as a diver or an instructor. The knowledge here is going to take significant time off your development in both cases and is an absolute bargain. Thanks, John!