Your day starts at 07:00 with breakfast. After breakfast, the plan for the day is reviewed. Some volunteers will be doing scuba courses, others will be out doing marine research, underwater cleanups or community work. Sometimes you’ll take part in shared efforts by the whole organisation, but in your first many weeks, you’ll spend the vast majority of your days on scuba training. We’ll usually have lunch around one or two o clock - if you’re doing work far from our base, you’ll eat your lunch at a local market there. After lunch we often continue with our various activities until sometime in the afternoon. During your training, you’ll spend quite a bit of time studying in the afternoons, or discussing dive theory with your instructors. Later in the program, you’ll be more engaged in entering survey-data on computers or various base work.
The evenings are different. At times you will be at work analyzing data collected on the dives or studying for your next scuba course, but often you’ll just want to relax and unwind with fellow volunteers. What you do after dinner in the evenings is very much up to yourself. You may want to organize a game or movie night, share a drink and a laugh, get people around a camp fire or something completely different. Other options would be to go on a night dive, go for a run, catch up with friends and family at home using our free WiFi, work out in our gym or just quietly read a book. It really is up to you.
When you wish to have days off, you can let us know. This may be to experience other islands elsewhere in the Philippines, to go for a visa-and-shopping run to Dumaguete, to explore the area on a motorbike or just to have a day to yourself and laze in a hammock with a book. While we feel the work we do is important, we don’t expect you to take part in everything all the time - especially if you stay for months. (But if you want to, you’re most welcome!)
Sunday is always a day off. No volunteers are allowed to do any diving, except during unusual circumstances. The reason for this is two fold - firstly it’s important to off-gas from time to time so you don’t get the "Friday Bends" (a slang term in the dive industry, where divemasters and instructors can load their bodies with gas day after day, until they eventually experience symptoms of decompression illness). Secondly, we wish to give our staff a day off as well. Obviously food needs to be cooked, but other than that, nothing happens on Sundays, unless you organise it yourself. (When’s the last time you went swimming in a mountain lake, visited a faith-healer or sang karaoke anyway?)