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Diving is a potentially
hazardous activity. The materials contained within
this magazine are for informational purposes only and are
not intended as a substitute for proper and appropriate training.
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Rule Number Six?
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by David Strike |
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Popularised by the
WKPP's Project Director, George Irvine and
Training Director, Jarrod Jablonski, (holders of dual records
for the longest and deepest cave diving penetrations,
a staggering underwater distance of 18,000 feet at a depth of 300 feet
established in 1998) 'Doing It Right' received an added boost
with the establishment of Global Underwater Explorers
(GUE); an organisation founded by Jarrod Jablonski
that is dedicated to education, research and exploration.
Offering formalised DIR cave and technical diving programmes, it became evident to GUE that many of the applicants, (regardless of their qualifications and years of diving experience) seeking training lacked a sufficient mastery of the basic fundamentals; skill levels that form one of the foundation stones on which DIR is built. |

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Despite
its outstanding pedigree, DIR ('Doing It Right')
is a term that's frequently misinterpreted by the diving
community at large.
A holistic approach to diving - one that puts equal emphasis on fitness, experience, attitude, teamwork, training and safety - DIR is a snappy phrase whose origins are embedded in the equipment configurations, techniques and training of the Florida- based, Woodville Karst Plains Project (WKPP); a team of talented cave diving explorers intent on expanding our knowledge of the underwater world. |
Hence the introduction, by GUE, of a programme that teaches the
fundamentals of better diving; one that has relevance to all
divers, regardless of their underwater interests and that promotes
confidence in one's ability by finely honing and polishing the essential
skills and teaching the importance of proper equipment
configuration. All of which is a necessary prelude to talking about the DIR Fundamentals course. An intensive three-day programme recently conducted in Sydney by GUE President and Founder, Jarrod Jablonski and Training Director, Andrew Georgitsis. |
Back to basics As somebody who firmly believes that experience is a measure of how much a person has managed to learn, (about themselves as much as anything else!) rather than the length of time that they've been diving, I like to think that I've kept on open mind about DIR. As an interested observer in its development, I have, (at various times over the years) been sometimes astounded and often amused by the ferocity of debate taking place on the internet diving forums about DIR; its defenders remaining unrelenting in their views and its detractors often maintaining that the proponents of DIR exhibit all of the characteristics of born-again zealots, and that the austere approach adopted by them is ill-suited to all forms of diving! |

(Given the technical and more extreme nature of the diving practiced by the
leading protagonists in these debates, it's sometimes easy to believe that
DIR is an esoteric concept exclusively reserved for advanced exploration
divers. Particularly when the discussion centres on
equipment configuration and the use of
twin-cylinders, decompression gases, dry-suits and the like.
Nothing - as I now know - could be further from the truth!) Nevertheless, DIR has, for me, remained an ideal having - like military and commercial diving systems' that seldom, if ever, attract opposition - its basis in common sense. In that regard, I have been slow to realise all of its benefits! |
Which is why I jumped at the chance to join Billly
Williams and Steve Blim, from Sydney; Dean Laffan, from
Melbourne; Craig James, from Western Australia; Dr Jeff Swan, from
Darwin, in the Northern Territory; and Simon Hartley and Kay Dimmock, both
from Lismore, in the northern part of New
South Wales, on the three-day programme taught by two of the world's
leading authorities on the topic. At this point, I really ought to point out that, over the course of many years involvement in military, commercial and recreational diving, (and having acquired a thick skin through being insulted beyond belief by experts!) I believed that I had a reasonable understanding of the basic skills and techniques appropriate to the activity. I even appreciated - and always have done - the fact that one is never too old to learn! |
What I was not prepared for was the non-partisan approach to equipment
brands; the care that both Andrew and JJ
took in helping each of us configure
the equipment properly; their non-confrontational
attitude; the willingness to answer questions
and offer detailed explanations of just why X approach was better than
Y - and the relevance of that approach to diving safety and
enjoyment. More particularly, however, I was unprepared for their quiet, courteous and outstandingly friendly regard for all of us as equals in diving, rather than just paying students. An attitude that's rather rare in diving today. Neither was I prepared for the sudden realisation that I had much to learn about trim and buoyancy; ways of maintaining a constant depth while swimming without a face mask and air-sharing; the benefits of a 7ft hose over that of the 6ft hose, (that I |

used to use!); the advantages of shortening the hose on the back-up regulator; how
to position the back-plate harness properly; the use of various finning
techniques to improve propulsion, (OK! I'm still struggling with
swimming backwards!); the various gas management techniques; decompression
procedures, and much, much more. |
I could, of course, go into lengthy details about the programme
itself - but I won't! Not because it's not worth describing in absolute
detail, but rather because it's an active programme that is best
explained more properly by people of the calibre of J.J. and Andrew - and more
importantly because it's something that everybody who dives really should experience
for themselves. Oh! and Rule #6? During the introduction to the Fundamentals programme, Andrew asked if any of us knew what, in diving, Rule #6 was? None of us did! "Rule #6", he explained, "is to always, 'Look Good' when underwater." |

An interview with me! So, having completed the programme - and interviewing myself for a change: Q. Do I believe that I am now a DIR diver? "Not yet. But - having come to a realisation of its enormous benefits - it is something that I aspire to become." Q. Have I become a DIR zealot? "No! But it has reinforced my view that health, fitness, training, competence, teamwork, attitude - and a standardised system of equipment configuration based on the minimalist principle of, 'carry with you only what you need' - are essential elements to safe diving practice. "On the other hand, I do tend to regard those who claim to be DIR based on the sole fact that they use a back-plate, harness and long-hose, with a degree of scepticism unless they also embrace the concept in its entirety!" |
Q. What are my overall impressions of the programme? "It is the most informative - the most humbling - and, at the same time, the most enjoyable diving course that I have undertaken." Q. Why do I say, "most humbling"? "As a person with many years experience in different facets of diving, I was conceited enough to believe that I had a reasonable understanding of the basic techniques. During the Fundamentals programme, I quickly discovered that what little I did know was woefully inadequate when compared with the seemingly effortless performance of those skills by Andrew and JJ. That, all by itself, can be humbling. It's made more so when it's realised that these are regarded by them as 'basic' diving skills!" Q. Do I regard the Fundamentals programme as only for would-be technical divers? "Certainly not! Although I have every respect for people who want to wriggle their bodies through narrow, water-filled holes beneath the earth, it's not a prospect that fills me with joy! My idea of diving heaven, is a shallow, tropical reef, one where the visibility would stretch into infinity were it not for all the colourful fish life in between! "In that regard, the DIR Fundamentals programme is one that offers very distinct benefits and advantages to everybody who dives - regardless of the type of diving that appeals to them most. DIR is, after all, a philosophical concept with relevance to the broad spread of diving interests and one that's based on a proven system of safe diving practice." |
Q. What benefits have I gained from the course? "I have certainly become far more aware of the advantages of proper trim and how the correct approach to equipment configuration will assist. It has also become far more apparent to me that proper buoyancy control - and I do emphasise 'proper' - is an essential skill that many of us only think that we've mastered! "It also has to be said that the techniques that I learned during the course are ones that I have since been practicing constantly; mainly in the hope of gaining at least a modest proficiency in their use. And all of that is leaving to one side the theoretical aspects of the programme as far as gas management and decompression techniques are concerned." Q. And my thoughts on Rule #6? "Everybody should set themselves goals; things that they want to achieve rather than those that they know they can! For me, 'looking good' underwater might be the impossible dream! But I can carry with me the hope that when I eventually master the techniques learned during the DIR Fundamentals programme, then - at the very least - the quality of my diving will have improved enormously and I will be a safer and more conscientious diver; one who is better prepared to handle the unexpected. |
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