Local Dive Shop Recommendation?

Raoul5Duke

Active member
I got PADI certified about 25 years ago, but haven't been diving in probably 20 years. I was thinking about getting re-certified or doing a refresher course and getting involved in scuba diving again. I was wondering if anyone has had good experiences with a local shop they would recommend? I live on the west side of Cleveland in Avon Lake, so something closer to that area would be preferred. Thanks for any suggestions.
 
I got PADI certified about 25 years ago, but haven't been diving in probably 20 years. I was thinking about getting re-certified or doing a refresher course and getting involved in scuba diving again. I was wondering if anyone has had good experiences with a local shop they would recommend? I live on the west side of Cleveland in Avon Lake, so something closer to that area would be preferred. Thanks for any suggestions.


Theres a place by me in Willoughby called "just add water" I know they do certs for like $250. I am looking into doing it . they seem to have a nice set up
 
just add water II in fairview park

just add water II in fairview park

My son was certified through them
They have refresher courses
 
I would also recommend Just add Water and know many divers who would agree. There is a shop in Elyria which myself and friends do not recommend from past experiences.

As stated in previous post, Just add Water has a second store in Fairview Park. Check their website, they are having an open house / sale / 'I hate winter party' this Sat. 20th, 11-5 at the Willoughby location.

Dilemma is how to make both LEAR Swap and dive gear sale.
 
I always wanted to get certified but I thought, whats the point?
Tell me if I am wrong, is it only good to be certified, if you are diving in some kind of carribean areas? I've heard of some cool dives n Ohio.
I dove shallow in the Carribean and heard that if i'm certified, I can do much more. Is that true?
What are the bennefits?

I'm a noobe.
 
The certification is all about training you to handle situations so you don't panic. Second reason is you must be certified to rent gear and tanks; example would be you and a buddy want to do some independent shore diving. Yes, you can snorkel, snuba and do resort dives to 20 feet and see a lot of amazing corals and fish. At that depth, if something goes awry you can surface with minimal risk/concern. At 60 feet it is quite different. Again, certification and training will teach you the about decompression, equalizing, risks of holding your breath and actually practice handling scenarios / situations so you don't panic. Examples of situations include a flooded mask, free flow regulator, someone kicking your regulator from your mouth and my personal favorite is your wife vomiting through her reg. (it attracts fish like you can't imagine :))
So why go beyond 20 ft; in short, not all destinations have shallow diving. I did Flower Gardens Marine Sanctuary in the middle of the Gulf and the top of the reef was 55 feet down. Off of Fort Lauderdale many dive sites are artificial reefs created by sinking old ships and they typically start at 60-70 ft. and go 100-120 feet to the bottom.

Local diving: very few people are aware that the great lakes is one of few places in the world where you can see 200 year old Schooners still largely intact. The best ones are in water deeper than 80+ feet. This is due to the cold, freshwater, dark conditions and depth prevents winter ice from damaging them. When wrecks sink in salt water there is a marine worm that consumes the wood. Intact salt water wrecks are typically modern steel ships / submarines since 1900. I have done some of the wrecks in Lake Erie because I love diving and it is what we have local; my wife has no interest in diving local. Conditions are cold, green, visibility can be poor and there are no colorful fish or corals. Quarries are about the same but a bit warmer. Most people who get serious about Great Lakes wreck diving will take drysuit training and rent or purchase one for warmth.

For us, scuba coincides with a tropical destination vacation during Cleveland winters. My aquarium holds me over the other 51 weeks of the year:twitch: . Always glad to answer questions or talk diving.
 
The certification is all about training you to handle situations so you don't panic. Second reason is you must be certified to rent gear and tanks; example would be you and a buddy want to do some independent shore diving. Yes, you can snorkel, snuba and do resort dives to 20 feet and see a lot of amazing corals and fish. At that depth, if something goes awry you can surface with minimal risk/concern. At 60 feet it is quite different. Again, certification and training will teach you the about decompression, equalizing, risks of holding your breath and actually practice handling scenarios / situations so you don't panic. Examples of situations include a flooded mask, free flow regulator, someone kicking your regulator from your mouth and my personal favorite is your wife vomiting through her reg. (it attracts fish like you can't imagine :))
So why go beyond 20 ft; in short, not all destinations have shallow diving. I did Flower Gardens Marine Sanctuary in the middle of the Gulf and the top of the reef was 55 feet down. Off of Fort Lauderdale many dive sites are artificial reefs created by sinking old ships and they typically start at 60-70 ft. and go 100-120 feet to the bottom.

Local diving: very few people are aware that the great lakes is one of few places in the world where you can see 200 year old Schooners still largely intact. The best ones are in water deeper than 80+ feet. This is due to the cold, freshwater, dark conditions and depth prevents winter ice from damaging them. When wrecks sink in salt water there is a marine worm that consumes the wood. Intact salt water wrecks are typically modern steel ships / submarines since 1900. I have done some of the wrecks in Lake Erie because I love diving and it is what we have local; my wife has no interest in diving local. Conditions are cold, green, visibility can be poor and there are no colorful fish or corals. Quarries are about the same but a bit warmer. Most people who get serious about Great Lakes wreck diving will take drysuit training and rent or purchase one for warmth.

For us, scuba coincides with a tropical destination vacation during Cleveland winters. My aquarium holds me over the other 51 weeks of the year:twitch: . Always glad to answer questions or talk diving.

Thanks for taking the time to write that up, great info to know.
 
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