<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7283410#post7283410 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by 6Speed
How much does it cost to get certified?
I was PADI certified last Fall at the Madison quarry. In fact, I was
in the very last class that SDI held at the quarry. I'm still just a
beginner, and there are several other dive training programs
besides PADI, but here are my still-recent impressions on the
subject.
SCUBA is an expensive hobby. The guys at Pixar were right
to make
P. Sherman 42 Wallaby Way Sydney a dentist.
PADI dive training fees are indeed $250, but by the time you
add in extras, the total cost is closer to $500 if you have a local
quarry and more like $600 if the final dives are in Pelham or at
Vortex Springs near the coast.
Mask, fins, snorkel, weight belt, and weights are about $150
to $200. Misc hidden costs include 1) $50 for the PADI class
materials kit 2) $40 for 2 days of dive-park fees and 3) $100+
for hotel and transportation costs if a nearby quarry isn't
available for your final open water dives.
I highly recommend to anyone serious about PADI dive training
to first buy the $30 PADI
Open Water Diver DVD. The DVD
demonstrates all the concepts you must learn plus all the
tasks you must perform. If you see anything in the video that
REALLY freaks you out (like clausterphobia, sharing a regulator,
or removing your mask under water), then save your money
and don't dive. But if you're like me, the DVD will ease your
fears and make you even more excited about diving.
The $30 for the DVD is also money well-spent simply as a study
aid. You must still read the entire PADI manual, complete the
homework, and pass the tests to get certified. But the DVD
puts you way ahead of the learning curve. I plan to go back
and watch the DVD again before taking my advanced training
this Summer.
Getting certified is easy. Honestly, the hardest part is the initial
swimming ability test. You must swim 4 laps in an olympic pool.
Backstroke, sidestroke, freestyle, whatever. No time limit. Oh,
that
sounds easy, but almost every guy in the class was
wheezing and sidestroking by the 3rd lap. I'm a fat computer
nerd who never excercises, and I nearly had a heart attack,
but I didn't finish last dagnabit.
All the basic dive-knowledge and safety drills quicky becomes
habit. After that, SCUBA turns out to be just lots and lots of
underwater swimming. It's a mode of transportation. SCUBA is to
reef-keepers what mountain climbing is to bald eagle watchers.
If you loved spending hours in the pool or lake as a kid, and
swimming underwater is like flying Superman-style to you, then
you'll absolutely love SCUBA. Highly recommended. If you just
want to see corals and fish up close, and despise the idea of
swallowing a bit of seawater or having bits of seaweed in your
hair, then stick with aquariums.