PADI eLearning:
“PADI scuba diving certification is globally recognized, never expires, and allows you to dive worldwide. Join over 30 million PADI-certified scuba divers who started their underwater diving adventure here with highly trained PADI Professional Instructors”.(Site Link)


Refresher Course:
Refresh your dive knowledge and scuba skills. Move quickly through topics you know well and dive deeper into topics where your knowledge may have lapsed.




Open Water Diver:
JOIN THE GROWING RANKS OF CERTIFIED DIVERS. Today, we use the world’s most respected, NUMBER ONE dive education system, with over 900,000 divers trained each year.PADI Open Water Divers can plan and execute dives with a certified buddy or dive professional to a maximum depth of 18 meters/60 feet. An Open Water Diver certification can take an estimated 4-7 days. This includes:
“*Learn fundamental concepts about scuba through PADI eLearning or classroom instruction (knowledge development).
*Complete five confined water (pool) skill practice sessions.
*Complete four open water (ocean/lake) dives.
*Complete a 10-minute swim/float demonstrating comfort in water too deep to stand and a 200 meter/yard continuous surface swim or a 300 meter/yard swim with mask, fins, and snorkel”(PADI).

Discover Scuba:
If you’re interested in scuba diving but unsure if you want to enroll in a scuba certification class, Discover Scuba Diving is the perfect way to test the waters. You’ll learn basic scuba skills and quickly take your first breaths underwater(PADI).

Bubblemaker:
Experience scuba diving under the direct supervision of a PADI Pro. Take your first breaths underwater in water shallower than 2 metres/6 ft for children at least 8 years old. **A child must be 8 years old or older. Kids must be comfortable in the water, but no prior experience is necessary. Parental approval is required (PADI).**




Advanced Open Water Diver:
Exploration, Excitement, Experiences. They’re what the PADI Advanced Open Water Diver course is all about. This course helps you increase your confidence and build your scuba skills to become more comfortable in the water. This is a great way to get more dives under your belt while continuing to learn under the supervision of your PADI instructor. This course builds on what you’ve learned and develops new capabilities, introducing new activities and new ways to have fun scuba diving (PADI).

Rescue Diver:
Challenging and Rewarding best describes the PADI Rescue Diver course. Building upon your knowledge, learn to identify and fix minor issues before they become big problems, gain confidence, and have serious fun along the way (PADI).

Divemaster:
Learn how to lead underwater tours, assist with scuba classes, and inspire others to care about the ocean. Gain practical experience giving dive briefings, assisting with classes, and leading underwater tours. Learn how to anticipate problems, provide assistance, create an Emergency Assistance Plan, and improve your navigation and problem-solving skills through practical workshops (PADI).





Deep Diver:
After your first few scuba dives, you soon want to explore deeper. There is something exciting and mysterious about the water’s depth that attracts divers. You’ll learn how to plan deep dives, manage your gas supply, and how to identify and manage narcosis. You’ll learn about buddy contact procedures, safety considerations, and buoyancy control at deep depth (PADI).

Drysuit:
Unlike wetsuits, drysuits are filled with air. During your drysuit course, your instructor will teach you how to control your drysuit’s air and buoyancy. You’ll also learn about the different types of drysuits and the basic repairs and maintenance (PADI).

Enriched Air (Nitrox):
Enriched air, known as nitrox or EANx, contains less nitrogen than regular air. Breathing less nitrogen means you can enjoy longer dives and shorter surface intervals. You’ll learn to analyze a tank, fill out an enriched air log, and set your dive computer for nitrox (PADI).

Equipment Specialist:

Don’t miss a dive due to a scuba gear issue. Whether it’s a blown o-ring, regulator problem, wetsuit tear, or a broken fin strap, you can learn how to manage basic scuba equipment adjustments. In addition, you’ll learn interesting background information about how your gear works, how it is repaired, and other information that helps you with your equipment investment (PADI).

Ice Diver
:
If the spirit of adventure and unusual, challenging diving appeals, try diving under the ice! During the course, you dive with a PADI Professional in one of the most extreme adventure specialties recreational diving has to offer. Explore the unique aquascape found only under the ice. You can be among the few who dive under a solid ice ceiling. Plus, imagine the look on your Divemaster’s face on your next Caribbean trip when you finish your PADI Ice Diver certification. You must be an Advanced Open Water Diver at least 18 years old to enroll in the Ice Diver course. (PADI).

Night Diver
:
The thought of dipping below the surface at night seems mysterious yet so alluring. Although you’ve been scuba diving at a site many times before, you drop into a new world at night and watch it come to life under the glow of your dive light. The scene changes as day creatures retire and nocturnal organisms emerge. Practice underwater navigation at night and learn to find entry and exit points in the dark. Your instructor will share night diving tips and teach you how to stay in contact with your buddy and avoid disorientation (PADI).

Peak Performance Buoyancy
:
Excellent buoyancy control is what defines skilled scuba divers. You’ve seen them underwater. They glide effortlessly, use less air, and ascend, descend, or hover almost as if by thought. They more easily observe aquatic life without disturbing their surroundings. You can achieve this, too. The Peak Performance Buoyancy Specialty improves the buoyancy skills you learned as a new diver and elevates them to the next level. Excellent buoyancy control is what defines skilled divers (PADI).

Search and Recovery
:
People accidentally drop things from docks, off boats, or even while scuba diving. The next time someone loses an item underwater, you can be the hero who finds the missing object. You’ll learn how to find lost objects underwater. You’ll practice different underwater search patterns and learn how to use a lift bag as you plan and execute mock search operations (PADI).

Underwater Navigation
:
Be the scuba diver everyone wants to follow because you know where you are and where you’re going. This course fine-tunes your observation skills and teaches you to use your compass underwater accurately. If you like challenges with big rewards, take this course and have fun finding your way. Practice using a compass on the surface, then apply your skills underwater during three dives. Learn how to estimate distance, follow natural clues, and practice finding your way back to the boat or shore (PADI).

Wreck Diver
:
Whether purpose-sunk as an artificial reef for scuba divers or lost due to an accident, wrecks are fascinating windows into the past. Ships, airplanes, and cars are fascinating to explore and usually teeming with aquatic life. Each wreck dive offers a chance for discovery, potentially unlocking a mystery or spying on something others have missed. During four dives with your instructor, you’ll survey and map a wreck, practice special fin techniques, and may use penetration lines (PADI).





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