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Showing posts with label underwater fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underwater fun. Show all posts

Friday, September 3, 2010

Virginia Hatter, not your ordinary dive instructor

Photograph of a PADI Master SCUBA Diver badgeImage via Wikipedia

If PADI dive instructor “Virginia from Virginia” Hatter’s experience is any indication, there has been a “surge,” no pun intended, in SCUBA diving interest on the part of women.
When she started instructing in San Diego, her male students outnumbered their female counterparts by a ratio as high as 80:20. Now, it has become equal, if not more women, maybe as high as 60 to 70 per cent female, she says.
“I do not advertise. Almost 100 per cent of my students are referrals,” says Virginia, who only learned to dive herself in 2004 and quickly progressed from PADI Open Water Diver certification to several specialized disciplines, PADI Master SCUBA Diver, PADI Assistant Instructor, PADI Open Water Instructor and PADI Master SCUBA Diver Trainer.
In her case, female students recommending her course to their friends is a factor in changing the male-female ratio so dramatically. But it’s also a sport that is as suited to one sex as the other.
“Everyone loves the ocean, exploring wrecks, canyons, reefs and all different types of diving.”
Growing up in Virginia (hence the nickname “Virginia from VA”), she had learned to love a variety of water sports, from small time sailing to waterskiing, jet skiing, surfing and swimming.
“I’m a water person anyway,” Virginia says, so she welcomed the challenge and opportunity when her staff at a sports retail store she managed urged her to sign up for PADI Open Water Diver lessons the store was offering. “I loved it from the first breath I took underwater in the pool. Little did I know it would change my entire life.”
Being a stressed out HR manager in Virginia wearing dress suits and paying to park, turned into her passion for “changing the lives of others for the better through SCUBA diving instruction.” She adds that “the only difference is my panty hose are now seven-mm thick.”
Virginia had moved to San Diego by the time she took up SCUBA diving and instructing has become a full-time job for her. She has a waiting list of students.
She prefers to work as an independent so she can control the number of students in her classes and does not press her students to finish in a prescribed time. “There are no make-up fees for classes missed, nor will I promise a certification date.”
“I do not believe in large classes,” says Virginia, who never teaches more than four students in the water at once, and usually instructs private or semi-private classes. “I don’t want to be the biggest. I strive to be the safest.”
It has been a little slow this year due to problems that affected all dive operations in the San Diego area. They include high surf, red tide, strong currents and low visibility.
“I do not take students in unfavourable conditions. Instructing students to dive in these circumstances and conditions is simply not safe. Diving is already a little intimidating as it is. Safety must come first, then education, followed by fun.”
Virginia also suffered two sting ray hits that kept her out of the water for awhile. The second one was more painful. A large number of small, aggressive sting rays had congregated close to shore off San Diego for four or five days and there were more than 100 hits, including hers.
Virginia says she doesn’t know if her female students are more comfortable with a woman instructor than a man, but that wasn’t the case for her. Her instructors were all men and she called them “the best of the best.” She never experienced any male chauvinist attitude among instructors who taught her or among those who are now her competition. “Most are men for whom I have the highest regard.”
In fact, she adds, when she couldn’t instruct while her foot recovered from the sting ray hit, a male instructor who was her competitor helped her out by finishing the course for one of her students whose completion was time sensitive. Another female instructor helped with the same student, only proving what a bond SCUBA instructors develop, no matter who they instruct for. This student is now becoming a commercial diver in hopes to aid with repair efforts in the Gulf of Mexico on other oil rigs. “We’re all on the same team.”
Virginia credits SCUBA Diver Girls for playing an “awesome role” role in attracting women to the sport. She once got eight women together to dive in hopes it would lead to something better “but it just fizzled out. So when Scuba Diver Girls started, I said ‘way to go, girls.’ SCUBA Diver Girls are in a class of their own, they rock.”
The next step is to involve the entire family in the sport more often. Virginia has certified children as young as 10 as PADI JR Open Water Divers. One of them who took her certification class went on to dive on just about every continent. The child’s parents took her course, too, because the whole family was going on a world tour “home schooling” their daughter.
Another young diver of hers is currently working on her JR Advanced Open Water Diver with her father in tow and plans to complete PADI JR RESCUE Diver, as well.
Could family diving become the next trend?

Kathy Dowsett

www.kirkscubagear.com
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Saturday, July 3, 2010

Tackling underwater rugby at 74


By age 74, the closest many people come to sports is watching it on television from their recliner chair, remote control in hand.

Not Tom Elliott of Brantford, Ontario. He not only runs the underwater rugby club in Brantford, but is a player – tackling and being tackled in the pool. He also plays underwater hockey and is a free diver – a sport in which participants descend to great depths without scuba gear.

“I have a personal trainer who puts me through strenuous gym workouts,” says Tom. “I also run for cross training.”

The health advantages that an active lifestyle promotes are well known. So are more traditional fitness sports such as running, tennis and gymnasium workouts. Less known is underwater rugby, which is played by people of a wide age range.
The Brantford underwater rugby club is one of two in Canada, the other being in Montreal. It is much bigger overseas. It was started in Germany, but is popular in Scandinavian countries and Eastern Europe. In the United States there are clubs in: Boston, Mass.; Newark, N.J.; Greenville, S.C.; and Austin, Tex. It`s also played in Colombia, Peru and Venezuela, with the latter country just starting is program.
The Brantford club is composed primarily of underwater hockey players and free divers, with the latter comprising about one-third of its players. Elsewhere, the free diving component is not nearly as prevalent. The Brantford exception is because many members of the club Freedive Toronto decided to join. Underwater rugby and free diving, as well as underwater hockey, are logical extensions of each other, helping to train the body to extend the time one can stay under water. These players are comfortable working hard underwater.

Like its hockey counterpart, underwater rugby players prefer a constant-depth pool. That is where the similarity ends. The playing area in the rugby pool is a maximum of 18 metres long, compared to 25 metres for hockey. Rugby requires a shorter playing area because it is played in deeper water, which provides plenty of playing space. The depth enables players to get vertical separation from opponents. The pool’s depth must be 3.5 to five metres. The Brantford pool, at the Wayne Gretzky Sport Centre, is almost the maximum allowed. For hockey, depth is a factor because if the pool is too deep it requires too much breath hold to get to the bottom and if too shallow, it is too crowded and injuries increase. The ideal depth is two to three metres.

The round underwater rugby ball is made of a vinyl material and is 50 centimetres in circumference. It is filled with salt water, giving it negative buoyancy, but at the same time the weight necessary to enable passes up to two or three metres under water. Passes above the water surface are not allowed. Whenever the ball is raised out of the water it is ruled out of bounds.

To score, a player must put the ball in the basket on the bottom of the pool in the opponents’ end. The diameter at the top of the basket is 40 centimetres. This makes scoring more difficult than in rugby played on grass because it concentrates the scoring area. “They (defenders) surround the basket,” says Tom. “It can get quite hectic. You have to wait for an opening (such as when a defender has to return to the surface for air). ”

Teams consist of six players in the water and five substitutes.

“You work hard and then get out,” says Tom, explaining that a player`s shift in the pool usually lasts one to two minutes. But because of the intensity of the sport they use up oxygen quickly, which means they may be down only 10 seconds before resurfacing for air and then quickly going down again to rejoin the fray.
“There are some amazing feats with high-level players, swimming from one side of the pool to the other (with the ball).”

They must try to avoid being tackled by an opponent. Players may not grab a player’s equipment or swim suit, hold an opponent in a manner that might cause strangulation, intentionally kick someone, or do anything that may cause injury. They may only tackle the ball carrier.

The injuries that do occur are usually minor, such as scrapes or bruises. In underwater hockey, with a heavy puck and a stick in the hands of each player, the injuries can be more serious.

As in hockey, men and women often compete together on underwater rugby teams. In hockey, smaller players have the advantage of agility. But in rugby, size and strength are positives.

Brantford has an underwater rugby program, which Tom runs, for players as young as eight. Players of high-school age also play. Most of the adult participants are in their 20s, 30s or early 40s, but some are in their 50s and very few in their 60s.
Then there is Tom, who like the Energizer Bunny, just keeps going.

“At age 41, I got serious about fitness and never stopped,” he says. “Last fall, I played a tournament for underwater rugby in Colombia and one month in Denmark. Two years ago I played for a month in Spain. It is an excellent way to experience other countries. There have been many years of underwater hockey travel before that.”
A retired musician who played the bassoon in symphony orchestras, Tom has spent a lot of time on top of the water – in a canoe – as well as under the water. After snowshoe camping in the winter months, he turns to canoeing trips in the spring.

“Last April I did a solo canoe trip, from Buffalo to Hamilton, in six days, camping along the way. That was the fourth such trip in recent years between Brantford/Hamilton and my mom’s house east of Buffalo. It’s a unique adventure using various water routes.”

Put all the activity together and it begins to make sense how Tom Elliott can still be battling for the ball deep in the pool at age 74.

Kathy Dowsett

www.kirkscubagear.com


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