Free Refresher Dive!

Sign up to your PADI Advanced Openwater Course & Receive a Free Refresher Dive

Anyone who pays a deposit for their PADI Advanced Openwater Course at Scubadive West during the month of May & June 2010 will receive one FREE Instructor/Divemaster Led Dive.  This Instructor/Divemaster Led Dive is perfect for anyone who has not dived in a while, or for anyone coming from a warm water diving background.

All we ask for is the deposit of €89 for the Advanced Openwater Course on your chosen course date. We can then get your FREE Refresher Dive booked in.

This refresher dive will set you up perfectly for successful completion of your PADI Advanced Openwater course at Scubadive West.

See you in the water!

May Bank Holiday News

You know summer is in the air when the May Bank Holiday weekend is on the horizon! If you don’t already have plans, consider a trip to Scubadive West. Our popular Streamstown Drift Dive takes place on Friday evening (30th April), with a pre dive briefing at 3pm so plenty of time to drive down that morning. We will run our daily boat diving schedule with dives taking place at 10am and 2pm. The weather forecast appears in our favour, and we will aim to visit some of our most popular dive sites; including the Julia T, Llachog Prahan, Thany Beag and who knows what other sites we may have discovered by then!

Any regular visitors to this part of Connemara will be delighted to know that the esteemed ‘Paddy Coyne’s’ pub in Tullycross will reopen in time for the May Bank Holiday weekend. This popular watering hole will also play host to the ‘Connemara Mussel Festival’ , taking place the same weekend.

Paddy Coyne's in Tullycross

Paddy Coyne's in Tullycross

A nice Bit of ‘Crump’et

Crump Island, located approximately six miles west of the dive centre, was the location for an al fresco lunch on Saturday as part of our Day Trip. This unique surface interval provided the perfect opportunity to compare notes on the morning dive to Llachog Prahan, and to admire the panoramic views of Connemara. Crump Island is renowned for its historical significance, in particular as an early Christian site.  After an hour exploring the island, divers travelled to our newly discovered  site for their second dive. This dive site is in close proximity to Crump Island, and consists of a long wall running  northwest.   The ‘offshore’ nature of this site ensures a quantity and quality of marine life similar to that of Inis Turk, and Inis Boffin. Some species spotted were squat lobster, conger eel, bearded rockling, cuckoo wrasse and bib.

Rest assured that we will offer trips to this new dive site throughout the season, so do plan your trip out West!

First Visit to Crump Island

First Visit to Crump Island

The Offshore diver anchored beside Crump

The Offshore diver anchored beside Crump

Early Christian Structural Remains

Early Christian Structural Remains

‘Order of Malta’ go Diving

Scubadive West was delighted to welcome members from the Galway branch of the ‘Order of Malta’ on Saturday afternoon for a Discover Scubadiving. This group of five had volunteered for the dive in a bid to raise funds for their organisation. Needless to say, a great time was had by all; as can be seen from the photos below.

 

Order of Malta, go diving!

Order of Malta, go diving!

Happy Divers after their First Dive

Happy Divers after their First Dive

Advanced Openwater Divers April 2010

Six energetic divers completed their PADI Advanced Openwater course with us last weekend.  The weather remained favourable, with visibility only slightly hampered by an early plankton bloom.  Sunday’s course dives took place from the boat. The Deep Adventure Dive took place at Thany Beag, where our students experienced a maximum depth of 27.5 metres. It is safe to say that each of the divers resurfaced full of enthusiasm for deep diving! Sunday afternoon saw us visit the Julia T for the Wreck Adventure Dive. This popular wreck dive never fails to please, and showcased a variety of big and small marine life. 

Congratulations to Gudny Flatabo, Noreen Hopkins, John Morris, Chris Mullen, John Martin and Deboarah O’Brien; our newly qualified and capable Advanced Openwater Divers.

Advanced Openwater Course: 25th April

Advanced Openwater Course: 25th April

 

 

Safety stop on ascending from the Julia T

Safety stop on ascending from the Julia T

Idyllic Training Conditions Continue

The sea conditions at present remain perfect for our diving courses. A number of visiting divers took advantage of the weekend’s summer like weather, and undertook their training at Scubadive West. Newcomers to our fascinating sport were in awe at the end of their Discover Scubadiving. The cove provided plenty of entertainment with corkwing wrasse, little cuttlefish, hermit crabs and pollack aplenty.

Discover Scubadiving Students taking their first breaths underwater on Saturday

Discover Scubadiving Students taking their first breaths underwater on Saturday

While, a group of seven divers learnt the skills for using a drysuit on Sunday’s Drysuit Specialty. Well done to Noreen Hopkins, John Morris, Noel Ward, Gudny Flatabo, Chris Mullen, Steve Mc Dermott and Mark Stephens; all newly qualified PADI Drysuit Divers. Four of these students will go on and complete their Advanced Openwater training with us next weekend, all in the comfort of a nice, warm drysuit!
PADI Drysuit Specialty at Scubadive West on Sunday

PADI Drysuit Specialty at Scubadive West on Sunday

Try then Buy for 20% Discount

Latest News on 2010 Scubapro Diving Days.

We can confirm that a 20% discount will be available on all the SCUBAPRO gear throughout the weekend of 19 & 20th June.  Just tried the latest BCD? Like it? Well, go ahead and buy it for 20% off retail.

Contact us to confirm your attendance.

New Ground

What did you get up to on your Monday morning? We spent our morning out exploring some new dive sites. The most promising of these is near Crump Island, approximately 6 miles west of the dive centre. The site consists of a very long wall, dropping to about twenty metres.  The wall is dotted with jewel anemones, a variety of wrasse and sea urchins. At one point, a large cleft in the wall provides two interesting overhangs. The good news is we will be diving this site on Saturday’s Day Trip.  We hope to put divers on to Crump Island for lunch, and an interesting surface interval. This island is lovely to walk around and provides incredible views around the bay.

About to Descend on the new Dive Site

About to Descend on the new Dive Site

On to Crump Island

On to Crump Island

Tall Tales

Scubadive West’s ‘Make Me A Diver’ competition is now finished. The level of entries was fantastic, and we are delighted that the future of Ireland’s diving is in such safe hands. Winner of the competition is Siobhan Stella from the east coast. Siobhan wins her PADI Openwater Diver course at Scubadive West, as well as her accommodation and food for the duration of her course, courtesy of the ‘Bard’s Den’ hostel in Letterfrack.

Below is Siobhan’s story as to why she deserves to be Ireland’s newest diver!

I’ve had a fascination with water since as far back as I can remember. I’m only seventeen, so that’s not an awfully long time, but even so, some of my first memories are of splashing around in the sea, going as far out as I was allowed, taking off the armbands and attempting that perilous first stroke.

I was fascinated by fish. Creatures that could live and function without air. How was something like that even possible? To me, under the sea is a whole other world, a completely different reality to anything you will experience on land. Any documentary or film I have ever watched involving the ocean has justified that to me. The colours, the animals – everything seems to have a surreal quality, an untouched beauty for the sake of sounding corny. It intrigues me.

However, it wasn’t just what was to be found underwater that drew my attention; it was the untameable force of the sea, its power. I remember before the stones were placed on Bray beach, whenever the sea was choppy my guardian would bring me down to watch the  waves crash over the promenade and then get sucked back into the ocean only to come rushing back again. One word will suffice to describe it, beautiful.

I’ve tried surfing, though I admit to being useless at it, the whole staying on the board without falling on my face was too much of a challenge it seems. I’ve tried canoeing as well, and I love it, and while I’ve never done it before, I love watching people water-ski, it looks like magic.

 What really intrigues me most though, in a way that I can’t even put into words, is shipwrecks. They have a sort of eerie, mysterious aura about them that is almost hypnotic. (I confess it was The Little Mermaid that first twigged my interest) I would like to do underwater archaeology when I’m in college, however it seems that’s not a standard course in most universities, and when I asked around at universities about it I got vague replies about “no direct route” and “not exactly a science” while the poor professor looked around, silently begging someone to ask a question he could actually answer.

The more elusive the answers get, the more determined I become. I’m difficult like that. So that is why I applied, because there are some things in life you know you have to do, experiences you have to have. I seem to be drawn to the more dangerous experiences in life, now that may be my youth, as many believe, but I think it’s more than that. If you ask me, my desire to dive has nothing to do with my age, neither does my love of rock climbing or sky diving. It’s my personality, something that is ever evolving but also unchanging. You cannot change your nature. My nature has always been taken with the sea, its beauty and strength, and that it why I would really like to do this course, because it would mean something, a thirst quenched, a task fulfilled, a dream come true.

Thanks for giving me the opportunity to try,

Siobhan Stella :) x

Rays of Hope

Fun in the sun was the order of the weekend! Daytime temperatures soared to an average of sixteen degrees in Connemara, while an ever-smiling sun ensured some ever-smiling divers. Saturday and Sunday saw the dive centre thronged with divers from all over the country.  Our boat visted some of our most westerly, inshore dive sites; including Carrigaddy, Llechog Prahan and Thany Beag. Each of these sites offers colourful wall diving coupled with spectacular marine life.

Departing the dive centre for Carrigaddy, Sunday afternoon

Departing the dive centre for Carrigaddy, Sunday afternoon

The good news is that the fine weather is to continue, with winds remaining in our favour right through next weekend. So diving conditions will only get better with each passing day. We are running a full schedule of boat diving, at 10am and 2pm so contact us to book your piece of paradise. Anyone who has time on their hands midweek should call us. We often have boat and shore diving available on weekdays also. There is boat diving taking place on Friday 16th April and Thursday 22nd April, so call us to book.