It was a cold stormy night; the air was as thick as a rubber duck. The team was stuck inside wondering when the weather would break so they could go submerge in the tropical waters. It was at this point that the duo decided that they needed to expand their horizons, look beyond the Caribbean to the once blue waters of Beautiful Blue Lagoon in Pine Prairie Texas. They made the fatal phone call to Dive Mom and the dead was done… they were now on their way to becoming a certified Open Water Instructor!
The program was a lot of time listening to Eric espouse the virtues of Scuba Instruction while demonstrating their diving prowess and techniques to a variety of enlightened individuals. Through it all they maintained kept their eyes on the goal of joining the few proud souls who are privileged to impart scuba knowledge to the uninitiated.
This past Sunday, they realized their goal; they became Open Water Scuba Instructors! Congratulations Charles Alvarez and Zach Gay for becoming new Scuba Schools International Open Water Scuba Instructors!

Scuba Dive Training
Wade's Excellent Scuba Diver Specialty Weekend

If it is in May, why mention it now?
I can hear you asking, “if it is not until May, why should I sign-up now?” Because “now” is the perfect time to start reading the material; it is cold outside! One of the requirements for a Specialty Diver Weekend is that you must complete all of the educational materials before you show up. By enrolling now, you
- Have time to complete your reading;
- Guarantee your space;
- Have time to make sure you have the required equipment for the program;
- Have time to purchase what you are missing; and
- Plan your contribution to the “Pot Luck Dinner” (remember as Eric says, Texas Diving is a BarBQ interrupted by diving).
What specialties can I take?
You can participate in a number of specialty programs this weekend including,
How Do I sign-up?
Enrolling in a class is “as easy as squeezy” as they say in Trinidad. You can either call Dive Mom to sign-up or simply, click a button below, which will take you to the product to purchase it. Either way, we will open up the training materials so you can get started and be ready for diving in May.



Continuing Diver Education – Don't Stop Diving Now!
The colder weather is coming and you may be thinking of putting your diving equipment away for the season. You may even be thinking of dragging out that equipment used for the wrong form of water (i.e. skiing). But, wait; Don’t stop diving now! The weather outside is wonderful and the lake water is clearer — I’d like to say clear but this is Texas.
Now is the time to start thinking about taking some continuing diver education courses. Why not get ready for some colder water diving or our California trip by taking a dry suit course? Or, maybe it is time to learn how to field repair your diving equipment. You could even get ready for the 2018 Oceanic Ventures Photography Contest by enrolling in an underwater photography class.
Fall and winter are great times to enroll in classes. You can keep your skills sharp and improve your diving knowledge. Even if you don’t like diving in the colder water, the pool is warm and you can complete your dives in a warm tropical location. Of course, I would not recommend a warm tropical location for your dry suit open water. Think about photography, navigation, equipment field repairs, marine life identification, marine cooking and Principles of Technical Diving.
Call Dive Mom to find out when you can start your program.
New Scuba Diver Video
The other day, I had an idea to try a new video for the website. My idea was to have a short video to add to our website for new divers to entice them to call or come-by. Since our program is a little different, I thought a video might be a good start along with a new page focused on becoming a scuba diver. Below is the first video I came up with. I have also set-up the new page for a new diver that hopefully provides a little information and will entice them to call. You can find that page here. Please let me know what you think.
Dealing With Accidental Decompression
There is nothing to fear about accidentally going into deco as long as you know what to do when it happens.
Simon is the best-selling author of Scuba Confidential – An Insider’s Guide to Becoming a Better Diver and Scuba Professional – Insights into Scuba Diver Training & Operations. Both books are available from Oceanic Ventures. Simon has also just published a new book for divers-to-be and absolute beginners called Scuba Fundamental – Start Diving the Right Way.
There is a very good reason why instructors tell their students not to go into deco and why dive computer manuals repeat the warning time after time.
Chances are that the cylinder on your back is usually your only air source when you dive. If you run very low on air or if you suffer a rapid loss of air supply, perhaps because of a regulator free flow or a split hose, then the best option you have is to make a slow controlled ascent directly to the surface.
Yes, an alternative option is to share air with an alert, calm and capable diver around who is carrying more air than they need and is both equipped and willing to share it. But you can’t depend that someone like that will be nearby when you need them.
If you stay calm and you are not in deco, that is to say, if your computer is not showing required decompression stops, you will make it safely to the surface. You will probably not be able to make a safety stop on the way up but that is not going to be health threatening. After all, a safety stop on a no-decompression-stops dive is a luxury rather than a necessity.
On the other hand, if you do have required decompression stops, then going straight to the surface and missing those stops is definitely a health risk! That is the main reason why divers are told, “don’t go into deco!”
But Divers Do It All The Time
You may not be surprised to hear that divers accidentally go into deco every day. This is because they are only human, they have fun diving and they tend to get distracted. If it has not yet happened to you, it certainly will, so it is useful to know what to do when it does!
Because they have heard the warning so often, divers tend to panic when they find themselves accidentally in deco. There is no need for anxiety. Going into deco will not hurt you. Going to the surface when you are in deco, however, may well hurt you.
Know how your computer works and what it looks like when you go into deco. Do not be the diver who gets back into the boat moaning about a “broken” computer that is actually functioning perfectly. It is just telling the diver that they should still be underwater waiting until their deco stops clear.
The first thing you notice when you go into deco is that your computer screen suddenly looks different. A new depth reading appears, usually 10ft or 20ft, and a new time display. The depth is your new ceiling; you must not go shallower than this. The time is either your decompression stop time at the ceiling or an indicator of the minimum time it will now take you to reach the surface taking into account both your ascent time and the decompression stop time.
Every brand of computer is different. There is no industry standard. You must know how yours works. I know the manual looks boring but take the time to study it. Trust me, if you see your computer’s deco screen for the first time deep down at 100ft with your brain befuddled by narcosis, you will have no idea what it is saying to you.
Run The Clock Down
So what do you do next? First, look at your pressure gauge. If you still have plenty of air left, relax; you have nothing to be concerned about. Start ascending gradually, keeping an eye on your computer until the deco/ascent time figure stops growing. When the figure starts to drop, continue your dive at that depth but do not go deeper again. Eventually, the deco will clear and you will see your usual no decompression screen display again with plenty of minutes remaining.
Finally, end the dive a little earlier than originally planned to make sure you have plenty of air left to do an extended safety stop of eight or ten minutes before you surface.
Remember
1. Going into deco is nothing to panic about.
2. Know what your computer screen will look like when it happens.
3. Do a long safety stop at the end of every dive where you accidentally go into deco.
Scuba Diving and Narcosis – Diving Under the Influence
Simon is the best-selling author of Scuba Confidential – An Insider’s Guide to Becoming a Better Diver and Scuba Professional – Insights into Scuba Diver Training & Operations. Both books are available now from Oceanic Ventures.

Understanding narcosis, being aware of its effects, and knowing how to manage it are important tools for divers.
When you dive deep, you often see people do strange things under the influence of narcosis. One diver will swim away from his buddy, lost in his own thoughts until he suddenly realizes he is alone in the ocean. Another will keep looking at his computer every few seconds, apparently not registering what it is telling him. A third will stop on a reef wall and stare fixedly at a branch of coral for a good five minutes. Later, he will tell you that he thought the coral was a moray eel and that he was waiting for it to move.
This sort of thing can be funny but there is a serious side to narcosis. The diver who heads off into the blue without his buddies loses the support of the team. The diver who cannot remember what his computer was showing just a few seconds after looking at it is suffering from short-term memory loss and this makes it difficult for him to follow a dive plan.
Narcosis is an integral part of scuba diving. The only way to avoid it is not to dive deep. If you want to dive to 100ft and beyond, then you are just going to have to get used to it!
What is Narcosis?
Air, even oxygen-enriched air like NITROX, is an intoxicating cocktail. Many people will tell you they enjoy the “buzz” of going deep. This “buzz” is mainly due to “anesthetic potential”, something all gases have. In the right quantity, any gas can knock you out. Nitrogen, the major constituent gas in air, has substantial anesthetic potential and, as you dive deeper, the partial pressure of the nitrogen increases, and the depressant effect on your central nervous system becomes greater.
The effects are similar to alcohol and, just as with alcohol, they are dose-related. Narcosis is progressive and increases with time and depth. At 100ft a diver will experience mild symptoms such as euphoria and slow reactions but at 150ft the diver may not be able to function intellectually at all.
There is a widespread misunderstanding of what narcosis is. Many divers claim that they do not suffer from narcosis because they feel more relaxed, comfortable, confident, and capable at depth. However, these are actually the most common symptoms, and, although it might sound like a good thing to feel like that, in fact, this state of mind will lead a diver to take more risks, forget or throw out the dive plan, react to an emergency more slowly and lose track of time.
Managing Narcosis
The good news is that narcosis can be managed.
The first steps are to recognize that it is there and understand what it is doing to you. Then you must train yourself to focus on important issues such as time, depth, and the dive plan and not allow yourself to get distracted.
Exercise mental control over everything you do. Move slowly and deliberately when carrying out a task at depth. You are more likely to get it right if you do something in a sequence of short steps, rather than try and do it quickly.
You can also use memory cues. Technical divers wear wrist slates to remind them of complex dive plans and experienced instructors carry checklists for training dives. They also make debriefing notes as they go because they know that later they will not be able to depend on their memory for the things that happened while they were at depth.
Probably the best defense against narcosis is to rehearse team rescue and self-rescue drills and skills until they become instinctive. Then, in an emergency, you will automatically choose the correct response without thinking about it.
Contributory Factors
A number of factors can aggravate narcosis. These include fatigue, alcohol, stress, cold, and dark water. Anticipating the effect of these additional factors is the key to dealing with them. For instance, use a drysuit in cold water, minimize alcohol intake, and get a good night’s sleep before a deep diving day.
Final Word
Narcosis is something to be understood and managed, rather than feared. There is no law against diving under the influence but proceed towards deep diving gradually. Don’t just go off the deep end straight away!
There is nothing to fear about accidentally going into deco as long as you know what to do when it happens.
