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Home » The Dive Locker Podcast » Page 27

028 Dive Industry Strategies During COVID-19 Pandemic

By Tec Clark Leave a Comment

In this episode of The Dive Locker Podcast you will learn strategies for dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic as diving professionals.

Welcome To The Show!

Welcome to the dive locker podcast, the podcast for dive professionals where we bring you the latest in diving industry resources that make you excellent at teaching techniques, risk management and dive business.

Desperate times call for desperate measures, actually I like more “unprecedented times call for unprecedented measures”. So much has changed in just even one week. Social distancing has now been added to washing hands. And now we are seeing restrictions on restaurants, churches, bars, even beaches. Homeschooling is now a thing.

Obviously there are social and economical impacts with all of this. But as cliched as it sounds we can’t panic nor loose hope. We will get through this. Darcy Kieran with Scubanomics says this in his latest blog post “The dive industry bounced back after 9/11 and after the 2008 financial crisis. We will bounce back again. The question is how well your own business will do, meanwhile.”

Often hope comes from wisdom. We can turn to leaders for wisdom and guidelines but remember this is new to everyone. So bear that in mind when hearing or reading news or social media.

In today’s episode I want to highlight some in our industry who are making recommendations of how to weather this successfully, and I want to share many of these recommendations.

  • DAN’s recommendations
  • PADI’s recommendations
  • Madacide-1 a hospital-grade equipment and surface disinfectant
  • Gurpreet K Gill quote on Coronavirus response

How to Use Madacide-1

Now Madacide‘s directions say to use it at full concentration. BUT then you have to rinse it off with fresh water. If you miss that step, then a milky white formation appears and it is too harsh for contact with mouth, nose and eyes. What we do is make a 9 to 1 solution – that’s one part of Madacide to 9 parts of water. In our case that’s one cup of Madacide to 9 cups of water, that makes for a nice 10 cups in our Rubbermaid 12cup/3L container. By the way that size container is easy to store and is just the right size to dunk items into.

But here’s the trick, we are using that ratio because the students will fresh water rinse first, then they dip the items in the Madacide solution last and then we put it in the dive locker and let it dry with the Madacide solution on it. No rinsing required – there is no aftertaste, smell or caustic issues with the body. And this still kills everything because of the length of time the Madacide solution is on the gear.

Our dive program rents every piece of equipment so we have students disinfect everything. After fresh water rinsing, snorkels go in, masks go in, the whole second stage primary and alternate second stage go in, and the BCD inflator hose. Anything the mouth has been in contact with.

A little bit of Madacide goes a long way. One gallon bottle will cost about $54 and a case of four one gallon bottles is $170. The best part is this will last a long time because your solution works for multiple rinsing sessions. We just put the lid back on the Rubbermaid container and it stays good for several days. Our dive program averages two cups per week, that means one gallon is lasting 8 weeks. That’s with pool sessions four nights a week and both days of every weekend. Your dive center may be less for your rental equipment use, so your Madacide stock will last you a while. Again, I have my Amazon Associates links to both the one gallon and the case of four one gallon of Madacide.

If you would like to see all of these decontamination procedures demonstrated – go to my YouTube channel TheScubaGuru and look for my new Beyond the Standard video on Disinfecting Rental Scuba Gear.

Episode Sponsor

Mastering Dive Tables & Decompression Theory Course

Thanks For Listening!

That’s it for today, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. Remember to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher, that way you’ll be notified of new episodes as soon as they go live and please leave a rating. Items talked about in this episode can be found on the show notes Page at scubaguru.com and there you can also click the microphone and leave us a comment. Thanks again. We’ll see you in the next episode. Safe diving and take good care of my friends.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/divelocker/028_Dive_Industry_Strategies_During_COVID-19_Pandemic.mp3

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Filed Under: The Dive Locker Podcast Tagged With: COVID-19, DAN, PADI

027 Disinfecting Rental Dive Gear

By Tec Clark Leave a Comment

In this episode of The Dive Locker Podcast you will learn the strategies of how to properly disinfect rental scuba equipment.

Welcome To The Show!

Welcome to the dive locker podcast, the podcast for dive professionals where we bring you the latest in diving industry resources that make you excellent at teaching techniques, risk management and dive business.

It’s pretty common that many in the diving industry are just relying on fresh water rinsing of rental equipment after each use instead of disinfecting after each use. That’s not good enough, especially in today’s virus conscious world. Disinfecting after each use is the way to go.

There are two products I highly recommend, Madacide-1 for regulators, snorkels, masks, and BCs – anything that has made contact with the respiratory system. And then Odor Away for all exposure suits.

Madacide-1

First, let’s look at Madacide-1. This is a hospital-grade equipment and surface disinfectant. In fact, it is so good that it is a bactericide, a viruscide, a fungicide, and a mildewcide, There are a couple versions of this – you want the Madacide-1 with the blue label. We have been using this in our Nova Southeastern University Academic Diving Program for over 9 years with amazing results.

Now Madacide‘s directions say to use it at full concentration. BUT then you have to rinse it off with fresh water. If you miss that step, then a milky white formation appears and it is too harsh for contact with mouth, nose and eyes. What we do is make a 9 to 1 solution – that’s one part of Madacide to 9 parts of water. In our case that’s one cup of Madacide to 9 cups of water, that makes for a nice 10 cups in our Rubbermaid 12cup/3L container. By the way that size container is easy to store and is just the right size to dunk items into.

But here’s the trick, we are using that ratio because the students will fresh water rinse first, then they dip the items in the Madacide solution last and then we put it in the dive locker and let it dry with the Madacide solution on it. No rinsing required – there is no aftertaste, smell or caustic issues with the body. And this still kills everything because of the length of time the Madacide solution is on the gear.

Our dive program rents every piece of equipment so we have students disinfect everything. After fresh water rinsing, snorkels go in, masks go in, the whole second stage primary and alternate second stage go in, and the BCD inflator hose. Anything the mouth has been in contact with.

A little bit of Madacide goes a long way. One gallon bottle will cost about $54 and a case of four one gallon bottles is $170. The best part is this will last a long time because your solution works for multiple rinsing sessions. We just put the lid back on the Rubbermaid container and it stays good for several days. Our dive program averages two cups per week, that means one gallon is lasting 8 weeks. That’s with pool sessions four nights a week and both days of every weekend. Your dive center may be less for your rental equipment use, so your Madacide stock will last you a while. Again, I have my Amazon Associates links to both the one gallon and the case of four one gallon of Madacide.

Odor Away

Next up is for your rental wetsuits, you’ll want to use Odor Away. Why is this product the best to use, because it is not just a smell good agent. I reached out to the manufacturers of Odor Away for their detailed description on their product here is what they had to say. “ODOR-A-WAY is state of the art, natural, environmentally friendly product, specifically formulated for diving, surfing and watersports community.

ODOR-A-WAY is a synergetic mixture of special odor destroying bacteria cultures which are kept in a state of suspended animation while contained in gallons or bottles. It has a long shelf life and best if stored in temperatures ranging from 35F to 100 F.

ODOR-A-WAY biologically eliminates the odors commonly found in neoprene wet suits, BCDs and Dive Skins, including urine, mildew and other smells.

Watersports odors are produced by bacteria, found in both salt and fresh water. These bacteria’s consume organic matter like urine, algae, waste matter and pollution. When the bacteria starts consuming these matters, it produces a small amount of foul smelling waste products. When billions and billions of bacteria particles’ consume organic matter in your wet suit or dive skin, there a serious problem.

As soon as ODOR-A-WAY concentrate is mixed with warm water, our odor destroying bacteria, springs into action and starts to find and destroy the organic waste matter they find in neoprene, nylon, Polertec and any other items immersed in the solution. Our ODOR-A-WAY microbes eat and reproduce very aggressively, they produce only odorless carbon dioxide and water. The bad bacteria are out of food and absorbed by ODOR-A-WAY.

ODOR-A-WAY also forms a bio-film that penetrates deep into neoprene, eliminating urine and other contaminants from absorbing under pressure. This deep cleaning is not possible with shampoos and cleaners.

When the ODOR-A-WAY microbes have completed their job, they quietly expire leaving behind a thoroughly clean environment.”

So what we have at our academic diving program is a 100 gallon Rubbermaid trough, many dive centers have this same thing. We label it “WETSUITS ONLY” and we have a fill line marked less than half way, so about 40 gallons. Then we add four cups of Odor Away to the 40 gallons of water. Now this is slightly less than the instructions say, but when following the instructions of 8 ounces per 5 gallons of water, that is super concentrated and requires rinsing afterwards.

Again, by doing our mix we have students thoroughly rinse their wetsuits inside and out. And while the wetsuit is still inside out from them taking it off, they immerse it and swish it around in the Odor Away bath. Then they turn it right side out and hang it up. We then put it in the dive locker and let it dry with the Odor Away solution on it. Again, this kills everything and the locker smells great. You CAN find Odor Away online at Amazon, BUT if you’re a retail dive center I highly recommend you get this product wholesale through Marine Sports Manufacturing. Mike and Miki Reinman are great people and their company Marine Sports Manufacturing has outstanding customer service.

Now A couple areas in our dive program have changed with respect to the coronavirus. and you may want to do the same. First, for BCDs we now add about half a cup of the Madacide 1:9 mixture into the BCD then add 3-5 seconds of fresh water via a hose, inflate then mix around. Remember The BCD has exhaled air from the lungs in it, so this is an added precaution. Also, we are now going to single use manikins for our CPR and oxygen provider courses. The lungs of the manikins are contaminated upon the first exhaled breath into them, and changing the lungs out during the class isn’t feasible especially for two person CPR training. So now we have one dedicated manikin for each person in the course.

Oh, and one more thing in case your students or customers ask, how does chlorine in a pool deal with coronavirus? Well, Per Ireland’s Health Protection Surveillance Center, the following detailed specifics are minimally required to sufficiently inactivate COVID-19 virus in chlorinated drinking water and swimming pools:
“For Swimming Pool chlorination, operating to ‘current recommendations / best practice’ means maintenance of a free chlorine residual of at least 1.0 mg/l (depending on pool type and disinfectant used).” This is basically saying that if a pool is in accordance with our US Department of Health specifications of properly chlorinated pools, it will inactivate the virus.

Folks, please use these disinfecting procedures and tell your students and customers about it. They will appreciate knowing your concern for their health. Also, here’s a tip, notice how I’ve been saying have the student do it? Well this is psychologically very good for your customers. When they play a role in their health and the health of others, there is a buy in, they feel part of a good effort. Don’t think your doing them a favor by disinfecting all the equipment behind the scenes, let the students do it for everyone to see it is getting done properly.

If you would like to see all of these decontamination procedures demonstrated – go to my YouTube channel TheScubaGuru and look for my new Beyond the Standard video on Disinfecting Rental Scuba Gear.

Episode Sponsor

Mastering Dive Tables & Decompression Theory Course

Thanks For Listening!

That’s it for today, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. Remember to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher, that way you’ll be notified of new episodes as soon as they go live and please leave a rating. Items talked about in this episode can be found on the show notes Page at scubaguru.com and there you can also click the microphone and leave us a comment. Thanks again. We’ll see you in the next episode. Safe diving and take good care of my friends.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/divelocker/027_Disinfecting_Rental_Dive_Gear.mp3

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Filed Under: The Dive Locker Podcast Tagged With: disinfectant

026 Who Is PSS and What Makes Them Different?

By Tec Clark Leave a Comment

In this episode of The Dive Locker Podcast you will hear from Professional Scuba Schools about what makes PSS different from other dive training agencies.

Welcome To The Show!

Welcome to the dive locker podcast, the podcast for dive professionals where we bring you the latest in diving industry resources that make you excellent at teaching techniques, risk management and dive business.

Okay do we really need another scuba training agency? I’ve heard this comment bouncing around some since the marketing of PSS, Professional Scuba Schools, started popping up all over the place. Well PSS actually isn’t a new training agency, in fact they have been around for nearly 30 years mostly in Europe. But not too long ago they broke into the US market.

My stellar diving industry colleague Derik Crotts was hired by PSS to be their Director of Operations for North America and Caribbean. You may know Derik from when he was with NAUI headquarters, and now he’s with PSS, so I caught up with Derik at the PSS booth at the DEMA Show because I wanted to go straight to the source and find out what makes PSS different as a scuba training agency.

Episode Sponsor

Mastering Dive Tables & Decompression Theory Course

Thanks For Listening!

That’s it for today, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. Remember to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher, that way you’ll be notified of new episodes as soon as they go live and please leave a rating. Items talked about in this episode can be found on the show notes Page at scubaguru.com and there you can also click the microphone and leave us a comment. Thanks again. We’ll see you in the next episode. Safe diving and take good care of my friends.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/divelocker/026_Who_Is_PSS_and_What_Makes_Them_Different_.mp3

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Filed Under: The Dive Locker Podcast Tagged With: PSS

025 Girl Power!

By Tec Clark Leave a Comment

In this episode of The Dive Locker Podcast you will hear about the increasing popularity of the Girls that Scuba brand.

Welcome To The Show!

Welcome to the dive locker podcast, the podcast for dive professionals where we bring you the latest in diving industry resources that make you excellent at teaching techniques, risk management and dive business.

Well everyone I just returned from England where I was a speaker at the Go Diving Show. This was truly the best consumer dive show I have been to. The show was packed and they had a great lineup of speakers, GUE had this 3d experience, a cave experience, rock climbing wall and demo pool that was packed.

The best thing was the passion. They have such a passion for diving over there. Both the divers and the dive pros. It’s a hearty diving over there. Often cold water with not the best visibility.

I personally had a blast! I got to attend my first rugby game, having the pleasure of going to see the Coventry Wasps take on the London Saracens with Stephen Wheelan founder of DeeperBlue.com and Paul Strike co-founder of Fourth Element. What was cool was that Paul had played professional rugby for the London Saracens. So I got a proper education in the sport, after which I am now a huge fan of rugby.

I drank tons of Guinness – by the way if you’re a Guinness fan did you know that it tastes better the closer it is to the source. So it tastes better in England than the US, and many in England say it tastes better in Ireland.

And I also met some wonderful new diving industry colleagues. One of which is our guest on this episode, Sarah Richard is the founder of Girls that Scuba. Now I interviewed Sarah for the League of Extraordinary Divers, my other podcast. However, there were things she said that were setting off bells for The Dive Locker podcast, things all dive professionals should hear.

Most notably are two things; one is positive and one slightly negative. The negative is that some sexist attitudes towards women in diving still exist and that was a key reason why Girls that Scuba was born. But that led to the good point, Girls that Scuba is one of the coolest entrepreneurial start up stories in the dive industry that I have heard. Wait till you hear the organic success of Sarah’s brand.

Episode Sponsor

Mastering Dive Tables & Decompression Theory Course

Thanks For Listening!

That’s it for today, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. Remember to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher, that way you’ll be notified of new episodes as soon as they go live and please leave a rating. Items talked about in this episode can be found on the show notes Page at scubaguru.com and there you can also click the microphone and leave us a comment. Thanks again. We’ll see you in the next episode. Safe diving and take good care of my friends.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/divelocker/025_Girl_Power.mp3

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Filed Under: The Dive Locker Podcast Tagged With: GirlsThatScuba

024 Checking In With Aggressor Adventures and Professional Scuba Inspectors

By Tec Clark Leave a Comment

In this episode of The Dive Locker Podcast you will hear about new happenings in Aggressor Adventures and Professional Scuba Inspectors.

Welcome To The Show!

Welcome to the dive locker podcast, the podcast for dive professionals where we bring you the latest in diving industry resources that make you excellent at teaching techniques, risk management and dive business.

Today we have two great guests. First up is Wayne Brown CEO of Aggressor Adventures. Wayne purchased Aggressor Fleet in 2007 and co-founder Wayne Hasson became president. A few episodes ago we did a tribute to Wayne Hasson as he recently died of cancer. But Wayne Brown has done remarkable things with Aggressor- and its not only liveaboards they have Nile river cruises and African safaris, thus the name Aggressor Adventures.

Our second guest is Mark Gresham President and CEO of Professional Scuba Inspectors, Inc./Professional Cylinder Inspectors, Inc. they are the diving industry’s foremost authority on scuba cylinder safety. If you also listen to my other podcast the League of Extraordinary Divers, I had the founder of PSI Bill High on in episode 25 that was fascinating to hear how PSI started by Bill hearing about a cylinder explosion on a dive boat – not at a dive shop at fill station but on a dive boat! And Mark has taken this company to new heights as they are teaching dive professionals around the world about how to fill, use and inspected scuba cylinders safely.

I wanted to do check-ins with both of these companies because if you are in the dive industry you need to know these two companies. First, you should do a liveaboard – go for fun or lead group travel on one. It is one of the best diving experiences out there as you can do up to 4-5 scuba dives in a day! If you’re a pro you need to be experienced with livaboards.

And scuba diving is based around this major piece of equipment , the scuba cylinder. This is actually a hazardous material. It has to be treated with safety and respect. Since your job deals with cylinders everyday, you need to be at minimum a fill station operator and for some you should be a cylinder inspector.

Episode Sponsor

Mastering Dive Tables & Decompression Theory Course

Thanks For Listening!

That’s it for today, everyone. Thank you so much for listening. Remember to subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher, that way you’ll be notified of new episodes as soon as they go live and please leave a rating. Items talked about in this episode can be found on the show notes Page at scubaguru.com and there you can also click the microphone and leave us a comment. Thanks again. We’ll see you in the next episode. Safe diving and take good care of my friends.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/divelocker/024_Checking_In_With_Aggressor_Adventures_and_Professional_Scuba_Inspectors.mp3

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About Tec Clark

Tec Clark is a diving industry expert who has held very elite positions in the dive industry including Managing Director of the University of Florida’s Academic Diving Program and National Director of the YMCA Scuba Program. He holds over 40 professional certifications with over 15 diving agencies. Tec has received numerous honors for his instructional abilities and has co-edited several diving texts. He also appeared as a diving expert on A&E, The Learning Channel, and Outdoor Life Network. He was Captain of the US Freediving Team and is the founder of both Reef Ministries and ScubaGuru.com. Tec is the Associate Director for Aquatics and Scuba Diving at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Read More…

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Welcome Dive Professionals

Welcome to ScubaGuru.com!  The ScubaGuru brand is dedicated to giving dive professionals tools and techniques to be GREAT LEADERS – leaders in the classroom, leaders underwater, and leaders in their diving businesses.  With unique leadership skill-sets, the dive professional can create:

  • Better divers
  • Loyal customers
  • A thriving dive center
  • A flourishing dive industry

See what we mean by Go Beyond the Standard and enjoy the rewards of being truly great at what you do!

Sincerely,

Tec Clark

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