Do you want to be a freediver? Perhaps the
thought of descending to depths of 100 metres or more on a single breath gets
you all excited. Perhaps you’re a mainstream diver who’s tired of strapping on
all that equipment every time you go in the water, tired of scaring away all
that marine life with your bubbles and Darth Vader breathing noises. Or perhaps, the thought of having to spend another small fortune to buy another
piece of unnecessary “technical” kit just to keep up with the diving Jones’ has
finally got to you. Maybe you’re a new age, mystical sort of person who adopts
the lotus position whenever you can and believes freediving could help you get
closer to nature, to balance your life, to free your mind whilst you free your
body of oxygen. Altogether now.. Ohmmm. Perhaps you’re the sort who’s looking
for a new challenge and the thought of pushing your body to very edge of it’s
physiological capabilities in search of competitive glory is the very thing, or
perhaps you just fancy Tanya Streeter and want to see her in that bikini close
up. Or maybe, just maybe, you’re the sort of person who just thinks that being
able to descend to twenty-metres for a few minutes at a time unencumbered by
tanks, regulators, and people called Brad would be a bit of fun when you go on
holiday. Now, whichever category you fall into, you’re probably thinking to
yourself that you should get some training before you take the plunge so to speak.
Freediving, after all, is rather dangerous and at its competitive zenith it can
be positively fatal but where do you get that training?
Luckily there are a multitude of training
organisations out there ready to teach you to stop breathing in exchange for
cash and in this very month, PADI is launching its own freediving courses. The
course tiers will be PADI freediver, PADI advanced freediver and PADI master
freediver. There will also be several grades of instructor, freediver
instructor, advanced freediver instructor, master freediver instructor and
finally freediver instructor trainer. A basic freediver course will also be
included which, according to PADI, will prepare swimmers for freediving in
“confined water”.
When we first heard that PADI was going to
launch it’s own freediving courses our little group immediately thought of the
Mel Brooks film Blazing Saddles and one scene in particular where the Mexican
bandits refuse to be deputised by the films villain. Offered the deputy
sheriffs badge, the moustachioed brigands reply with heavy accents: “Badgeez!
We don’t neeeed no steenkin' badgeez! PADI likes badges and judging by the
bewildering array of tiers they’ve developed they’re going to have a lot of
badges to sell wannabe freedivers. This is probably being a bit unfair on PADI,
as we say there are a whole host of companies, associations and operators out
there offering freediving training and all of them have structured tiers of
training with equally ludicrous titles and there is currently nothing to
suggest that PADI’s courses will be any better or any worse than those already
available.
With so many training organisations out
there then, which one should you chose? Well before you hand over your hard
earned cash in exchange for a few days training and a badge that can be
eventually sewn onto your bodybag we’d like to offer you some humble
advice. Before you do anything you need
to speak to an independent expert – your doctor. Tell him or her that you want
to learn to freedive and this means holding your breath for long periods. If
your doctor suggests you should probably stop smoking first or that your morbid
obesity, diabetes, incompetent heart valve, that pacemaker you’ve just had
fitted or the fact you cannot swim makes you singularly unsuitable for
freediving we think you should probably stick to a little light gardening. If
however your doctor can find no medical reason why you shouldn’t go freediving
we suggest you go and have a look at the freediving clubs in your area. Clubs
are a great way to meet like-minded people and get a feel of the experience and quality
of the available training. The club may well have their own instructors or be
able to direct you to instructors they’ve used before. Speak to the instructor
face-to-face, find out how they trained, what their experience is. This will
give you a sense for the depth and quality of the training they offer. There
are many experienced divers out there, but just because they are experienced
doesn’t mean they can teach. We’ve met a lot of divers with instructor badges
sewn onto their baseball caps and some of them are, to be blunt, damn idiots.
So finding an instructor that can teach and that you trust is imperative. You
are, after all, putting your life in their hands.
Make sure that the company/club that is training
you is freediving based. What we mean by this is that the company or club was
established and run by freedivers. A good example of this is Freediving Instructors International or Performance Freediving, which were established by
Martin Stepanek and Kirk Krack respectively. Check that the courses on offer
have an AIDA equivalent. AIDA is the international freediving umbrella
organisation for competitive freediving. We also suggest that you speak to or
join your countries national freediving association who will be able to offer
advice and guidance on training, clubs, competitions etc. Finally remember that
a couple of days training does not mean you are an expert. Freediving is a
competitive sport, SCUBA diving is a recreational sport and there is a big
difference in the type of training and type of people you will come across.
That doesn’t mean that you cannot be a recreational freediver but it does mean
that you have to really understand your own limits. Don’t be pressed or bullied
into pushing those limits by others who are overly competitive or talk
nonsense about “mystical experiences” and in freediving you will meet these
people. Freediving is, by its nature, inherently dangerous so start by enjoying
yourself and build slowly, very slowly, or you will kill yourself. Finally,
remember that the training you undertake should be about knowledge gathering.
It should equip the mind and body to deal with the demands of the sport, it’s
not and never should be about collecting badges. As those Mexicans in the film
said: Badges! We don’t need no stinking badges – even if they’ve got the word
“master” on them.
Diving Safety
Diving Safety
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