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Recreational
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Rescue Diver How do you take a subject like accident prevention and management and turn it into fun? Call it the PADI Rescue Diver Course. Unlike a lot of other schools, we run this course over two full days to maximise your knowledge and give lots of opportunity to hone the skills you have learnt.
The PADI Rescue Diver Course develops your knowledge and skills so you can effectively perform diver assists and rescues, manage diving accident situations and render first aid. The program is an important step in expanding your knowledge and experience as a diver. PADI Rescue Diver (or equivalent) certification is also a prerequisite for all PADI leadership courses.
To get into the PADI Rescue Diver program, you'll need to be certified as a PADI Advanced Diver (or equivalent) and must be at least 15 years old. The PADI Junior Rescue Diver Course is available if you're between the ages of 12 and 14 and hold a PADI Junior Advanced Open Water Diver rating. You'll also need to have successfully completed the PADI Emergency First Response Course (which you can do with us) or a sanctioned program in CPR within the past three years.
The PADI Rescue Diver Course covers: -
- Self-Rescue and Diver Stress
- Diving First Aid
- Emergency Management and Equipment Considerations
- Swimming and Non-Swimming Assists
- Panicked Diver Response
- Underwater Problems
- Missing Diver Procedures
- Surfacing Unconscious Diver
- In-Water Artificial Respiration
- Egress (exit) Methods
- First Aid Procedures for Pressure Related Accidents
- Dive Accident Scenarios
All of these topics are covered in the PADI Rescue Diver Manual which is included in the course fee. After successfully completing the course, you'll receive the internationally recognised PADI Rescue Diver certification card.
The Rescue Course is £250.
Emergency First Response is £125.

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Newsflash
The summer is here so why not learn to scuba dive, enter a whole new world of adventure, excitement and fun.
The PADI Open Water Diver course is the world’s most popular scuba course, and has introduced millions of people to the adventurous diving lifestyle. |
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Ok you have completed your PADI Open Water Course, and are wondering what the next step is?
The PADI Advanced Open Water Course takes your newly acquired skills and enhances them. It provides you with an insight into various diving areas that you may wish to take further by taking speciality courses.
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How do you take a subject like accident prevention and management and turn it into fun? Call it the PADI Rescue Diver Course.
Unlike a lot of other schools, we run this course over two full days to maximise your knowledge and give lots of opportunity to hone the skills you have learnt.
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Read more... |
Open Water? Check
Advanced Open Water? Check
Rescue Diver? Check
So what's next?
Well you could go for the Master Scuba Diver rating.
With the PADI Master Scuba Diver rating, you have reached the highest non professional level in the PADI System of diver education. It means that you have acquired significant training and experience in a variety of dive environments.
What else do you need?
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Night diving can be some of the most exhilerating and exciting diving you can experience. Everything looks different in the beam of your torch and new life begins to emerge.
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The TDI Advanced Nitrox Course qualifies divers to use enriched air nitrox from EAN 21 through EAN 100 to a depth of 40 metres/130 feet during dives hat do not require staged decompression.
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