By David on Saturday, 01 October 2022
Category: Diving

Rescue, Repair, Recover: 10 Surprising Things Scuba Divers Can Do

Learning to scuba dive unlocks new destinations, magical experiences, and friends for life. It provides uninterrupted, unfiltered time to switch off from everyday troubles. You’ll also be surprised just how many weird and wonderful things scuba divers can do, such as:

epic rescue missions underwater modeling removing old fishing gear playing underwater ice hockey underwater treasure hunting

What can you do with a scuba diving certification? From volunteering to specialist scuba careers, here are 10 of the more unusual things scuba divers can do:

Photo Credit: Mike Berry

1. Search for (and recover) lost things

Every day, people lose things in the ocean or inland waterways, but if they (or someone they know) can scuba dive, there’s hope. Using search and recovery skills, divers have reunited keys, phones, sunglasses, cameras, and even wedding rings with their owners. For a real challenge, there’s still 2,000Ib (900kg) of missing cheese in Quebec!

Police divers and underwater criminal investigators also rely on scuba training to find, retrieve, and examine bodies, weapons, and other underwater evidence. Divers can free snagged anchors, salvage sunken wrecks, and even bring up long-lost timber!

Finally, how about collecting golf balls? With over 300 million lost annually in the US alone, it can be pretty rewarding (while recycling them is good for the planet). Just be warned: with cold water, low visibility, and (in some places) leeches, snakes, or alligators, it’s not for the faint-hearted!

2. Go on rescue missions and keep people safe

In 2018, two British cave divers became world famous following the rescue of twelve Thai boys and their football coach. The event undoubtedly became one of history’s greatest rescues and would have been impossible without scuba divers.

Being scuba certified means you’ll have underwater skills that, one day, you might use to save a life. With additional training, such as the PADI Rescue Diver or PADI Public Safety Diver courses, you could support major rescue operations or provide safety cover for:

What’s more, it’s not just humans that need saving; there are countless stories of divers rescuing marine life from injury and entanglement.

Photo Credit: Andrew McKaskle via Wikimedia Commons

3. Inspect, clean, and repair

There’s an astounding amount of things scuba divers can do when it comes to underwater maintenance jobs, from finding leaks in a neighbor’s pool to heavy-duty commercial work. Divers repair aqueducts, water parks, bridges, and even weld underwater pipelines on oil rigs. A rise in sustainable seafood also means more fish farms, which need divers to repair enclosures and check fish.

Boats and yachts need upkeep, too — like changing propellors or cleaning barnacles from the hull. Owners often enlist scuba divers to avoid the cost and hassle of taking their boat out of the water.

Then there’s contamination diving. From sewers (yes, it’s as bad as it sounds) to toxic spills and nuclear reactors, these underwater hazmat settings still need essential maintenance. It means unpleasant conditions (and vaccinations), but you’d certainly be a one-off among your friends.

4. Take part in research and conservation

You might already know about popular citizen science projects such as CoralWatch and Dive Against Debris. Still, there are many more ways to make scuba diving purposeful through science and research. Some other things scuba divers can do include:

Studying sinkholes Being an underwater veterinarian Combining art and science, like Australia’s Coral Greenhouse Searching for seahorses Testing scuba gear for manufacturers or magazines

Photo Credit: Associated Press

5. Hunt for treasure

From ancient shipwrecks to lost cities, scuba divers and underwater archeologists can uncover history and treasures from the seabed, and even beneath pyramids!

Many dive shops also host underwater treasure hunts with prizes, while several Geocaches are only reachable with scuba gear (locations include the Kittiwake and Finnish mines).

6. Re-create life on land

Social media can make us feel like we need to do more. If you want to impress your friends while still getting a healthy dose of unfiltered, switched-off life, then grab your scuba gear and swap topside activities for underwater equivalents like these:

Send a waterproof postcard: there are postboxes in Vanuatu, Japan, Norway, and Malaysia Get your hair cut: one hairdresser managed 33 customers in a record-breaking fundraiser Celebrate the holidays: hunt Easter eggs, carve pumpkins, or dress up like Santa Iron your clothes: the Extreme Ironing Championships are really a thing! Get married: the largest underwater wedding was in 2011, with 303 guests Pay your respects: Florida’s underwater memorial park also supports the local reef

Or, how about a hotel break where you’ll need to scuba dive to your room? At Jules Verne Undersea Lodge, you can even order an underwater pizza delivery!

7. Remove things from the ocean (that don’t belong there)

While Dive Against Debris has already removed over 2 million items of underwater trash, up to 1 million tons of fishing gear are lost in the ocean every year. Thankfully, charities like Global Ghost Gear Initiative and Ghost Diving work with volunteer divers trained to remove ghost gear safely. Recent success stories include Greece, California, and the UK.

Something else that shouldn’t be in the ocean is explosives. With our rich maritime and wartime history, it’s no surprise that bombs and mines are discovered from time to time. It calls for trained clearance divers to remove the threat. So, if you want to combine a military career with hair-raising scuba diving missions, this one’s for you!

8. Experience unfiltered arts and culture

Arts, culture, and creativity can boost our mental health, but spending too much time on cellphones and social media during live events can ruin the experience. Instead, why not learn how to dive, swap your tech for tanks, and Live Unfiltered with a fully immersive, screen-free experience. Three things scuba divers can do are:

9. Play your favorite sports and games

Scuba diving is fun on its own, but there’s certainly no harm in adding a few extra underwater sports and diving games. Indeed, buoyancy courses often use simple obstacles like hoops. In the UK, you’ll find the world’s first underwater escape room with themes including a murder mystery and princess rescue. Meanwhile, escaping the undead with Zombie Apocalypse Diver is a no-brainer for kids at Halloween!

For more serious competitors, plenty of land-based team games also work well underwater — rugby and hockey included. In colder climates, there’s even underwater ice hockey! Put your navigation skills to the test with underwater orienteering, take a ride with a scooter, or pause and relax with diving yoga.

10. Raise money for charity

You don’t need to scuba dive to raise money for charity — unless you want to attempt one of these wackier fundraising challenges:

Break an underwater world record: make the longest human chain, dive in the most countries, solve the most Rubik’s cubes, or join the world’s biggest underwater cleanup. Race other divers: every July, there’s an underwater bicycle race in North Carolina, USA. (Almost) anything goes, and it raises funds for children’s cancer research.

Things scuba divers can do — training and safety

While many of these activities can be enjoyed by any diver level, some need further training – such as rescue, technical, professional, or commercial diving certifications. Some diving jobs sound easy (like cleaning a boat or recovering a lost item), but they might need specialist equipment, training, licenses, or insurance. Before undertaking any new scuba activity, always check you have the appropriate training and safety precautions in place.

Discover things scuba divers can do and #LiveUnfiltered

Surprised about the number of things scuba divers can do? Why not try some of them and discover the unusual ways to find fun, purpose, accomplishment, and to Live Unfiltered through scuba diving.

Sign up for the PADI Open Water Diver course and learn to dive in three easy steps. You can even get started online right now with our eLearning course. You’ll be ready to explore all the things to do while scuba diving in no time!

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Original author: Danielle Schofield
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