#Buoyancy Example

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#Buoyancy Example Reel by @mikkopaasi (verified account) - I was honoured to be the first guest on Dive Saga Podcast hosted by Nick Derutter. 

This recording is only 30 mins of straight forward conversation a
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@mikkopaasi
I was honoured to be the first guest on Dive Saga Podcast hosted by Nick Derutter. This recording is only 30 mins of straight forward conversation about my work… Fear, Stress and Decision making underwater cave systems, training and rescue operations. I speak so fast that this could equal a full hour but who’s got that much to spare in these hectic times. Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DVD-nLnEqxu/?igsh=MTB5aDdqeTJwNjh6bw== #dontpanic #ccrexplorers #divingsucks #cavediving #adventure
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @divesaga (verified account) - 🎙️ If you haven't checked out our new DiveSAGA Dive Debrief PODCAST then you are missing out big-time!
⚡ From deep wrecks to caves and flooded mines,
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@divesaga
🎙️ If you haven't checked out our new DiveSAGA Dive Debrief PODCAST then you are missing out big-time! ⚡ From deep wrecks to caves and flooded mines, this episode explains how shows like DiveSAGA are built around real environments, real limits, and real consequences, and why no shot is ever worth breaking fundamental diving principles. . . #scubadiving #underwater #podcast
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @acumenclips - Lost, disoriented, dwindling air. Panic means death. Calm thinking and methodical movement are the only way out. Keep moving. #DeepSeaDiving #CaveDivi
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@acumenclips
Lost, disoriented, dwindling air. Panic means death. Calm thinking and methodical movement are the only way out. Keep moving. #DeepSeaDiving #CaveDiving #DivingSafety #StayCalm #PanicControl #UnderwaterAdventure #ScubaDiving
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @freediving.in - Fear remains, but I manage it systematically: master protocols on land, learn blackout signs, drill rescues; hire expert safety diver; repeat same-dep
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@freediving.in
Fear remains, but I manage it systematically: master protocols on land, learn blackout signs, drill rescues; hire expert safety diver; repeat same-depth dives, track responses, progress slowly. Three months later, 30m calm. The ocean rewards thoroughness, not speed.
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @dirtydozenexpeditions - Most people only see the dives. They don't see the preparation. 👆🏼

@apuantti on the safety culture behind @dirtydozenexpeditions , which starts lon
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@dirtydozenexpeditions
Most people only see the dives. They don’t see the preparation. 👆🏼 @apuantti on the safety culture behind @dirtydozenexpeditions , which starts long before we ever leave the dock. About a year before departure, we begin structured Zoom calls and WhatsApp group discussions to prepare the team. Divers get access to our internal knowledge base, along with complimentary access to the @thehumandiver Fundamentals course. Once onboard, our crew delivers comprehensive safety briefings covering the vessel and diving procedures. Our expert guides lead detailed dive briefings, and every diver completes a SPLASH checklist before entering the water. This is just a small part of how we approach safety on our expeditions. Been onboard with us? What was your favorite detail in terms of safety during your trip? Let us know in the comments. Want to learn more? Visit www.dirtydozenexpeditions.com or email us at info@thedirtydozen.org.
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @gemmkemp - This is what most Sunday mornings look like for us 🎙️☕
Podcast planning, recording intros, plenty of laughs, coffee and tea and getting ready for the
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@gemmkemp
This is what most Sunday mornings look like for us 🎙️☕ Podcast planning, recording intros, plenty of laughs, coffee and tea and getting ready for the next episode of The BiG Scuba Podcast 🤿 Hard to believe we turn 6 years old on 4th February 🎉 Six years of bubbles, banter, amazing guests, big conversations, and a whole lot of fun doing this together. The work is real, but the rewards? Absolutely fab 💙 Massive thanks to our listeners, guests, supporters, and our brilliant sponsor @narkedat90 — we couldn’t do this without you. Here’s to many more Sundays like this 🙌 and all the fun each day 💕 👉 www.thebigscuba.com Dont forget to subscribe to our newsletter ! #BiGScubaPodcast #PodcastLife #ScubaCommunity #BehindTheScenes #SixYearsStrong
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @swiss.aquanaut - Dive trip accident data consistently shows a disproportionate number of incidents occurring on the first dive, not the deepest, not the most technical
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@swiss.aquanaut
Dive trip accident data consistently shows a disproportionate number of incidents occurring on the first dive, not the deepest, not the most technically demanding, not the last dive of an exhausting week. The first one. Several factors converge to make this counterintuitive pattern real. Divers arrive at a destination having not dived in weeks or months. Skills that feel automatic are slightly degraded. Buoyancy that was solid in familiar water needs recalibration for a new environment, different water density, different thermal layers, unfamiliar equipment configurations, a rental BCD that responds differently from the one at home. The gap between perceived competence (based on memory of diving well) and actual current competence (based on the reality of not having dived recently) is at its widest on dive one. At the same time, first-dive enthusiasm works against caution. The trip has been anticipated. The conditions look good. The briefing was encouraging. The tendency is to dive the plan from the trip planning phase rather than the plan appropriate for the current actual conditions and the current actual state of your skills. Experienced expedition divers and dive professionals address this with a deliberate shakeout dive, shallow, low-stakes, focused on recalibrating equipment and recalibrating self. Not exploring. Not chasing depth. Specifically rebuilding the feedback loop between body, equipment, and water before committing to the dives that actually matter. The shakeout dive isn't a warm-up. It's a recalibration. The difference is that a warm-up assumes your systems are ready. A recalibration checks whether they are. Do you treat your first dive of a trip differently from the rest, and if so, how? 👇
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @swiss.aquanaut - There's a concept in risk psychology called risk homeostasis. As people become more competent at something, they unconsciously recalibrate their risk
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@swiss.aquanaut
There's a concept in risk psychology called risk homeostasis. As people become more competent at something, they unconsciously recalibrate their risk tolerance upward to maintain a constant perceived level of danger. Experienced drivers speed more than beginners. Experienced climbers take harder routes with less protection. Experienced divers push depth, skip safety stops, dive in conditions they'd have refused at 20 dives. The skill is real, but the margin they believed they had shrinks faster than they realize, because the risks they're now taking are categorically different from beginner risks. Dive accident statistics confirm this pattern uncomfortably well. The majority of serious diving incidents don't involve beginners panicking at 10 meters. They involve experienced divers, 100, 200, 500 dives, making small overconfident decisions that compound. Certification teaches you to dive. Experience teaches you that you can dive. Neither one teaches you that your brain is actively working against your risk assessment the more comfortable you feel. The most dangerous moment in any diver's progression isn't the first open water dive. It's somewhere around dive 80, when fear has gone but wisdom hasn't fully arrived. At what point in your diving did you feel most overconfident looking back? 👇
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @divesaga (verified account) - 🎙️ The first DiveSAGA Dive Debrief PODCAST episode is now live! 🔊
👉 In this episode we discuss filmmaking in hostile environments such as under dec
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@divesaga
🎙️ The first DiveSAGA Dive Debrief PODCAST episode is now live! 🔊 👉 In this episode we discuss filmmaking in hostile environments such as under decompression obligation or overhead environments. 📺 DiveSAGA Dive Debrief is the behind-the-scenes companion to the DiveSAGA YouTube series. It is not a replacement for the films, but a deeper look at the planning, decision-making, and compromises that happen before and during real exploration dives. 💽 This episode explores how storytelling, diving skill, safety, and filmmaking priorities collide when time is limited and the environment is unforgiving. Topics include: • How DiveSAGA episodes are conceived and built around story • Why story always comes before spectacle • The real order of priorities underwater: line, environment, buoyancy, trim, team, camera, and lights • Why complex dives (cave, CCR, scooter, navigation, emergency plans, and filming) do not simply add up, they multiply risk • The pressure of time constraints and limited bottom time • How previous knowledge of a dive site changes planning and shot design • Why filmmakers must sometimes sacrifice “money shots” for safety • How constraints force creative solutions in lighting and camera setup • The responsibility of not promoting bad diving habits on screen • Letting real stories unfold without encouraging unsafe behavior 🔗 You can find it in today's stories, or by searching "DiveSAGA" on Spotify and YouTube. #scubadiving #podcast #diver
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @bezeldiveoperations - The first 3 Stories of Dive Operations Journal are live #scubadiving #journal #read #adventure #scubadive
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@bezeldiveoperations
The first 3 Stories of Dive Operations Journal are live #scubadiving #journal #read #adventure #scubadive
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @diverace_liveaboard - Most diving incidents can be avoided by anticipating problems and acting before they occur. 

Safe diving is shaped by awareness underwater and the pr
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@diverace_liveaboard
Most diving incidents can be avoided by anticipating problems and acting before they occur. Safe diving is shaped by awareness underwater and the practices divers follow throughout a dive. Planning ahead, staying aware of your surroundings, and making calm, informed decisions help prevent small issues from escalating. This post marks the start of the DiveRACE Safety Series, beginning with Diving Practices & Underwater Awareness. Throughout the series, we’ll explore key topics across the diving industry, including environmental awareness, travel considerations, liveaboard operations, and diver training. Each article focuses on practical habits and real-world considerations that support safer diving, whatever your experience level. 👉 Learn more by reading our latest blog post below (link in bio) and follow along as the series continues. https://diverace.com/diverace-safety-series-diving-practices-underwater-awareness/ Thinking about experiencing a diving liveaboard in the Similan Islands? Join us on board MV DiveRACE Class X, coming early 2026! Reserve your spot now at www.DiveRACE.com 🎉 All bookings with DiveRACE go into supporting our coral restoration project - DiveRACE Foundation! Learn more on our website and join us on the journey to help restore the ocean's coral reefs. @diverace_foundation We look forward to welcoming you on board! #DiveRACE #responsiblediving #safety #divingpractices #situationalawareness
#Buoyancy Example Reel by @swiss.aquanaut - Bad dives happen. Panic attack. Equipment failure. Lost buddy. Poor visibility that overwhelmed you. You surface shaken, embarrassed, questioning your
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@swiss.aquanaut
Bad dives happen. Panic attack. Equipment failure. Lost buddy. Poor visibility that overwhelmed you. You surface shaken, embarrassed, questioning yourself. How you handle the next 24 hours determines whether this dive damages your confidence long-term or becomes useful experience. Immediately after surfacing: Don't talk about it yet. Most divers immediately verbalize what went wrong, often with shame or self-criticism. This locks the negative narrative in place. Stay quiet for 10 minutes. Just breathe. Let adrenaline clear. Hour 1: Write down exactly what happened factually. Not "I panicked like an idiot" but "visibility dropped to 2 meters, I lost spatial reference, heart rate increased, I signaled buddy and we surfaced." Facts only. No self-judgment. This process separates event from interpretation. Hour 2-4: Identify the specific trigger. Not "I freaked out" but "I freaked out when visibility dropped below 3 meters." Specificity is important. You're not a diver who panics. You're a diver who struggles with sudden visibility reduction. That's a specific, solvable problem. Day 2: Research and plan response to that specific trigger. Visibility drops: practice low-vis drills with buddy. Equipment fails: practice that failure scenario in shallow water. Buddy lost: practice separation protocol. Day 3-7: Get back in water. Not challenging conditions. Shallow, calm, familiar. Rebuild positive experience. Your nervous system needs evidence that diving is safe and manageable. Give it that evidence. The mistake: Avoiding diving after bad experience. Every day you don't return, your nervous system consolidates the "diving is dangerous" narrative. The longer the gap, the harder the return. Bad dives don't define you. How you respond to them does. What was your worst dive and how did you recover? 👇

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