24
Jan

Life and times of a divemaster intern

   Posted by: Heze   in Bali

So, you want to know how life is really like for a diving intern?

First of all, it’s actually quite hard work in relatively rudimentary conditions. We typically get up at 5:30, have breakfast from the fridge (no cooking equipment) and arrive at the dive centre at 6:30 the latest. Then we pack up, help the centre staff haul all the equipment to the van, wait for the guests to arrive and head out for a dive.

The Bedroom in all its glory – a bed, a cupboard, a fridge and a toilet

It takes from forty-five minutes to three hours to get to the dive site, depending on which one we’re going to. Some coastal sites can be reached by car, but most of the time we take a boat directly from Sanur.  Usually we do two or three dives and practise some skills during them, have lunch on board or in a beach restaurant and head back to the dive centre around two o’clock or so. After the return trip we wait for the equipment to arrive, service our own stuff and usually give a hand to the staff with air tanks and such. If we’re not exhausted enough after this, there’s always some studies to do in the afternoon.

Returning to Sanur after dives

Finally, if time allows, we take some time to relax, surf the net and spend time with the dive centre staff.  There’s nothing waiting for us in the Bedroom, so we’re in no hurry to get back there. Usually we grab some dinner around seven, take a quick shower and hit the hay at nine. Rinse and repeat.

This is what we have to put up with day in, day out: fish

And yes, it sounds worse than it actually is. We commute by bike, go diving on a boat, get a lot of sun and fresh air on the way and the general philosophy of the whole industry is to have fun. We’ll also stay pretty fit just by attending the training, there’s a million places to eat in, and we actually get to do something we like. Right now it’s the best job/training/whatever in the world, but I’m sure it will be worse some days.

Still, why didn’t we do this any sooner?

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This entry was posted on Sunday, January 24th, 2010 at 13:50:30 and is filed under Bali. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 comments so far

Norzhi
 1 

[...] it sounds worse than it actually is.[...]

You do realise you haven’t said anything bad about it yet? Apart from maybe the missing cooking utensils.

So what you should’ve said was “This is even better than what it sounds like.”

H: Hmm, let me check. No kitchen, no air conditioning with constant +32 outside, minimal free time, having to move by bike in the rain, physically challenging day job, sitting in a bus or boat for hours every day… only positive sides?

January 25th, 2010 at 11:32:37
Norzhi
 2 

Not having to cook.
It’s warm.
Minimal chances of getting bored.
You work at a diving-thingmebob, you’d get wet anyways.
You keep fit.
Not having to stay on your feet all the time.

You’re looking at it upside down.

January 28th, 2010 at 14:40:41

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