Ready to go Deep? How does 40 meters sound? Did you know that 40 meters is the same as a 12 story building?
Deep diving opens the door to many new exciting dive sites like deeper wrecks, reefs and walls. As a rule, divers tend to be adventurous people, and deep diving – whether to visit a wreck or take photos – can certainly be called adventurous. It’s only natural that like most divers, you have some interest in deep diving.
PADI Enriched Air Diver Course is designed to qualify recreational divers to use enriched air (“nitrox”) for no stop recreational diving with an enriched air (EANx) compatible dive computer. The program addresses computer-assisted diving while using enriched air with 22 percent to 40 percent oxygen to monitor no stop limits and oxygen exposure.
The PADI Digital Underwater Photographer course is a two-part (Level One and Level Two) introduction to digital underwater photography centered around today’s point-and-shoot digital cameras. The course helps you develop the knowledge, skills and practical techniques necessary to obtain excellent photographs with a digital camera, even on your first photo dive.
Multilevel diving is defined as gaining more no decompression time by ascending to shallower depths where nitrogen absorption is slower. Thanks to recreational multilevel diving, in most environments you can stay underwater as long as you have air and warmth.
The PADI Underwater Naturalist course is designed to help you interact with the living underwater world based on objective assessments and observations. Underwater Naturalist teaches you to view the aquatic ecosystems scientifically, without biases based on misconceptions and myths.








