The Crossover Experience

PADI in Thailand

I learnt to dive with PADI in Thailand in 2005 in crystal clear waters surrounded by tropical fish. It is exactly how the sport is painted by marketing men the world over – stunning and highly memorable.

I was travelling and the only option (I thought at the time*) was to train with PADI. I found this an enjoyable experience, and learned in just a few days. I used the qualification to complete around 40 dives while I was abroad.

Back Home

Then I came back to the UK. Continuing diving here didn’t immediately occur to me. In fact it took a long while to sink in that there is a really active diving community in the UK. After being told by three or four different people that I should join a club and give UK diving a go I got in touch with the Oxford branch of the BSAC.

I had had a two year break, so my confidence wasn’t high and I was concerned about the water temperature (I’d learnt in 28+ degree C!!). Despite what anyone would tell me I wanted to find out for myself whether I was up to the challenge of UK waters. On my first visit to the Oxford club I was met by several of the most experienced divers I have ever met. They reassured me that the water temperature would probably not be a problem, and encouraged me to come and have a go. After a check-out pool dive I was invited to go for a shallow dive at Swanage, Dorset.

First UK Dive

Newly kitted out (well, second-hand semi-dry suit plus borrowed club kit) I plunged into the unknown – and didn’t freeze! The water in October was a pleasant 18 degrees, which in a semi-dry is absolutely fine. I think around 20 club divers were there on the day, which meant there was always someone to talk to and no shortage of buddies.

Signed Up

After that I had no hesitation in joining the club, and as I write I’ve been a member around a year and half, and done about 50 dives with the club (plus another 40 on holidays abroad). I’ve learned new skills appropriate to UK diving which weren’t taught in Thailand, made lots of friends and done lots of diving. I’m now training to be a Dive Leader (equivalent in the PADI system is Divemaster) – training which would be fairly expensive outside the club.

The experience I’ve had as a PADI diver joining BSAC is that no-one cares about how I learned, they just care about how I dive. To prove a point, I recently joined the club committee – and I’m not the only ex-PADI diver and I’m really enjoying being involved).

Advantages of the Club

As I see it there are several advantages to the club over the way I went diving before:

  • No-one is trying to sell me anything!
  • There is a wealth of experience in the club, decades and decades – there’s always someone around to answer questions.
  • I’ve developed my diving skills, gaining new grades and skills without shelling out (I think one training pack cost me £30 but that is all).
  • I have opportunities to learn new things (rescue management, oxygen administration, boat handling)
  • I always have options for people to go diving with
  • Although there are always new people coming into the club I usually get to know them and get more comfortable diving with them.Gone are the days of being stuck with a random person for a day and never seeing them ever again.
  • The diving is pretty cheap – our club boats are only £20 per day (however many dives I do).
  • I can test out new kit in the pool every week (I don’t buy it that often, honest)

In summary: there is nothing wrong with learning with any diving agency and there is no stigma in the club however you’ve learned. What is important is an appreciation of what experience you have, and what you might need to learn to do if you are not familiar with UK diving. I found the club environment was an excellent place to do this.


* I learnt on Koh Tao, and I’ve since discovered that there are several BSAC operations there.

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Weymouth March 2011

A Beautiful Spring Weekend

You could not have asked for better conditions: neap tides, sunshine, no wind and a perfectly flat Weymouth Bay – truely like glass. 

Our plan was to have two dives on our project wreck – the Alex van Opstal – one on each day. To do this we had to leave the marina at an un-weekendly (think I’ve just invented a new word there…) 7.30am. Despite all predictions we actually left 5 minutes early and made good progress in the perfect conditions. 

It was all going so well

With a little early morning fog adding to the atmosphere we were starting sense this would be a good weekend. But with a sudden CRUNCH! that all looked a bit premature. We’d hit something. With lightning reactions the skipper shut off the engine, and we sent a diver in to investigate what had got tangled on the propellor.

So the first official dive of the 2011-12 calendar (from the dinner dance in late March onwards) was in 1m of water cutting a plastic mail sack from our boat’s propellor. Auspicious indeed.

The Alex van Opstal

Problem solved we made it to the Alex on slack. We shotted the wreck and two divers started off the weekend’s diving proper. It was looking so good, until we realised they hadn’t moved off the shotline after being down about 5 minutes. Surfacing shortly afterwards they informed us that they couldn’t even see their own fins at the bottom, and despite being on the wreck had decided there wasn’t really any point in diving.

So, the mood slightly more sombre we enacted Plan B…

Lobster Alley and the Black Hawk

Not as exciting as the Alex, but with 4-5m vis we weren’t complaining. After months of being confined to inland dive sites after the weather ruled out trips it was just nice to be back in the sea. There were fish, crabs, lobsters, a slight current and all the random bits of this and that which make the sea so much fun to dive in! Plus it is around 3 degrees C warmer than the quarries, making it a lot more comfortable.

Day Two: Round the Bill

Having realised that Weymouth Bay was pea soup (possibly to do with run-off from all the Olympics construction?) we ventured West and round Portland Bill. When we headed for the wreck of the James Fennel and saw all the charter boats there we knew we must have got it about right.

James Fennel

On dive one, Steve L and I actually found the notoriously difficult-to-locate James Fennel, and were able to pinpoint it for the others to have their second dive on. I’d say this was more by luck than judgement, certainly on my part, but I think Lichy knew what he was doing once we’d started to find bits of wreckage and led me on a tour of the highlights! It really was a fantastic dive – 10m+ vis, calm water and loads of life. Despite locating the stern, prop shaft, boiler and plenty of scattered wreck, we also saw lobsters, pipefishes, conger eels, a stonefish, wrasse and so much more.

SS Gertrude

On our second dive Lichy and I tried to find the SS Gertrude, hidden amongst the bus-size boulders littering the seabed. We weren’t so lucky this time, although having located the anchor I suspect we simply needed to turn towards land rather than out to sea and we would have found it. Never mind – still a pleasant drift dive amongst the boulders, and a nice end to a cracking weekend.

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Loch Fyne 2010

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St Abbs and Eymouth 2008

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