It’s Official…

News just in from PADI…Scubadive West is officially Ireland’s leading dive centre for Specialty Courses; we train more divers in PADI Specialty Courses than any other dive centre in the country. Our unique location permits year-round training in the sea, and allows us to continue with training throughout even the winter months. Our Intructors’ combined years of teaching experience will ensure you get the best training. Some of our most popular Specialty courses include; Drysuit Diver, Deep Diver, Nitrox Diver, Digital Underwater Photographer and our latest “Hard Hat” Diver Specialty.  We even have a Scubadive West “Special” Specialty Weekend;  our Combined Deep & Nitrox Diver Weekend where you can get two PADI Specialty ratings in one weekend, and some great dives while doing so.

 

Deep & Enriched Air Diver Specialty: April  2009

Deep & Enriched Air Diver Specialty: April 2009

We are one of the only dive centres that provide drysuits for the Drysuit Specialty; meaning you can try a drysuit out before committing to purchasing. We also provide one dive as part of our Nitrox Specialty; a course that many dive centres limit to the classroom.

 

So folks, come West for your Specialty Dive Training.
We look forward to seeing you.

Our Newest PADI Pro

Any of you lucky enough to have visited Scubadive West this year will surely recognise this face.

Patrick Rooney, our newest PADI Divemaster

Patrick Rooney, our newest PADI Divemaster

 Patrick Rooney signed off on his PADI Divemaster course with us on Friday last. Since starting out on his journey to becoming a PADI Pro, Patrick has been a joy to have around the dive centre (his constant supply of biscuits and sweets included!)

We wish Patrick well in his diving career and look forward to having him as part of the Scubadive West team.

Thanks Patrick!

Last Openwater Course of 2009

Our final Openwater Divers for 2009 earned their stripes during the bank holiday weekend. This course started two weekends previously,  on October 10th & 11th. While weather conditions were somewhat less than idyllic, we conducted the openwater training dives from our boat at a very sheltered Inis Barna.  Dogfish, lobsters, conger eels and colourful corkwing wrasse all came out to show their support for the student divers.  “Perfect buoyancy”, was the comment of one spectator. High praise coming from a fish!

Final Openwater Course of 2009

Final Openwater Course of 2009

Congratulations to Ailis Fagan, TJ Redmond, Lewis Nuttall, Jamie Riley and Aaron O’Grady; all bona fide members of the Underwater Appreciation Society. 

Aaron & TJ on Safety Stop

Aaron & TJ on Safety Stop

Well done to all of the Openwater Divers who qualified with us in 2009. An excellent effort was put in by all and we really look forward to seeing you back here soon. Indeed, many of you have already completed or signed up to further training with us.

Looking forward to 2010 already!

Head Up, Feet Down

Our Underwater CCTV

Our Underwater CCTV

“Head up, feet down”….how many times have you heard that from your diving instructor? Used to describe anything from controlling a descent to venting the air from a drysuit, these four simple words cover a multitude. The pioneering staff of Scubadive West have found yet another use for this term…it aptly describes  our new PADI Orientation to Surface-Supplied Air Diving Specialty (a bit of a mouthful for sure!).  In short-hand let us refer to it simply as the “Hard Hat” Diver Specialty, where you literally walk underwater in full commercial dive gear.

Smile for the Birdie

Smile for the Birdie

This one-day Specialty gives recreational divers of all levels the opportunity to learn more about the world of commercial diving, and what is involved in becoming a commerical diver. Candidates also get the opportunity to walk the seabed wearing a full set of surface-supplied commercial diving gear.

A recent addition to this exciting programme is an underwater CCTV video system. This is a diver-held inspection camera, which provides a live video feed to a television monitor on the surface. Our latest participants were given the task of providing video footage of a boat’s hull, the base of a pier and a standby diver (Cillian Gray obliged on this one!).
Tiernan Gray, an experienced commercial diver and PADI Instructor runs this programme and more dates are available from our website.

The next course will take place this Saturday 31st October, with additional dates to be added for the winter months.

Streamstown Drift Dive in the Media

Check out Sport Diver magazine’s review of our Streamstown Drift Dive.

Dates for this dive are available on our website www.scubadivewest.com

Dive Mecca Weekend

Little Killary, with Maol Reidh in backgroun

Little Killary, with Maol Reidh in backgroun

The weekend of 14 & 15th November will see Scubadive West transformed into a knowledge mecca.

Michael Gibbons, renowned archaeologist and expert on Connemara’s history, will run a complementary Maritime Archaeology workshop for those on Saturday 14th’s 10am and 2pm boat dives. Divers will be brought to local, historic sites of interest; including Bronze Age relics and a famine village.  These historic landmarks are on the islands you know and love for diving, Inis Deigil and Inis Barna included.  You will be placed ashore these islands, where Michael will deliver an interactive field trip of the historic treasures contained within. Following each field trip, a dive will take place on a nearby underwater site. This is an opportunity to open your mind to the wonders and secrets of our stunning coastline, plus avail of some excellent winter diving.

The evening of Saturday 14th November will see Cillian Gray sharing his expertise during a complementary “Dive Gear Care and Maintenance” workshop at the dive centre. 

Join us afterwards in The Bard’s Den pub in Letterfrack, where the day’s activities can be mulled over with some really great food and diving friends.

The excitement continues on Sunday 15th November with our Streamstown Drift Dive. A relatively early high tide will accommodate those of you with long trips back.  The dive will commence at 2pm, with a pre-dive briefing in the dive centre at midday.

Fast Current at Streamstown

Fast Current at Streamstown

Book your place on this weekend  by contacting us at the dive centre: 095 43922 or info@scubadivewest.com

 

Diary of a Red Sea Junkie

Colour Me Beautiful

Colour Me Beautiful

Destination: Wadi Lahami Eco-Village, southern Red Sea.

Number of Divers: 24

When: Wednesday 14th – Wednesday 21st October 2009

Why: To experience great diving, sunshine and world-class photo opportunities by the bucket load!`

Planning for our 2009 Red Sea Trip started as far back as April 2008.  By February 2009, the 24 spaces had been filled and a waiting list was already in place.  All sorts of bribes were offered to secure a place on this exclusive list; groovy Armada wrecks, labradoodle dogfish, the deeds to the world’s oceans (yes, we were slightly dubious about that one also!) And so came October 14th…time for the chosen ones to depart for “heaven on earth”; included was Cillian Gray, designated Trip Leader Extraordinaire. Those left behind in Connemara remarked upon a unique green tinge to their skin; Eau d’ Envie anybody?!!

So how did it all go??? Words alone cannot do it justice, so thank god for digital cameras.

Wednesday 14th Oct: Marsa Alam Airport

A 5 hour flight and some onboard snacks brought our divers safely to Marsa Alam airport. The Wadi Lahami mini bus and driver greeted our travel-weary wanderers.  You have heard of ‘Walk Like an Egyptian’, well try on ‘Drive Like an Egyptian’ for size. A 2.5 hour journey to the camp was characterised by much light-flashing, horn blowing and seat gripping. But t’was a journey well worth it. Wadi Lahami is one of the most southern dive locations in the Red Sea; ensuring unspoilt diving, incredible fringe reefs and of course the world-famous Fury Shoals. Next stop Sudan! Diving here does eaxctly what is says on tin, “guaranteeing Red Sea debutants and seasoned visitors the diving experiences of a lifetime.”

Wadi Lahami Mini Bus

Wadi Lahami Mini Bus

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Wadi Lahami Eco-Village is located on a sandy beach, directly opposite the Fury Shoals. Diving would take place daily off the Shoals, and on the inshore fringing reef.  Accommodation was in spacious chalet tents or traditional Madyfa huts.

Beachside Accommodation at Wadi Lahami

Beachside Accommodation at Wadi Lahami

 Shoes, socks, sunhats optional; but don’t forget the suncream. Daily air temperatures reached the mid 30′s, while the water averaged a rather agreeable 28oC. (We continue to coax Cillian back into Irish waters less his hot water bottle.)

 The subsequent 6 days passed in a frenzy of diving, socialising, eating and some obligatory drinking (well it would be rather rude not to!). But we did manage to garner some details from deliriously happy divers. (words were sometimes garbled, resembling other well known Oxford friendly phrases: “g..ur..rate”, “un..bloody..believable” (bet you won’t find that in a Dickensian novel), and so on and so forth until we got their drift).

Take me to the Beach

Take me to the Beach

The general running order was something as follows:
6am: Up with the larks for a breakfast of pancakes, cheeses, pastries (and not a bowl of Flahavans in sight).
7am: Boats departed for the two morning dives on the Fury Shoal reefs.  A one hour surface interval between dives took place aboard the boats; where tea and cake were shared, and diving tales exchanged.
Surface Interval

Surface Interval

 
12pm: Lunch back at Wadi Lahami camp
2.30pm: Afternoon dive on the local fringing reef
6.30pm: Optional Night Dive
 
Lunchtime in Wadi Lahami

Lunchtime in Wadi Lahami

  
A Cave System

A Cave System

 
An abundance of colour

An abundance of colour

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A myriad dive sites were visited on this trip; too many to describe them all. But here is a shortened list.
“Claudia” (Fury Shoals): cave system through coral reefs. All caves within easy access to the surface. Sunlight created awesome shafts of light
“Tug” (Fury Shoals) an old tug boat struck the reef in 1940′s; it lies upright with the bow in 8m and the stern in 20m.
1940's Tug Boat

1940's Tug Boat

 
Stockie and a coral dropoff

Stockie and a coral dropoff

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
“Shab Rour”: a long reef with4 different sites. Innumerate batfish, clown fish and a distant sighting of a black tip reef shark.
Clownfish

Clownfish

  

Trigger Happy

Trigger Happy

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wednesday 14th October: Back to Reality
Six days of solid diving later, twenty-four tanned Irish divers (as rare a sighting as eskimos in a desert; this blog might double as a springboard for new similes!) departed Egypt.  While this holiday is over, the memories will last a lifetime.
2010 will see us return to the southern Red Sea for more. Book your place in the sun (you never know, you might even feature on camera).
Check out our 2010 Holiday page.