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Are you looking to share your love of SCUBA and educate others? There’s no better way to do so than becoming a SCUBA instructor. Our private SCUBA instructor diving courses open the door for serious divers to turn their passion into a way of life. With the determination, practice, and proper certifications, you’ll be able to teach people about the sport you love – and get paid in the process. Join Dreaming Sea Divers for Instructor Development Courses, happening October 16th-24th, 2022!

Private SCUBA certification

DIVEMASTER/ASSISTANT INSTRUCTOR COURSE

This private SCUBA certificationcourse enables participants to obtain the first level of professional diver in the SCUBA industry: Divemaster. This distinction will allow you to work in the industry to guide certified divers, assist instructors with training, and teach a select number of courses (like refreshers).

Those interested must be 18 years or older, have a minimum of 40 logged dives, and must bring their own basic SCUBA equipment. Additionally, a Rescue Diver and CPR Cert from and recognized agency is a prerequisite. Throughout the course’s instruction, participants will conduct activities like:

Please note that the Divemaster Course does not include rental gear, so come prepared! For more information, visit the course event page. We’re excited for you to partake in our West Palm Beach SCUBA instruction to become a role model and mentor to fellow divers!

South Florida SCUBA diving certification

OPEN WATER SCUBA INSTRUCTOR CERTIFICATION COURSE

This course grants participants the knowledge to teach and certify students from Open Water up to the Divemaster level. Through the Instructor Development portion of the course, you will learn how to teach to the standards of SCUBA Diving International. Scenarios will be presented to test your aptitude in dealing with potential difficulties students may have along the way. We’ll also go over the business aspects of diving so you can be armed with the know-how to make diving a career. From there, you will be evaluated on your instruction abilities.

Those interested must be 18 years or older, have a minimum of 100 logged dives, and must bring their own SCUBA equipment. A Divemaster or Assistant Instructor and CPR Certification from a recognized agency is a prerequisite. Throughout the course’s instructional workshops, participants will learn about:

Please note that the Instructor Development Course does not include rental gear, so come prepared! It does, however, come with the Pro OWSI Kit. For more information, visit the course event page. Come learn from a renowned South Florida SCUBA diving certification instructor, and leave with the experience to start your own operation!

Become an Instructor to Teach SCUBA Diving Lessons

As an avid diver, you know that your skills and equipment can take you to places otherwise unimaginable. The best way to show the world below the surface to others is educate and get them physched about diving.

When taking one of Dreaming Sea Divers’ Instructor Development Courses, you’ll go home with the necessary skills to begin your journey as a professional dive instructor. Reach out to John and the crew to reserve a spot on our SCUBA West Palm Beach diving course roster. We’ll see you with fins on and an appetite for learning!

SCUBA Dive in Florida!

Dreaming Sea Divers is located in West Palm Beach, Florida; one of the best diving locations in the world. Renowned for its diverse marine life, variety of reef depths, and close proximity to the Gulf Stream, West Palm Beach has a little bit of everything. Our Florida SCUBA diving lessons are your ticket to beautiful scenery, remarkable aquatic life, and an unmatched location. See why you should book an experience with Dreaming Sea Divers!  

A Variety of Wrecks and Reefs to Explore

SCUBA diving FL has a bounty of wrecks and reefs! There’s Breakers Reef, a two-mile long stretch of coral reef that's home to Caribbean tropical marine life, green morays, spiny lobster and fish from the Pelagic zone. Next is The Corridor, known as a collection of “shipreefs” for hosting many wrecks that you can dive to on a single tank. Mere minutes from the Palm Beach Inlet, you can find the 185-foot Greek luxury liner Mizpah in 90 feet of water, the retired PC1170, a 165-foot patrol boat sitting off of its bow and a path of rubble leading to the Amaryllis: a massive 441-foot freighter that slammed into Singer Island in ‘65.

When you come our way for West Palm Beach SCUBA diving lessons, you'll be amazed at the scenery in our clear blue waters. The shallowest depths we dive to in the reefs are 40 feet on top and 60 feet in the sand. Our deeper reefs start at 65 feet and drop to 90 feet in the sand. Many of our reefs have a double ledge system advantage where we can weave back and forth to save us bottom time and explore the view. This includes several wrecks starting at 65 feet down that have been intentionally sunk to attract marine life and promote coral growth. Some of these wrecks are even accessible to enter and look around inside!  

Our Aquatic Life

May through August are the best months to observe leatherback, green, and loggerhead turtles nesting on the beaches and swimming back to the reefs. We see plenty of hawksbill turtles as well, though they don’t mate and nest here in Palm Beach. On our “Wreck Treks,” we are often joined by schools of Goliath grouper fish, and sometimes we see several species of sharks which can be photographed safely from a distance. Between August and September, it's possible to see over 30 giant groupers that congregate here to mate.

The dive sites we visit are populated with many species of moray eels, angelfish, butterfly fish, grunts, and snappers. Occupying our reefs are loggerhead, Kemp’s Ridley, hawksbill, and green turtles, octopus and squid, and anemones that house tiny shrimp. If we’re lucky, the manta rays, whale sharks and great white sharks may make a special appearance!

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Our reefs are full of game fish and crustaceans, if you want to dine after your dive! Palm Beach hosts crabs, lobsters, clams, scallops, hogfish, snapper, grouper and cobia. Lobster hunting season is early August through the end of March, if you want to catch dinner eight months out of the year! Spotting the spikey lionfish is probably the coolest, though not so much for our reefs. This species is invasive and harms the reefs - but you could help by catching them to eat, if they suit your palette. 

Blue Heron Bridge at Phil Foster Park is a world famous dive site, right here in Palm Beach. Divers have come here for decades to observe and photograph rare marine life that are hard to find elsewhere. These include batfish, frogfish, seahorses, manatees, sea robins and flying gurnards, bumblebee shrimp, spotted eagle rays, yellow spotted stingrays and pipefish. In addition, you can enjoy many types of blennies, tropical fish, and eels. What more could you ask for? Something else great: the deepest spot here is 23 feet, which means we do not have to be concerned about decompression limits. Keep in mind though, we are limited here by a daily two-hour window based around Slack High Tide (the weakest currents) and air consumption. We'll go over all of that during your South Florida SCUBA diving certification.

More Top Dive Sites In So. FL For Your Bucket List

Jupiter

Jupiter is referred to as a small drinking town with a fishing problem. There is a famous lighthouse that’s worth climbing and plenty of fun shops and wonderful restaurants, some right on the water. The Square Grouper restaurant is the site where Jimmy Buffet recorded the music video for “It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere” with Alan Jackson. The diving is slight deeper and the currents are normally a little stronger than Palm Beach, but the reefs are filled with tons of life. There are also some exciting wrecks and good hunting spots in Jupiter as well.

Fort Lauderdale

Known as the “Venice of America,” Fort Lauderdale residents are passionate about the water and watersports. There is an artificial reef program that has sent dozens of wrecks to the seafloor, along with three retired oil platforms known as the Tenneco Towers. While these are cool to explore, you may find that several grunts, snappers, sponges and sometimes bull sharks are attracted to these as well! 

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Miami

While best known for its pop culture and beach life, Miami is also a secret diving hub with wrecks that can be visited on a single tank. Go-to sites include the Miss Patricia (a 65-foot steel tug), two M60 tanks, the 110-foot Billy’s Barge, Ben’s Antennae Reef and the Miss Karline, a 100-foot ship lodged in the sand near the Patricia. But, the best is for last: The Spirit Of Miami, a retired Boeing 727 that made its final landing off Key Biscayne! 

Some Final Words Of Diving Wisdom…

To prepare you for all dive sites in South Florida we may visit, you should know that water temperatures range from the mid 70s in winter to the mid 80s in summer and visibility is generally in the sub-100-foot range. 

Dreaming Sea Divers  will ensure that your dive trip in South Florida is easy, comfortable, and the experience of a lifetime! Become a certified diver through our private SCUBA courses and then embark on a private guided underwater tour with instructor John starting at the Blue Heron Bridge, or on one of the many comfortable dive boats! Get in touch with Dreaming Sea Divers today to plan and embark on your unique South Florida diving adventure!

Special note: Interested in becoming a Dive Professional? Check out John's upcoming Instructor Development Courses going on from October 16th - 24th 2022. SPACE IS LIMITED, SIGN UP TODAY!

                                                                                                            

Every day, thousands of people make the decision to take up scuba diving. If you are one of them, congratulations! Diving opens a lifestyle of adventure and new experiences unlike anything in our terrestrial world. You’ll feel weightlessness and interact with marine life of all shapes and sizes. Diving is exciting to be sure, but if you haven’t yet taken the plunge, you probably have questions and might even be a little apprehensive. To help make your transition from land to sea a little more comfortable, let’s explore what it’s like to “get certified.”

What is an Open Water Certification?

Open Water Diver is the introduction certification level that allows divers to dive independently—meaning not under the direct supervision of a qualified, active status diving instructor. Generally speaking, being “certified” means having successfully completed this level of diver training.

Open Water divers are certified to a depth of 60’ in saltwater and in conditions similar to those you were trained in.

You might be surprised to learn there are dozens—maybe hundreds—of certification levels including advanced diving options and countless specialty certifications like wreck diving and underwater photography.

After Open Water, Advanced Diver training is the typical next step. As an Advanced Open Water Diver, you’ll be introduced to more diving experiences including underwater navigation and the opportunity to explore depths to 100 feet.

open water certification

Getting Started

While it is great to learn about future training options, you probably have questions about what your Open Water Diver Course will be like. Common questions among future Open Water Diver students are: Do I have to take my mask off? Do you need to be able to swim to scuba dive? Is it expensive?

Of course, there are countless questions would-be divers ask, but let’s examine these a bit. To begin, mask skills, i.e. removing and replacing your mask are important to scuba diving. A lot of divers fear removing their masks but are surprised to learn it is an easy skill to master.

Removing and Replacing Your Mask

First off, removing your mask underwater is the same sensation as ordinary swimming without a mask. It’s just water on your face. Something about breathing from a scuba regulator makes it seem more serious, but it really isn’t.

Even the slightest amount of exhalation pressure through your nose will keep you from sucking in water, so water up your nose isn’t a problem after minimal practice. For most divers, it’s never a problem. You can breathe normally without your mask. The weirdest part is that, while SCUBA diving, we only breathe in through our mouth which takes a minute or two to get used to. Once you have that down, clearing and even removing and then swimming without a mask on with the gear is simple.

Clearing your mask simply requires exhaling through your nose while you gradually tilt your head upward. Some masks hold so little water that even the head tilt isn’t necessary. Like most diving skills, you’ll quickly find just the right combination tilt and exhalation volume to clear your mask nearly instantly. Some students don’t believe that adding air to a mask will replace the water inside but it works!

The important message here is, don’t freak out about taking your mask off! It’s no big deal. Promise!

What about swimming? Do I have to be a good swimmer to scuba dive?

You will need to pass a simple proficiency test, which includes swimming 200 yards freestyle OR 300 yards with your mask, snorkel, and fins. To clarify, “freestyle” in this case means swim that distance pretty much any way you can without the aid of supplemental floatation. In other words, no blow-up ducky or water wings will be allowed.

Some divers choose the mask, snorkel & fins option and just do laps at a manageable pace. The exact number of laps depends on the pool you train in. In any case, it isn’t too much of a challenge for most people. If you set a world record lap time, your instructor won’t be able to verify it to the powers that be, so just go slow!

In addition to the swim, you’ll also be asked to tread water for 10 minutes. The “tread” is another frequent panic point, but seriously, you’ll only be treading water for ten minutes. You’d do it without a second thought if it weren’t a class.

In any case, that’s it for the swimming assessments. Not so hard, right? You don’t need to be able to swim, just snorkel and tread water.

what is the padi open water certification

What about the cost? Diving is expensive, right?

Learning to scuba dive requires access to gear and a minimum level of training (Open Water Scuba Certification). Expensive is a subjective term, but for most who wish to learn to dive, the cost isn’t difficult to manage. Diving equipment can be rented and budget-minded divers often purchase one piece of gear at a time.

In most locations, diving instruction isn’t overly costly. Open Water Scuba Diver is a thorough course that you’ll only take once, so make sure you are comfortable with your instructor. Saving a few pennies in exchange for a miserable experience isn’t worth it.

In most cases, the “resort courses” you find in popular tourist locales are rushed and taught to the maximum ratios of student to instructor. These are typically more expensive than you’ll find where you live as well. If you are planning your first diving vacation, we recommend you learn to dive locally even if you’ll be renting gear onsite. You’ll enjoy better training and spend your days diving rather than in a class.

Focus on what you are excited about.

People new to diving often worry about mask and regulator skills, fixating on the things they fear. Don’t. You’ll find that it just takes a little practice to easily master them.

Diving is a community. You’ll be welcomed into our diving lifestyle with open arms. During your open water course, you’ll likely make lifelong friends and change your own view of the world around you. And you’ll probably never plan a vacation quite the same way.

If you’re still not sure, call us to schedule what some call a “try dive.” Try dive isn’t the best term, however, since you’ll have an opportunity to learn some of the skills you’ll master during your Open Water Diver course.

Whether you are ready to fearlessly charge into your certification course or are apprehensive about the unknown, diving offers a lifetime of real adventures. Ask us anything and we’ll be open and honest with you about what you should expect!

Stay Tuned for another Blog about what it’s like after you’re an Open Water Certified Diver!

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With the modern invention of the SCUBA tank, exploration of the oceans has been changed dramatically, but still, people continue to free dive. Ancient people all around the world have been exploring the oceans for centuries without an air cylinder.

However, in the debate of SCUBA diving vs. freediving, the differences go deeper than just the equipment. While both are a similar adventure, the technique and overall experience between the two is vastly different, and each person has a particular perception of the dive. It is truly a matter of taste.

Gear

The most obvious difference between SCUBA diving vs. freediving is the use of an air tank and other relatively cumbersome equipment like masks, gloves, regulators, depth gauges, and in today’s age, a dive computer. In contrast, while you really don’t need anything to go free diving, the most basic equipment includes a mask and fins. It’s also common to wear a wetsuit and a snorkel depending on your objective. With freediving, the most important thing you dive with is your dive buddy.

Technique

When people started using tanks to explore oceans the technique had to evolve with the technology. SCUBA divers must pay careful attention to their ascents, descents and take routine safety stops to avoid decompression sickness. They have to be aware of the nitrogen levels in their bodies. This makes SCUBA diving a slower, more thought out adventure than freediving.

On the other hand, freedivers don’t have to worry about nitrogen levels or slow ascents and descents. Freedivers have much more maneuverability than SCUBA divers. However, freedivers are challenged to hold their breath throughout the entire dive. Freediving requires a great deal of practice and training to be able to stay down for an extended period of time.

freediving

Experience

While the differences in gear affect the technique, the technique affects the experience. So if you’re SCUBA diving, you will have the advantage of staying underwater for longer. The longer you stay down, the more time you have to observe marine life and underwater geographical features. This means the longer you stay underwater, the more your eyes will adjust to the dark lighting which can increase the vibrancy creating a totally different image than a freediver. The length of time also influences how much you can explore. For example, if you’re going down to an underwater shipwreck or canyon you will be able to explore it more thoroughly.

However, freediving also has its benefits. Without the need for a tank, a freediver is able to swim smoother through the water and have a different experience with marine life. There is no added noise or disturbance because you are simply holding your breath. This can allow a freediver to get up close to schools of fish or turtles without scaring them off. 

It has also been pointed out by avid ocean explorers that one of the biggest differences between SCUBA diving vs. freediving is the sense of awareness. When you are SCUBA diving you are enabled to mainly focus externally on your surroundings and gear. You are constantly analyzing these things and reacting to external forces underwater. 

In freediving, it has been described as a more inward-focused experience where you are challenging yourself while still exploring. Your perception of yourself and your surroundings are altered when your mind is in a survival state, and you have to pay careful attention to what your body is telling you.

Dreaming Sea Divers

While the debate of SCUBA diving vs. freediving can go on forever, Dreaming Sea Divers has the best of both worlds. Here at Dreaming Sea Divers, we offer classes and guided experiences for both types of diving. If you have any questions or want to learn more about us, head over to our contact page or give us a call at (607) 624-6770.

Talk to an Expert

SCUBA diving is a sport that many people have heard about, whether it was in movies or on television, in the news, or in books they had read. Some take an immediate interest in it and some stay on the sidelines and don’t really revisit the topic. The training agencies are all standardized so that we all teach the same curriculum across the different agencies with very little variation. But unless you’re learning from a certified diver who’s absorbed the material well, you may have been misinformed about what exactly SCUBA Diving involves. Here’s a list of some of these misconceptions!

Divers Use an Oxygen Tank

Even some of my favorite TV shows (i.e. Money Heist, Season 3) get this wrong and it’s frustrating because it comes off as lazy to assume this is true and not do five minutes of research. Recreational (non-commercial or no decompression divers) do not use pure oxygen while diving. What we use at the entry-level is what we refer to as “Air”. It is comprised of the same mixture of Oxygen (~21%) and Nitrogen (~79%) that is in our atmosphere that we take in with every breath here on the surface. In your Open Water Diver Course, you will learn why this is safe. In your Enriched Air Nitrox course, you will learn how to use more than 21% oxygen, but no more than 40% oxygen safely and why divers choose to do so.

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Divers Must Learn College-Level Math and Physics

Okay, I know I just threw some numbers at you, but there is little math and physics that you need to truly memorize. What you do learn is how pressure affects us and our bodies, about the gas that we breathe, and how pressure increases the deeper we go. We benefit so much from technology in the 21st century in so many facets of our lives and diving is no different. Computers keep track of how deep we are, how long we have been down, and where our limits are in depth and time. This is all calculated in real-time. You need only to understand the concepts of what the computer is doing. Blindly following any computer is unsafe. Once you know the basics of diving physics, you know how to trust your computer.

I’ll Run Out of Air

Why would you run out of air? Air management is a vital and simple skill. The basic rule is: pay attention. This is a very preventable emergency. You learn how to avoid running out of air by monitoring your gas, letting your buddy know how much air you have, and learning when to leave the bottom. Another beautiful thing about technology is that some computers also know how much air you have and can alert you when you get to a preset amount.

The Pressure is Overwhelming at First, but Divers Get Used to It

In the mid-1900s, Freedivers were defying what so many physicists hypothesized. That is, that the enormous pressure of the ocean would crack a man’s ribcage past a certain point (~100m/333ft). The truth is, our bodies are well prepared to survive incredibly deep dives with the proper training. Pressure affects air spaces and the air spaces we take down with us are our mask, ears, sinuses, and lungs. The ears and the mask are the most noticeably affected by the pressure and in these air spaces. Have you ever tried to dive to the bottom of the pool and experienced discomfort in your ears? Have you ever had sinus or ear discomfort on an airplane? The physics are the same. We simply need to blow out of our nose gently while pinching our nostrils and we do this before we experience discomfort.

scuba diving florida

It's Dark Underwater

This could turn into a physics lesson but the truth is, I’m not qualified to teach it! Water does absorb light and color, yes. But natural light penetrates the ocean and other bodies of clear water for hundreds of feet. You would bring a light if you wanted to look into crevasses in the coral or perhaps under ledges. We do this especially when we’re hunting for lobsters. Underwater photography also calls for additional light sources sometimes, but not always. In general, you needn’t worry about the darkness of the ocean.

Divers Must be Excellent Swimmers

Swimmers who have trained and competed in, say high school or college, do generally make good divers. This, however, is not a prerequisite. Children as early as 8 years old can try SCUBA in a pool and students as young as 10 years old can be Junior Open Water Diver certified to a depth of 40ft. There are also handicap-able SCUBA divers. I once spent two days doing exploration dives with a 17-year young woman who was only able to use one leg. Divers come in many forms and the sport does not disclude people who don’t regularly swim laps. While diving, you’re using your legs with the help of fins for propulsion and the way you move through the water on SCUBA is very different than swimming laps.

Divers Must Always Beware of Sharks

The truth is, we’re going into the sharks' house and we’re so lucky when we get to see sharks in the wild. We’re wearing a SCUBA unit that makes us sound like Darth Vader when we breathe. We also blow bubbles while we breathe. Sharks are not used to hearing Darth Vader and they’re not used to seeing bubbles in the water so our breathing generally scares them away. If we don’t bring dead fish with us in the water or shoot a fish while we’re there, sharks stay at a very safe distance from us and sadly don’t normally come close enough for a great photo. It’s rare moments when we get a good shot and a closer interaction but I’ve spent years diving with sharks and have never seen them be aggressive towards divers. I’ve never been bothered by barracudas either.

Talk to an Expert

Wondering how we got our name? Well, here's your answer!

The founder of Dreaming Sea Divers (DSD), John, knew he was ready to branch out and start his own company, and start training people the way he has seen his students learn the best. That is, at their pace, in an unintimidating environment, in a private SCUBA class with their instructor, who is there every step of the way. This personal and private approach separates him from the rest by eliminating the large groups at a devastating discount with fine print. The positive approach John employs sets him apart from some militant type instructors with scare tactics. John has more tools in his toolbox.

Well, you can’t have a business without a name and Dreaming Sea Divers is personal to John! He’s has had a strong affinity for Dave Matthews Band since high school, referring to them as his “desert island band”. Of their vast catalog of songs, John chose a song that he could relate to the ocean, “The Dreaming Tree.” This song is about an old man reminiscing of a tree he used to sit under and think. He used to climb it with a girl that he shared his first kiss with. Sadly, the tree dies because of the progress of the world. Coral bleaching and plastic ending up in the ocean is perhaps a topic for a different blog but the similarities between a tree dying and the ocean needing advocates were obvious to John.

As we said before, Dave Matthew Band has a huge catalog of original songs and performs dozens of covers live. They’ve never played the same show twice, each song is different from night-to-night.

Diving is just like this! No two dives are the same. You never know what you'll see, who you may end up diving with, or where your diving endeavors may take you! John has a huge place in his heart for music, diving, and education. He loves learning new music as much as he loves learning and spreading his knowledge and skills of diving.

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