The PADI Self-Reliant Diver specialty course will teach you to recognise and accept the role of the buddy system and its contributions to diver safety while identifying and developing self-reliance and independence while scuba diving.
Self-Reliant diving is a collection of skills and attitudes that allow a diver to undertake certain kinds of dives alone or with limited buddy support. Self-reliant divers use redundant gear, such as two cutting tools, two computers, two masks, redundant breathing systems, redundant lights, and so forth. Just having the gear and jumping into the water with it is only part of the story. Self-Reliant diving is about discipline as much as anything else. Because you have limited or zero support from a buddy, dive planning and correct execution of the plan are critical. There can be no shortcuts taken in planning or gearing up, or technique.
Who should take this course?
Even if you never plan to dive alone, being able to safely handle your own emergencies certainly is a valuable set of skills to have. It will make you more confident, you’ll be safer overall and more relaxed in the water as a result. There are several diving situations in which separation from your buddy is likely or planned or in which you may want to rely on your own skills rather than those of your buddy.
The travelling diver. If you find yourself by yourself on a boat full of divers, and get paired up with a random buddy, it’s comforting to know that you are able to take care of yourself rather than rely on a stranger’s skills for rescue.
Parents diving with children. When we dive with our children, we’re watching out for them in a big way, but who’s watching out for us?
Photographers and videographers. If you’re shooting video, you may not want the sounds of your buddy’s bubbles to get recorded, so the urge is to shoo him away. Whether you’re shooting video or stills, it takes a pretty devoted buddy to stick with you while you fiddle with your camera’s settings to get just the right shot of that sea horse. Better you and your buddy be trained as Self-Reliant Divers so you can take care of yourselves and check in on each other from . If you’re shooting video, you may not want the sounds of your buddy’s bubbles to get recorded, so the urge is to shoo him away. Whether you’re shooting video or stills, it takes a pretty devoted buddy to stick with you while you time to time.
Wreck Divers and Drift Divers. Both of these diving activities have a high likelihood of buddy separation. Being self-reliant changes being separated from your buddy from an emergency into a manageable situation.
Divemasters, Assistant Instructors, and Instructors. When we’re underwater, we’re focused on our students. Their safety is our Number One concern, and we’re ready to help out at a moment’s notice. However, we pros need to be self-reliant so that we don’t have to count on the skills of a trainee in case of an emergency.
Technical Divers. Team diving is a big concept in the world of technical diving, but every technical diver starts each dive prepared to finish the dive alone if needed.
Course Overview
During the knowledge development portion of the course, we’ll cover dive planning in detail, including teaching you how to determine your Surface Air Consumption (SAC) rate, so that you can later go take air consumption measurements to calculate it.
We’ll also cover how to use your SAC rate to calculate gas requirements for a dive planned to a specified depth and time.
You’ll learn to plan your dive so that you begin your ascent with a sufficient breathing gas reserve to ascend safely and to allow for the unforeseen. Underwater problem-solving is also a focus area.
Mask issues, air supply problems, entanglements, currents, getting lost, BCD malfunctions are all items that will be covered.
Once we’re in the water, you’ll do three dives. Some of the skills are:
Buoyancy control
SAC rate gas consumption measurements
SMB use
Respond to simulated air depletion and regulator free-flow.
Navigation
Your third dive will actually be a fully self-reliant dive. You’ll be in the water with your instructor and the rest of the class, but you’re expected to handle all aspects of dive planning and execution completely on your own. The rest of us will back you up if needed, but the name of the game for this dive is Self-Reliance and Self-confidence.
What You Learn
Dive planning and gas management.
The value and application of the buddy system.
Preparing for and responding to foreseeable diving emergencies.
The philosophy of, and motivation for, diving without a partner.
Potential risks of diving alone, and how to manage those risks.
The value of equipment redundancy and what back-up equipment is needed.
Prerequisites
PADI Advanced Open Water Diver
Have a minimum of 100 logged dives
At least 18 years old
The Scuba Gear You Use
Standard dive equipment required for a dive.
Surface marker buoy, such as a delayed surface marker buoy or lift bag.
Reel with at least 100ft of line.
Redundant gas supply (pony cylinder with regulator or sidemount configuration.)
Redundant dive computer.
Redundant surface signalling devices (visual and audible).
Slate and pencil.
Back-up mask.
How long does it take?
A classroom session with your PADI instructor to ensure you fully understand the theory
There are 3 open water qualifying dives to be completed in 1 day