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Dad and Daughters take Family Vacation Diving with Great White Sharks

By Guest Blogger, November 27, 2011
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PADI and NAUI Professional Divemaster and Assistant Instructor Roger J. Muller, Jr. takes his Daughters on a Trip to Remember By Sally Deering Some families vacation in the mountains, some visit Florida's Disneyworld, but Roger J. Muller, Jr. of Hoboken, New Jersey, Professional Divemaster and Assistant Instructor who holds 80 PADI, NAUI, TDI, SDI and SSI certifications decided to give his daughters Kelsey, 19, and Taylor, 15, a trip to remember.  Muller took his daughters, who are also certified divers, aboard the Nautilus Explorer to Ensenada, Mexico's Guadalupe Island where they plunged 40 feet below the water's surface to observe the behavior of the mysterious Great White Sharks. Muller chose the Nautilus Explorer, which takes small groups of scuba divers on unique diving expeditions to give his daughters a memorable vacation away from the daily demands of their busy lifestyles. Muller, a Certified Professional Insurance Agent oversees Muller Insurance, the family business, in Hoboken, and in his spare time serves as General Manager and Captain of the Hoboken Rockets Ice Hockey team; Kelsey is a sophomore studying economics at Harvard College in Cambridge and Taylor is a high school sophomore. "It's a wonderful bonding experience," Muller says. "They get the opportunity to see Great White Sharks in their natural habitat and learn about shark advocacy. It's also five days on a boat with no Internet access or cell phones to text boyfriends." Based in British Columbia, Canada, the Nautilus Explorer takes divers to the giant mantas and dolphins of Socorro Island and adventures into Alaska, British Columbia, the Sea of Cortez, the California Channel ... More »

My Top 10 Tips on Teaching Kids to Dive and Diving with Kids

By Guest Blogger, June 11, 2011
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Sharing my strength, experience, and hope with you.  Margo Peyton 1. Kids have very short attention spans, they learn better visually and by doing repetitively. Its one thing to tell a child his max depth is 40 feet for example, but go beyond that with kids.  Tell them why; and don't make it about their ability or knowledge, make it physical! Tell them what can go wrong and what can happen. Give them an example.  Don't scare them but inform them enough to make a difference.  There is a fine line here.  Kids are competitive and want to outdo their parents and each other at anything they can, so explain the mandates are about safety, not skill. Example: "Jennifer, your max depth is not 40 feet because your just learning or not a good diver, its 40 feet, because based on all the research we have with nitrogen effects on bone growth at your age, internal organ development and tissue saturation limits, that it has been determined to be the safest depth for your physical composition at this age."  ( I even explain to 10 and 11 year olds, that it's like when they go to a doctor and get a certain dosage of medicine based on their age, weight etc.  The amount of medicine has to be adhered to, because more than that can be dangerous.)  I tell them nitrogen is similar, too much can be dangerous.)  This takes the skill out of it and puts into perspective for both kids and adults the real risk factor of not following standards. 2. Gauges and depth. Once most kids are certified, it's all about skill to them.  The deeper they go the cooler they think it is.  They are constantly talking about depth. So I turn this around and try to make it all about... More »

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