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You do not have to know how to swim in order to do SCUBA diving. When you dive you have a Buoyancy Compensator and a weight system. With the equipment and proper instruction you will be able to control your buoyancy. At the surface you will be able to float. Under water you will be able to achieve neutral buoyancy which is almost like being weightless. There is no need to swim to stay under water. Moving around is as simple controlling your buoyancy to ascend or descend, and kicking your feet for forward propulsion.

Don't get me wrong being able to swim helpsto SCUBA dive. It's just not necessary.

2007-03-27 03:27:20 · answer #1 · answered by Judge Dredd 5 · 0 1

Scuba diving is more amazing than snorkeling can ever be because you can get close to the things your looking at and stay there longer to look at them. You can scuba dive deeper than is possible snorkeling and see many things that are just impossible to see from the surface. Scuba diving has many more things to worry about when doing so you have to take classes to learn how to prevent decompression illness and blocks in air spaces and nitrogen exposure just to name a few.
But the truth it that if you want to scuba dive or snorkel, yes it is safer to know how to swim but you can wear a life vest snorkeling and scuba diving you have an air tank so as long as you can kick your feet you can do both. Learning some basics about swimming will help you conserve a lot of energy while doing either.
So take a couple classes on swimming and then go learn to scuba dive. It is great! But don't go alone.

2007-03-26 06:16:38 · answer #2 · answered by Boarder127 1 · 0 0

Snorkeling And Scuba Diving

2016-10-17 02:58:09 · answer #3 · answered by balbuena 3 · 0 0

Snorkling is siwmming on the surface with mask, fins and snorkel. You keep your face in the water the whole time. The mask allows you to see, the snorkel allows you to breathe, and the fins give you good propulsion. If you take a deep breath, you can swim down, but you will have to surface to take your next breath. Little or no training is needed.

Scuba diving is using a compressed air tank and other equipment that will allow you to stay at depth longer. There are safety concerns with the compressed air and the effects of breathing compressed air at depth so some training is required to dive safely.

Both scuba diving and snorkling require very little (if any) swimming knowledge. The motions used in both of these activities use only leg motion for movement (no arms). The kick styles used with fins will differ slightly from swimming.

Since you are going to be around water, some basic swimming proficiency is needed for safety reasons for both of these activities.

2007-03-26 05:46:46 · answer #4 · answered by Doug 5 · 2 0

You're in the business of "divin products" and asking this question? Yeah, not likely. Here are my definitions of snorkelers, skin divers, and scuba divers. A snorkeler uses a mask, fins, and snorkel on the surface while looking downwards with their face in the water, breathing through the snorkel. A snorkeler may make brief, shallow dives below the surface but spends the majority of time on the surface. It takes very little skill to be a snorkeler. A skin diver (also called a free diver) usually wears a mask and fins, sometimes a snorkel, or sometimes just a mask. The fins may be significantly longer than normal diving fins. Unlike a snorkeler, who spends most of the time on the surface, the skin diver makes frequent dives below the surface. The depths and bottom times of the free diver is usually significantly greater than the snorkeler - some free divers are capable of diving hundreds of feet down for several minutes at a time on a single breath. Obviously this involves more training, practice, and skill than simply swimming along on the surface breathing through a snorkel. A scuba diver carries a portable tank of compressed air underwater, and breathes from the tank using a regulator. Other equipment used by scuba divers include a mask, fins, many times a snorkel for use on the surface, and a buoyancy compensator device used to mount the tank on their backs and to control their buoyancy underwater. Scuba divers spend almost all of their time below the surface, and unlike snorkelers and skin divers their bottom time is not limited by a single breath so they spend significantly more time underwater. Scuba diving also requires a significant amount of training to understand/control the risks involved with breathing compressed air underwater and practice to develop proficiency in the skills. The line between scuba diving and snorkeling/skin diving is clear since scuba divers carry an air supply with them and breathe during the dive, while snorkelers/skin divers only stay underwater as long as they can hold a single breath. The distinction between snorkeling and skin diving is not so distinct. Good luck with your divin products.

2016-03-22 18:06:34 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Snorkeling is done on top of the water, there is no air tank present. Scuba diving is where they dive to the bottom, and there is an air tank present. You will need to learn to swim in order to do either, but most scuba classes can teach you to swim.

2007-03-28 03:53:35 · answer #6 · answered by Çåŗőľîņẫ§ħŷġĭ®ł 5 · 1 0

Snorkeling involves feet fins, a mask, and snorkel (a tube from your mouth to the surface of the water). You basically just skim or float on the surface of the water or just under it, leisurely kicking when you feel like it.

Scuba involves an oxygen tank, mask, wet suit, and training. You go way under water, and need to have a clear head about safety precautions. If you do not know how to swim, I think scuba would be too much for you to handle, since you will have to swim under water with a heavy scuba tank on your back.

2007-03-26 05:44:41 · answer #7 · answered by ? 2 · 0 1

snorkeling only requires you to have the breathing tube so that you can look down in the water and still breath. Water can get in the tube sometimes though.
Scuba diving, you carry and air tank on your back and you have a breathing apparatus in your mouth so you can breath. You can spend a long time underwater this way.
I suggest learning to swim first before attempting either of these activities.

2007-03-26 05:47:18 · answer #8 · answered by OzoidBlue 2 · 0 0

snorkeling is whaen you use a breathing device and you can not go very far under water, you can like only stay afloat the water. scuba diving is where you can go deep in to the water and still breath in oxygen. no it would not be a good idea to do either one if you do not know how to swim, you should take a swimming lesson before you do either one.

2007-03-28 13:56:47 · answer #9 · answered by ashley v 2 · 0 0

You should know how to swim before attempting either.

Snorkeling uses a snorkel, a tube that allows you to breathe while floating on the surface. Scuba is self-contained air in a tank that allows you to breathe underwater.

2007-03-26 05:44:21 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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