
Dive Planning · Read time ~4 min
Dive boats have their own rhythm, their own spatial logic, and their own set of unspoken norms that experienced divers navigate automatically. First-timers sometimes feel disorientated — not because the boat is complicated, but because nobody told them what to expect. Here is what experienced divers know that first-timers usually learn the hard way.
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Arrival at marina
Sign in with the operator, get your gear assignment, find where you're sitting. Introduce yourself to the divemaster. Ask where the toilets are, where the seasickness medication is, and where the emergency oxygen kit is.
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Gear setup
Assemble your equipment at your designated station. Don't spread gear across multiple areas — space is always limited on dive boats. Lay fins on the deck, not standing up where they fall.
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Briefing
Pay full attention. The briefing covers site conditions, entry/exit method, signals, depth limits, marine life of note, and emergency procedure. Everything you need for the dive is in this 5-minute talk. Questions are always welcome after.
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Buddy check
Before entry: BCD — inflate/deflate. Weights — check release. Releases — all clips and buckles. Air — turn on, check pressure, breathe test. Final OK — mask, fins, everything on.
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Entry
Giant stride (most common from dive boats), back roll, or ladder depending on the boat. Wait for the divemaster's signal. Hold your mask and regulator during entry. Confirm OK at the surface before descending.
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Between dives
Drink water — more than you feel like drinking. Rinse your mask. Don't sit in direct sun without sunscreen. Debrief with your buddy about what you saw. Prepare your computer for the next dive.
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After last dive
Rinse your gear in the tank before it dries with salt. Log your dive while memory is fresh. Thank your guide — tips are always appreciated and meaningful.
✓ Don't use someone else's gear station
Space is allocated. Spreading into someone else's area before asking creates friction — often with people who came for a peaceful dive day.
✓ Fins go on at the water, not on deck
Walking in fins on a wet, rolling boat is how falls happen. Fins go on at the entry point, not when you're still navigating the deck.
✓ Rinse your regulator first stage with the cap ON
Water entering the first stage is the most common source of regulator contamination. Always cap before rinsing, always.
✓ Listen when the guide speaks
Side conversations during briefings mean someone misses emergency information. This is not a café. It is a pre-dive safety briefing.
✓ Help less experienced divers
If you notice someone struggling with equipment and you know what to do, offer help. Dive boats work on mutual assistance.
✓ Don't be last back to the boat
The guide has to wait for every diver. Being consistently last means everyone on the boat waits for you. Be back before your tank runs low.
Ready for the boat. Ready for the reef.
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