Στο βίντεο παρουσιάζονται οι βασικές ασκήσεις του προγράμματος Open Water Diver, όπως αυτές διδάσκονται μετά τον πρώτο κύκλο εκμάθησης του καθιερωμένου εξοπλισμού καταδύσεων αναψυχής.
As a new diver (who just finished OW Certification at 64) I found this a great review before starting to dive with friends. I wish there was a Part II with things like sharing gas line and ascending, weight belt removal, etc. Once I learned how easy the emergency techniques are, my panic went away and I feel comfortable even at depth. Thank you Spyros.
Maestro,Maestro Maestro!!! Usted me acompaño y fue mi pilar hasta certificarme!!!hoy soy un buzo que lo admira y espera algún día bucear junto a Usted.gracias desde Argentina
This is very helpful, performing the skills in neutral buoyancy is more realistic than performing them on your knees. In case of a real emergency, you won't have time to look for a sandy bottom and get on your knees.
@@antoncrowley7342 Sorry but I disagree. This is just a reminder for people with a degree and not a diving course. Anyone with a basic dive course understands perfectly. To learn you should go to a dive school.
aJente Peña de la Zia Being that he’s demonstrating “Open Water Diver Course Skills” one can assume his target audience are new divers or possibly new instructors. I can’t read the language in the description, maybe it says it’s a refresher or maybe it actually is an overview of what you’ll learn. If you can translate that would be great, but I stand by my comment as I was clearly trying to help (common practice in the diving community) the instructor convey information that may be confusing or intimidating to a new diver. If you’re assuming that I was expecting this to be a replacement for the Open Water Diver Course then I agree with you, everyone should take the course at a reputable dive shop with a licensed instructor to become a “certified” diver. Trying to learn to dive from RU-vid videos is not best practice for becoming a safe diver. I agree with the comment above (even gave it a 👍🏼) stating the this diver is clearly skilled and more info would be helpful. Thank you for your comment, safe diving and look out for flappy snag hazards.
@@antoncrowley7342 I am not assuming anything at all, just have a different opinion from yours, that's it. In my opinion less is more and all titles at the beginning of each action are more than enough.
I suggest you change to a pair of thermoplastic fins. Your pair of jetfins are negatively buoyant, which will waste extra effort when you levitate. Just for reference