Rabu, 10 April 2013

Bubble Maker

What a great way to introduce children to scuba diving in a pool in less than six feet of water. Celebrate a birthday by throwing a memorable, exciting Bubble maker party with friends and family with us. It’s fun, easy and safe.
The Fun Part
Youngsters can join in the family fun of scuba diving or even start a trend! Children should be comfortable in the water, but they don’t have to be super swimmers. With youngsters in mind, the maximum depth is only 2 meters/ 6 feet.
  • Typical sessions last about an hour (sign up, gear up and fun included)
  • Also available as a confined open water experience (2 meters/ 6 feet max. depth)

What You Learn

Kids get a chance to:
  • Experience what scuba diving is like under the direct care and supervision of PADI Instructors
  • Take their first breath underwater 
  • Learn about and use scuba diving equipment made for children – not adults

The Scuba Gear You Use

Children use all the basic scuba equipment, which is made for their size and stature.
Book now at iqdiversgili@gmail.com about setting up a Bubble maker experience today. 
     The Learning Materials You Need
Ready to blow bubbles? The Bubblemaker crewpak gives kids a memento of their visit to the underwater world and is full of fun surprises. The pack includes: a kid-sized beach towel, log book, certificate, temporary tattoo emblem and the adorable and a popular Bubblemaker “action figure.” Adults love them, too.
Prerequisites
The PADI Bubblemaker program is for children age 8 and above.
  • No pre-training required

Scuba Review

Has it been a while since you’ve been scuba diving? Do you feel like your scuba skills and knowledge are a bit rusty? The Scuba Review Tune-up is just the refresher you need. It reacquaints you with diving so that you're back to feeling comfortable in the underwater world in less than a day.

The Fun Part

Brush up on your scuba knowledge and skills. Improve your diving ability, and get your scuba gear ready for your next scuba vacation or diving holiday.

What You Learn

You go over scuba knowledge you learned during your initial training. Then, practice fundamental skills in a pool or a confined water area. You review:
  • Safe diving practices
  • Dive planning fundamentals
  • Problem management
  • Breathing air at depth
  • Recreational diving and dive tables: basic knowledge
  • Recreational diving and dive tables: dive planning
After you complete the knowledge assessment, you go through the Confined Water Skills Preview. You review information about each skill, why it’s important, points to remember when performing the skill and a short video clip. Completing this section just before practicing is a great way to refresh your knowledge of how each skill is performed.
The Scuba Review course is particularly beneficial if you:
  • Are a PADI Open Water Diver course referral student who wants a refresher prior to making your open water training dives
  • Are a PADI Scuba Diver who wants to upgrade to Open Water Diver 
  • Just haven’t scuba dived in a while and want to get aclimated again

The Scuba Gear You Use

You use all the basic scuba gear.
Check with our dive shop about gear rentals and packages offered with this course. You can find most everything at our dive shop

The Learning Materials You Need

Quickly and effectively review scuba diving fundamentals with PADI’s Scuba Tune-Up Guidebook. Begin by answering a few questions related to dive safety, problem management and dive planning. For example:
What are the five steps in a pre-dive safety check?
What is the maximum depth limit for all recreational diving?
What are the signs and symptoms of decompression sickness?
At 12meters/ 40 feet a diver runs out of air. Her buddy is more than 60 feet away, what should she do?

Correct answers will allow you to complete the book quickly. For incorrect answers, you’ll read a brief explanation to help you understand the concept.

To purchase this product, contact us at iqdiversgili@gmail.com

Prerequisites

To take Scuba Review, you must
  • Have a scuba diver certification or be enrolled in a scuba certification course
  • Be at least 10 years old