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Houston's Premier Scuba and Dive Shop Oceanic Ventures Inc.

(713) 523-3483 (dive)
5808 Newcastle Drive
Houston, TX 77401

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Scuba Diving Activities

September 16, 2011 by Eric Keibler

David's Annual BarBQ at the Lake

Chef David In-Between Dives
Chef David In-Between Dives

Last year David celebrated is 100th dive in a year with a BarBQ at the lake.  Well as things have a way of doing around here, David decided to make it an annual event!  So, on Sunday 25 September from 10:00 to 4:00 David and some friends will be diving and cooking BarBQ at Mammouth Lake.  The cost of the event is only $10.00 but here is what you will receive:

    • A cylinder of air (must be picked up from Oceanic Ventures)
    • Some of David’s famouns grilled treats
    • Really cold water (bring your own cup or bottle – we are trying to help reduce the bottle trash in the world)
    • Some really fun diving
    • Door prizes!

You will still need to pay the admission at the lake but just think of the door prizes you could win.  And yes you can bring other beverages of your own, just remember that your last dive is the one before you drank that adult beverage.

Last year we had a great turnout so we would like to make this year’s barBQ even bigger.  Come join David and your fellow diver’s for a fun day at the lake!

If you have any questions, please contact David or Ashton.

 

Please RSVP if you will be attending.

 

Filed Under: Local Diving, Scuba Diving Activities, Social Activities, Travel Tagged With: BarBQ, party

September 15, 2011 by Eric Keibler

Dive Around Texas 2011

The 2011 Dive Around Texas is about to come to an end! However, you still have time to get your dives. The basic rules are simple:

    • Dive in 4 different Texas diveing locations
    • Log at least 3 dives in each location for a total of 12 locations before September 30, 2011
    • Enroll in the Dive Around Texas Program with Oceanic Ventures
    • Receive a Dive Around Texas T-Shirt with your paid registration ($25.00)
    • Get an invitation to the free Recognition BarBQ in San MArcos Texas on October 2
    • Have your dives validated at Oceanic Ventures
    • Submitt a spreadsheet with your dives to Oceanic Ventures
    • Be eligible for some really great prizes donated by the sponsors

SPECIAL RULE FOR 2011: Because of the current conditons at many of the Texas diving locations as a result of the drought, you can still qualify for the Dive Around Texas if you have at least 12 dives from at least 2 different locations. Please make sure to get your dives validated by Oceanic Ventures.

You still have time to complete the dives. We have 2 upcoming dive dates with Oceanic Ventures staff:

  • September 17-18 Blue Lagoon with Wade Sparks and Vernon Dittrich
  • September 25 Mammouth Lake at David’s Lake Party and BarBQ

So, you have no excuse to finish your dives and enter the contest.

Send your spreadsheets to Ashton for inclusion in the Oceanic Ventures group submission (we are sending someone to the BarBQ to collect the prizes so even if you cannot attend the BarBQ, you can still win prizes!) 

Please RSVP to Ashton if you would like to attend the Bar BQ ASAP.

 

Filed Under: Local Diving, New Students, Scuba Dive Training, Scuba Diving Activities, Travel Tagged With: DiveAroundTexas.com, party, Texas

August 12, 2011 by Eric Keibler

Too Busy Diving

Open Water Sidemount Divers
Open Water Sidmount Divers

 I am not sure where the summer has gone.  We have been busy teaching new students to dive, upgrading the skills of our previous students and traveling.  It seems there are never enough hours in the day to get everything done. 

 We want to congratulate our new divers for completing their course and entering the realm ofNeptune.  Our new divers are featured in the video below as well as some of our other divers who completed classes such as Night and Limited Visibility Diving, Deep Diving, Search and Relocation, Navigation, Advanced Buoyancy Control, Technical Deep Diving, Advanced Recreational Trimix, Open Water Side-Mount, and the Principles of Technical Diving.

 Other Places We’ve Been

 Over the past few months you might have seen our divers in Grand Cayman for Inner Space (Oceanic Ventures is a continuing sponsor), Cozumel, Isla Mujares, the British Virgin Islands, St Croix, Utila, Little Cayman, the Dry Tortugas, the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador as well as our local favorites like 288 Lake, the Blue Lagoon, and Mammoth Lake.  It has been an action packed season so far and we are not finished yet!  

It is Not Too Late

It is not too late to hop into the water and become one withNeptuneunce again.  We have some fun adventures coming up and continuing education course are filling up the calendar so there is no excuse to stay dry! 

So here is our photo thank you and remembrances of our season so far.  Please tell me what you think….

Filed Under: Digital, Photography, Scuba Diving Activities, Social Activities, Underwater

May 18, 2011 by Eric Keibler

Technical Training at Local Destinations or Not?

Divers walking to waterRecently I was asked why I don’t do more technical training in the deep lakes in Texas.  My reasoning has to do with both philosophy and the environment. 

First, let’s look at the environment itself.  The lakes have the advantage of being close allowing for short drives from home. To some, this helps keep the training costs lower, especially if you can camp near the lake.  They are familiar dive sites to many of the divers in the area so there is an increased comfort level which is beneficial for the student.  The problem with the lakes is that they are generally not very clear because of sediment and algae.  Because of the reduced visibility, class sizes are limited, which is not a bad thing, and students are forced to swim very close to one another or on a line.  While following a line is a good skill to learn, it inhibits the diver’s ability to fully integrate the skills and procedures into their diving.

The deeper lakes also tend to be cold at depth.  To properly train in this environment, the student needs a drysui or at a minimum a thick wetsuit.  This requires that they be comfortable with drysuit diving before the course starts because starting a technical diving program introduces more equipment and skills so adding a suit that the diver is not familiar with diving adds more complications to an already stressful situation.

This is not to say that a student cannot learn in this environment.  There are many skilled and successful divers who started their training in murky local lakes and quarries.  However, it takes more effort to become proficient in less than ideal conditions.

The second reason I prefer other locations is one of philosophy.  Beginning down the road of technical diving requires that the student develop skills, intuition, and procedures to survive and enjoy the dives.  Swimming with multiple cylinders whether manifolded or separate, as in a side mount configuration, or even on a rebreather requires that you retrain your brain to deal with different buoyancy characteristics and with mass.  I find that students master these skills faster, with more confidence, when they can see what they are doing in relation to their instructor and fellow students.  Further, by allowing them to have more room between them, they can develop better swimming and buoyancy skills in a shorter period of time.  Additionally, with clearer visibility, the stress on the instructor is reduced which I believe makes me more effective in the learning environment.

I also believe that students start this type of diving to do something or to go somewhere.  Some take it merely for the training, but moreover the student has a goal in mind when they enroll in a course.  I have yet to find someone who came to me saying they wanted to find out what the mud looked like at the bottom of Lake Travis.  Diving is about experiences and in my mind it should be predominately positive experiences.

This is not to say that these locations do not have their place in technical diving.  Before leaving for a destination, open water, I like to take the students to one of the shallow training lakes.  This allows them to refine their equipment configurations and develop some buoyancy skills in their new equipment.  You don’t need deep water to work on buoyancy; in fact, it is better to work on it in a shallow area because the trim changes are magnified.  Additionally, these locations allow me to teach some of the skills needed for this type of diving and the start helping them create procedures to deal with equipment and to start building more diving intuition.

For the final dives, I find it to be a more positive experience to go where the water is clear and there is depth and support for the type of diving you are learning.  Since we have completed the knowledge or classroom portion of the course and some basic skills dives prior to leaving for the destination, we can concentrate on the diving and planning when we arrive.

One argument against completing the open water divers in a destination rather than a local lake is the cost.  However, once you figure in the cost of fuel, lodging, meals, entry fees, etc.  The differences are not that great.  By electing to complete your training in a destination like Grand Cayman or Cozumel you will have a better experience and will enjoy the dives more.  Additionally, I believe you will learn faster and progress in this style of diving further because you have a solid foundation on which to build.

Filed Under: Caribbean, Dry Suit Diving, Open Circuit, Rebreathers, Scuba Dive Training, Scuba Diving Activities, Scuba Diving Equipment, Travel, Trimix Tagged With: Rebreather, Technical Diving, Technical Diving.Rebreather Diving, Training, Trimix

March 30, 2011 by Eric Keibler

Scuba Divers, Burgers and Dogs

Chef David In-Between Dives
Chef David In-Between Dives
Once again, David outdid himself on the grill serving up grilled hamburgers and hotdogs to about 20 divers this past weekend!  Saturday was the DiverXY BarBQ at the Lake.  The event was open to the DiverXY group as well as other divers who wanted to get wet and enjoy a beautiful day.  We had a mixed group of divers from new divers, to experienced divers, to technical divers and even some rebreather divers.  It was a fun day and everyone had a great time diving and socializing with other scuba divers and even a few non-divers (we can fix that you know…). 
If you missed the day, keep looking, David has promised to bring the grill again and have another BarBQ at the Lake soon!
Vernon and Francisco

Filed Under: Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Activities, Social Activities, X-Divers Tagged With: 288 Lake, BarBQ, DiverXY

March 25, 2011 by Eric Keibler

New Truk Lagoon Dive Video Debut at Club Aquarius Meeting

Photo of Wreck in Chuuk
Inside Wreck Looking Out
Drew Trent, our scheduled speaker for our monthly Club Aquarius meeting was sick.  But, don’t worry, he has agreed to reschedule his presentation later in the year.
But as they say in show business, the show must go on.  I debuted a new video compilation of his photographs from past trips to Truk Lagoon.  The video featured photographs of the ships before the blast and then ones from the bottom.  It also had photographs of a number of the people that have joined me on previous trips. 
It was a fun video to put together and was well received by the audience.  If you missed the video, I posted it so you can see it.

Filed Under: Digital, Pacific, Photography, Presentations, Rebreather, Scuba Diving Activities, Travel, Underwater, Wreck Diving Tagged With: Chuuk, Rebreather Diving. Photography, Truk Lagoon, Wreck Diving

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