Solo Diving

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Solo Diving

November 15, 2015 - 03:53
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I have a confession. I’ve gone solo diving before. (Mom, I’m sorry.) I’ve been a scuba instructor for eleven years, diving since I was 15, and have done over 4,000 dives, I believe sometimes I am more comfortable underwater than I am on land (seriously, fish can be much easier to get along with than people).

Close encounter with a whale shark at the Great Barrier Reef. Photo by Brandi Mueller.

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There is much controversy on this subject, and as my disclaimer, these are my personal thoughts and experiences directly related to my recent trip with Mike Ball Dive Expeditions (MBDE). MBDE was probably the first and currently one of the few commercial dive operations that allows certified solo divers with the required safety equipment to dive alone on their trips. Solo diving is becoming quite trendy right now, and more shops and boats are starting to teach and recognize solo certifications.

MBDE and solo diving

MBDE is no stranger to solo diving. Mike Ball actually pioneered the practice in 1997, creating his own course for his dive boats, in order to teach divers safe solo diving; and he promoted it to guests. These days, the operation is teaching the SSI Solo Diver certification onboard, which I took, completed, and then dived solo for most of my time with the operation.

Nothing is worse than showing up for the trip of a lifetime on your own than being forced to be paired up with a dive buddy who may be at a different experience level or have different dive goals than yourself. For me, the solo course was a no-brainer. I am an avid underwater photographer, with the tendency to spend excessive amounts of time with a single fish. Dive buddies (those who are not photographers of the similar obsession) are annoyed by me. Dive guides hate me, because they are leading a dive with several people, and I am the troublemaker who stops to take 20 photos of a butterflyfish. Pretty soon, they have continued on and lost me.

The course

The course is relatively straightforward; there is a book to read, some questions to answer and skills to do underwater, such as showing the ability to switch to your back-up air source, navigation and good buoyancy. Pre-course dive requirements include being an advanced diver, having at least 100 logged dives and being 21 years old (or 18 and a certified dive professional).

The goal of the course is to make a diver more self-sufficient, which is great whether a diver intends to dive solo or not. The more confident a diver is in their ability to handle any situation with or without their buddy, the safer they (and their buddy) will be.

After taking the course, the instructor and other crew members make it known that you do not have to dive solo every dive. You can take the course and still dive with the dive guides, or they will pair you up with a buddy. Also, the dive guides do not shun you for being a solo diver; if they find something cool, and you are in the area, they will still signal you over and show the interesting critter to you.

I will say that solo diving on MBDE is sort of solo-lite diving. With up to 28 guests on each trip, it is actually hard to get away from everyone at most dive sites (I might have tried). There are also dive guides in the water on every dive, so if there was a problem, there “may” still be another diver around to help you. (This situation is also good because when you are the only one who sees a whale shark, no one would believe you.)

Mike Ball on solo diving

Mike Ball was kind enough to have a coffee with me post-expedition, and I had lots of questions for him on his thoughts on solo diving. His trips are probably the first commercial operation in dive history to allow, teach and encourage solo divers. He introduced the Mike Ball Safe Solo System in 1997.

Mike told me that someone who “wants” to solo dive is probably already 90 percent ready to. It is like hiking; a hiker who wants to hike alone is most likely already mostly mentally prepared and properly geared-up for the task. By encouraging the course, divers are properly trained, which helps with individual safety as well as safety of the company, and just like any scuba course, completion is determined by the instructor; if they don’t think you’re ready, they won’t certify you. Divers enjoy their trip more because they are diving how they want, and the dive guides can focus their attention on divers who may need or want a little more guidance underwater.

My thoughts

In another confession, I will admit that in the past I have gone out of my way to solo dive. I even have a close friend and dive buddy with whom I have concocted plans in which we get in the water together, go our separate ways, and then join up at a determined location at a certain time so that we get back on the boat together. (This only failed when dive guides found us mid-dive nowhere near each other.)

As a certified solo diver, on a boat that accepts the practice, I was able to focus all my mental energy on my own personal awareness and safety (where I was, where the boat was, what was going on around me). Otherwise, I would be thinking about how to dodge the dive guide, worrying about a new-to-me buddy, or feeling guilty about lagging behind the group, taking photos. It just seemed easier being able to and actually doing things the right way (who knew?)

I would venture to say, this course is for everyone, but the act of diving solo is NOT for everyone. The course teaches a diver to be more self-reliant and discusses a lot of common-sense issues about what to do if alone during an emergency. In classical buddy-oriented courses, subjects like these are ignored because they focus entirely on a diver never being alone. Always being with your buddy is a great practice, but in reality, sometimes situations occur where you end up alone even when you tried not to be. This course can help a diver be prepared for those less-than-perfect situations.

In conclusion, as an experienced diver and an underwater photographer, being able to be allowed to safety solo dive helped me immensely to get the shots I wanted without annoying a buddy or dive guide (no one wants to watch me take photos of one clownfish for 30 minutes). On the downside, I missed out on some cool stuff others saw. Not diving with the dive guides who are familiar with the dive sites and all the resident critters made me miss a few cool sightings. On the other hand, I spent several minutes solo over the edge of a 2,000m drop-off, having a semi-spiritual moment with a whale shark before another diver showed up. That was magical, although no one would have believed me if I was the only one who saw it. ■

Brandi Mueller is a PADI IDC Staff Instructor and boat captain living in the Marshall Islands. When she’s not teaching scuba or driving boats, she’s most happy traveling and being underwater with a camera. For more information, visit: .

Originally published

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X-Ray Mag #70

January 06, 2015 - 21:51
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