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watch the first 4 minutes of this video, they show most of what I described:
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Thanks Steve. =)watch the first 4 minutes of this video, they show most of what I described:
How is that a best practice? I'm confused because I wouldn't want to do that.
How about smb and whistle?Hi, thanks for the reply. I would love to have one of those, or Nautilus lifeline. However, I don't think our center can afford it at the moment. =(
I thought about that, too. I think mares bcs come with whistles, mine does, I don't know other brands. And we definitely need to invest in some smbs as well. Thanks.How about smb and whistle?
Smb and whistle should be an integral part of the rental BC.
Hi jonhall, thanks for the input. I can understand the convenience having a cc machine on the boat. In case if you want to add a third or fourth dive to your existing package, you can always pay on the spot.The OP included "service" and "routine" for best practices. This was a part of the dive ops "routine service." I liked not being locked into any preconceived notion of diving a certain amount of dives, and that I could book a day in advance, and as long as there was availability, I would get the multiple-day discounted rate each day I added. Cut out an extra stop at a dive shop (using the term loosely as in this particular case the shop was really just a storefront for scheduling all types of tours.) Actually could have gone to boat every morning, 5 minute walk for me, and gone out without booking in advance, as long as there was availability, at the discounted rate. The other thing I liked about the payment method was that I could check my credit card transactions online after each dive, if I chose, and see that I was charged correctly (didn't want to get ripped off in another country - EC vs US $$$) and not wait until the end of my trip.
Best practices are methods that may work for some and not others. I imagine as more posts are included in the thread there will be some best practices that hit home with some and not others as chillyinCanada didn't like this one obviously. I personally liked this method of payment as it was convenient for me. If given the same set of circumstances of being as close to the dive boat as I was, dive op owners that were easy to communicate with, clean boat with limited divers, easy to pay as you dive, and me getting my multi-day discount, I wouldn't hesitate.
Hi Lewisevans, thanks for the reply. Yes of course. It's called save-a-dive bag. usually we have two for different sizes. It is definitely a must have. We also plan to have spare o-rings (for cameras), mouthpieces, etc.I'm not sure if you're planning on having a boat as part of the shop, but one thing I've found helpful is to have a spare pieces of gear onboard. I fill in at a local shop as a captain part time and I've lost count of the times I've lent out my personal reels, masks or bottom timer out. The shop usually keeps a full set of gear onboard when people are renting gear but I've found that having extra pieces of equipment can easily make a dive more enjoyable for a diver.
Offer me big tanks! I'm well into my 40's, about 6'1" and close to 270#, and not particularly in shape. If all you've got are AL 80's, me, a skinny athletic 20 year old guy and a 5'2" lean and petite woman may sit in a row on your boat, each with the same size tank.
That's nuts.
What I don't see but would like to are dive briefing write ups we can review in advance. Some people learn better by reading and re-reading than one shot listening on a noisy boat. We'd still need the oral report, but the option for added advance study would be nice.