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Hi and welcome to DIRdiver.co.uk. |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 09 February 2007 |
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"Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you too can become great." Mark Twain 
Hi, I'm Clare Gledhill and I teach Fundamentals for GUE here in the UK and anywhere else that would like me to drop by. I'm an active advanced trimix diver, diving with DIR UK at home and diving caves abroad wherever I can. I only teach for GUE.
From the Caribbean reefs, to the Baltic sea, to the English Channel, DIR principles are now being put into practice. Thousands of divers have found that the skills taught in DIR courses help them reach their full potential as divers.
GUE diver training looks to take the skills you have as a diver, buoyancy, awareness, buddy rescue skills, gas management, decompression management and refine them to a point where you become more comfortable in the water.
Whether you are looking to do shallow reef diving on a single tank, or deep wreck or cave diving with mixed gases, DIR principles taught via GUE training will help you build a foundation which will help make you more comfortable in the water. Are you up to the challenge? I've put various bits and bobs on here which I hope will be of interest to you. Some papers and research, some skill tips and training advice, and what it is all about - some trip reports about diving in wrecks and caves around the world. I'm passionate about my diving and enjoy helping other people get that way about their own. Have a look around my site, and contact me with any questions or suggestions - and dive safe! |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 09 October 2008 )
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Written by Administrator
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Tuesday, 19 January 2010 |
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We like to try to get to Mexico once a year and this year we got lucky with a last minute trip booked at great rates. We stayed at the Grand Palladium Kentenah resort and would go back there again. We flew from Gatwick with Thompson who had a pretty good approach to dive gear and flew home with them to Manchester - yes the snow got us diverted 100s of miles from our car! Anyway, enough of that - the diving. 
This was my fifth trip to Mexico and Al's fourth so we've done a fair amount of diving there. This made for some interesting discussions about where to dive. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 13 July 2010 )
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Future Fundamentals Courses |
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 28 February 2007 |
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Dates released for 2010.
Scheduled weekends for the next six months are as follows so far: 19 March Vobster UK Spaces available more info 09 April Vobster UK Spaces available more info 02 July Vobster UK 1 space available more info There can be some flexibility as courses will not be formally arranged until I have at least two divers interested so if a date or venue that you particularly want is not available, let me know. There is some possibility of midweek courses in the summer months and I am of course happy to travel outside the UK if you have a group of interested divers. If you would like to book on to a course, or have any questions, do let me know via the contact button above or via
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To register please visit www.gue.com go to diver education and then scheduled classes. Here you may register for the class. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 January 2010 )
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Written by Administrator
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Sunday, 17 May 2009 |
I haven't been to Florida for a year which is longer than normal but life sort of got in the way - or rather trips to Scapa, France, Holland and Mexico did!  Having timed our trip to coincide with two WKPP weekends, we were rather disappointed to learn prior to getting there that conditions in cave country were difficult. In addition to Wakulla and the other WKPP caves being undiveable, flooding meant that Manatee, Peacock and Little River were out too. It looked like Ginnie would be the mainstay of our trip. How wrong could we have been! Day 1 Ginnie Springs - Berman Room
We arrive in High Springs and take the RBs to Halcyon for their service. They have done 150 or so hours now and needed Corey's attention. Bumping into Casey, he asks what our plans are for the week and then offers to come for a dive as he has his gear in the van outside and it’s a Friday which is definitely a dive day. We're certainly not going to say no although we have to pop back to EE to get scooters as Casey isn't particularly known for his attraction to swimming.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 January 2010 )
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Written by Administrator
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Thursday, 09 October 2008 |
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I always said I probably wouldn’t ever do the German fleet in Scapa Flow – not because I didn’t think that the diving would be good but because the 14 hour drive seemed a bit of a waste when I could get to caves in France, Florida or Mexico quicker.
It wasn’t that I didn’t want to go - this mecca for English wreck divers always promised good diving – but I was reluctant to give up a weeks cave diving to do it. This changed when I was asked to run a trip for GUE tech 2 divers. So mid afternoon one Friday found me, Al, Andy Kerslake and John Grogan heading for Scapa where we would meet the boat, Valkyrie, and all our kit which had travelled with John Kendall and David Martin in a van. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 January 2010 )
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Written by Administrator
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Thursday, 09 October 2008 |
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I was at home preparing dinner one night just after Christmas when I switched on the news and saw a battle being bravely fought to save a ship which had run into difficulties off the coast in severe weather. The Greek-registered ship was heading for Alexandria but was stricken mid-channel 35 miles southeast of Dartmouth.
Over the next few hours the story changed from attempts to save the ship to attempts to save her crew. A joint French and English rescue mission was launched to save the twenty crew, some of whom were injured after being pounded by force seven gales off the coast and with some acts of bravery the lifeboats were brought alongside the massive ship and all were saved. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 09 October 2008 )
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 16 January 2008 |

A well fitting harness should be adjusted so that it is not really tight (you need to be able to get out of it easily) but not so loose that the set rolls around on your back which would be really uncomfortable. I’ve drafted out some instructions to help you get it right for you. A diver's harness should be rigged from one piece of webbing and should have no quick-release buckles or other failure points. Though plastic quick-release buckles seem to simplify the process of getting into and out of one's dive gear, these “savings” are illusory, putting a diver at greater risk that s/he would be without it. In many cases this could prove fatal as the diver clings to tanks whose negative tendency stands in stark contrast to his/her own positive tendency. In cases where the loosened or dislodged quick release does not cause a diver to lose their tanks it can easily cause a dangerously significant shift in weight, throwing the diver off balance. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 July 2008 )
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 18 July 2007 |
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After a Sunday spent fixing, filling, sleeping and eating, Monday saw us head to Ressel for the dive I had been planning for some time – the deep circuit which takes us to a max depth of 70 metres for about 2.7 kilometres total travel distance.
This dive done open circuit requires six stages, three for bottom gas and three deco/travel gases. The stages in this picture are all to be carried by me. The RBs take four stages and each of us had twinsets on which were intended for redundancy alone. Working together the large amount of kit required was carted down the goat track to the river quite quickly and we ate lunch in a very civilised manner before kitting up. The water level was way down on where it had been on Thursday. I got in first and spent some time arranging my stages in a way that I was comfortable with for each of the drop which were to come, clipped off my scooter and rested in the 24 degree river water. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 July 2008 )
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