Why You Should Learn To Scuba Dive?
Posted on Jul 29, 2009 under Scuba Diving | No Comment
August has been an exciting month for scubadiving enthusiasts. With the finding of Blackbeard’s flagship off the coast of North Carolina, the USS Grunion off the coast of Alaska and an underwater city near Japan, now is a better time than ever to learn to scuba dive.
With a PADI certification course, you’ll spread your time across classroom, pool and open water settings. You’ll learn about the various equipment, maintenance, first aid rescue, in addition to breathing and swimming techniques. Sometimes you can learn to scuba dive in just a few hours, while other times it can take up to four weeks. You can spend $69 at a small resort or $5,000 on an elaborate cruise. It all depends on your personal preferences.
Your imagination’s the limit when it comes to deciding where to take your lessons. For example, Sunrise Divers in Thailand offers a three-day, beginner, PADI-certified course plus two beach dives, two boat dives and a group lesson for $295. Intermediates can take a three-day rescue diver course in Egypt for $332. More advanced divers may want to spend four weeks in Honduras taking the PADI-certified divemaster course, where they’ll learn to become instructors and underwater tour guides. Five days all-inclusive at Australia’s Barrier Reef could set you back $562, but any seasoned diver will tell you it’s well worth it. Once you learn to scuba dive, you will never really forget. Once certified, you may want to add an $80, three-hour refresher course onto your Mexico vacation. You can check out www.adventuresportholidays.com to find a diving vacation that suits you.
When you learn to scuba dive, a whole new world opens up. Whether you’re in search of wildlife and plants or shipwrecks and treasure, this lifetime hobby is bound to be a rewarding one. Some even consider giving a scuba package to a loved one for a holiday or birthday. Everyone — from fifteen to fifty — can enjoy this opportunity.

