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Ranger Award Elective Requirements. Venture Crew 851. SCUBA. Presented by Dr. Ed Hawkins 2014 May 5. Reference : “Recreational SCUBA Diving by Shaun Sykes”. Open Water SCUBA Certification. Topics of Discussion. SCUBA – Its meaning and history Equipment Types of Dives
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Ranger Award Elective Requirements Venture Crew 851 SCUBA Presented byDr. Ed Hawkins 2014 May 5 Reference: “Recreational SCUBA Diving by Shaun Sykes”
Topics of Discussion • SCUBA – Its meaning and history • Equipment • Types of Dives • Training and Certifications • Health and safety • Dive sites and statistics • Crew Options
SCUBAMeaning and History • SCUBA – Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus • Long history dating back from 332 BC Alexander the Great – wooden barrel dive bell • Modern fins, mask and snorkel tubes were developed by fishermen from America, Russia, France and England in the 1920s and 1930s “Dive Bell” 17th Century 1918 Schrader – US Navy Dive Helmut British “Frog Man” c.1945
History (cont’d) • Recreational SCUBA Diving began between 1942 - 1943, after Emile Gagnan and Captain Jacques –Yves Cousteau developed the self-contained “Aqua-Lung” and new regulator that was automatic. • Cousteau took many successful, experimental dives with his friends, wife and two sons, making this an experimental family trip and experience. 1910-1997 Cousteau Society RV Calypso Cousteau Society Mini-Sub
Basic Equipment (1 of 5) • Mask- Device covering eyes and nose, allowing you to see underwater • Fins – Device put on the feet to extend the kicking motion underwater. • Snorkel – Device used to breath air close to or on the surface of the water
Basic Equipment (2 of 5) • Regulator – Device that delivers air to you on demand at reduced pressure • BCD or BC – (Buoyancy compensator device) controls buoyancy up or down
Basic Equipment (3 of 5) • Weights – Lead weights used to weigh down divers for depth decent • Pressure gauge – (SPG- Submersible Pressure Gauge) and depth gauge tells diver how much air is in tank, and depth of dive
Basic Equipment (4 of 5) • Wet suit – Insulated suit used to keep warm by warming a layer of water next to your skin • Dry suit – Used to keep the diver dry and warm in cold temperatures • Body suit – Warm temperature suit that keeps the core body warm
Basic Equipment (5 of 5) Gloves Hood Booties Knife Tank Light Watch Scooter
Diving Apparel Temperature • High 80s • 80º - 90º F • 75º - 80ºF • 70º - 80ºF • 50º - 70ºF • Below 50ºF What to wear • A Lycra body suit, a shorty, or a dive jacket (the top of a two-piece suit) • A shorty, a dive jacket, or a full-length, one-piece, 3mm wet suit • A 3mm one-piece jumpsuit, or a two-piece wet suit • A 5mm full-length wetsuit, a two-piece wetsuit, or a dry suit with light weight insulating garments • A 7mm full-length two-piece wetsuit with gloves and hood, or a dry suit with insulating garments • A dry suit with insulating garments, hood, gloves or mitts, and possibly face mask
Types of Dives • Types of dives – Boat, shore, pier • How to enter the water • From shore, walk into the water without fins, then put them on in the water • In rough water, put fins on and walk in backwards • If on a boat or pier • Giant Stride • Backward roll • Controlled Seated entry • Group entry
Types of Dives (cont’d) • Decent • Travel under water • Hand signals • Ascent Other types of dives – • Seawater, Freshwater, Wreck, Cave, Night, Drift and Ice
Training and Certifications • Pre-open water certification – Open Water Certified • Non – professional certification – Advanced SCUBA diver and Master SCUBA diver • Professional – Divemaster, Skin-diving instructor, assistant instructor and Instructor • Specialties open to recreational divers – Underwater photography or videography, wreck diving, night diving, boat diving, ice diving, cavern diving, dry suit diving, Nitrox diving, search and recovery, career diver, etc.
Health and Safety Diving Hazards • How soon to fly after diving – old vs. new philisophy • DCS – Epidermal or cutaneous, muscular, joint and limb pain and neuroligical • Hypothermia • Hyperthermia • Cramps • Overexertion • Nitrogen Narcosis • Overexertion • Nitrogen Narcosis • Carbon monoxide poisoning • Gastrointestinal barotrauma • Heart problems • Ear infections • Nosebleeds • Breathing problems • Dehydration • Diving while pregnant
Dive Sites • United States: The Hawaiian Islands, Florida Keys, Catalina Island, California and many oceans, rivers, lakes and quarries
Statistics • About 22 million divers world wide (2013) • Top 6 states for SCUBA certification: Florida, California, Hawaii, Texas, Illinois and New York
Web sites for SCUBA access, research and resources • PADI (Professional Association of Diving Instructors)- http://www.padi.com • DAN (Divers Alert Network) - http://www.diversalertnetwork.org • NAUI (National Association of Underwater Instructors)- http://www.naui.com • The Ultimate SCUBA source - http://www.scubasearch.com • About SCUBA diving - http://scuba.about.com • Joe Diver America - http://www.joediveramerica.com
Crew OptionsColumbia SCUBA • Open Water Training • 5 Sessions: 2-hours classroom/2-hours pool • CA Swim Center at Wilde Lake (Thursdays) • “Open Water” Certification – 4 dives (two weekends) • Quarry or something fancier (Florida Keys/Bahamas?) • Required Gear • Mask/Fins/Snorkel/Weight Belt ~ $100-$200 • Costs • $295 per student for Open Water Training • $15-$20 per student for log book • $65 per group for a “Book Kit”
Crew Options - ContinuedColumbia SCUBA • Discover Scuba Splash Party • $25 per person • In-pool training with all equipment provided (2-2.5 hrs) • Private party possible if more than 6 participants • Need to allow 2 weeks notice • Scheduled Scuba Splash Parties • 5/22 • 7/24