We offer a range of PADI diving specialty courses to improve your diving knowledge, skills and safety. There are plenty of other specialty courses available depending on the local dive environment. If there is something that interests you then please just get in touch.
It’s not diving in cold water that isn’t fun, it’s being cold! Wearing a dry suit keeps you warm and dry throughout your dive and allows you to stay underwater for longer periods.
More commonly known as Nitrox, increases the amount of oxygen in the scuba cylinder, so you absorb less nitrogen, which in turn allows you to stay underwater for longer. Nitrox also makes you feel more energetic after a dive!
The lure of the deep is a siren call many divers long to answer. The PADI Deep Diver course will extend your maximum depth limit to 40 meters (130ft)
Immediately recognize scuba diving illnesses treatable with emergency oxygen and be prepared to offer aid. Knowing how and when to use emergency oxygen is a great, and critical, skill to have and means that if an emergency arises, you are ready to help.
Why become a PADI Boat diver? From little inflatable RIBs off the Brighton coast, to luxury live-a-boards in the Red Sea, boat diving can take you to amazing sites that are simply inaccessible by land. There is also the added advantage of being dropped right on top of your dive site, no walking required!.
All over the UK, and the world, there are sunken ships whose stories are waiting to be told, and whose decks is waiting to be explored. Or maybe the Abyssinia, a haunted 19th-century steamer, in the Farne Islands? You could stop by the SS Yongala in Australia, or the SS Thistlegorm in the Red Sea!