There are many scuba training organizations out there. PADI (professional association of diving instructors) is just one of them. Most of these agencies allow the Course Director (C-Ditz) to certify open water instructors. PADI (often referred to as "put another dollar in") decided to make instructor candidates go through an IE (instructor evaluation) by PADI headquarters staff, having the last word on instructor rating and of course collecting more money. I was an IDC (instructor development course) staff instructor. A candidate in one IDC, was an expat that owned a small resort on Grand Cayman. After graduation from the IE, he invited me and my then girlfriend at the time to come stay and dive there. Only had to pay for airfare and food. We stayed there for 5 days. After diving with him a couple times, he showed me the air fill station, pointed out the local dive sites and handed me the keys to his boat! His villa was on Seven Mile Beach. Needless to say we took full advatage of the opportunity.
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After he and his buddies decimated the grouper population in the Med, he decided to discontinue selling spearguns from U.S. Divers (Aqualung) around 1977. One of his first tv specials was the Bahama Blue Hole. The Blue Hole is a deep area surrounded by a coral atoll. When it is low tide the corals are usually exposed above the water. Now just how do you get a ship, the Calypso, into the Blue Hole? The owner of the last dive store I worked at had some interesting pictures locked in his safe, that he showed me one day. Dynamite anyone?