Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Ladies Only

It's been a fact of life for women: when you want to do something outside the traditional female roles, you have to sacrifice comfort and style and make do with bulky, poorly fitting men's gear. Not only did the guys' stuff not feel comfortable, but it sagged here and squeezed there and could be downright unsafe.


No more.


Ladies, the scuba diving equipment designed and manufactured for you today is high quality, fits great, and comes in colors and styles you'll feel wonderful wearing!

Today's scuba diving equipment designed specifically for women comes in colors women like, fits great - even on real women, not just supermodels, and is made with outstanding quality to meet the needs of women who really dive, including dive professionals.

Want proof? All of the women on the Husker Divers staff are using the latest women's scuba equipment, and, as Instructors and Dive Control Specialists, they put this gear through a lot of wear. It gets used:


-In the pool with student divers and Try Scuba participants, with all the chlorine, the constant ascents and descents, and constant stuffing of gear into equipment bags for transport.

-In area lakes for diver training and other events, where the equipment is exposed to sand, sun, silt, and again, packing into equipment bags for travel.

-For rescue training and readiness. All the Husker Divers staff are trained in diver rescue, and some are certified to teach the Stress & Rescue course. It is imperative that the equipment the staff uses is top-notch and absolutely dependable. The women's equipment worn by Husker Divers staff, including the Diva and Pearl i3 BCs, fits the bill. When we need to trust our equipment in cold, dark, low- or no-visibility conditions, and trust it to get both ourselves and our students or fellow divers to safety, we know it will work beautifully.

-For travel. In the warm salt water of St. Lucia, the cold, dark depths of the mine at Oronogo in Missouri, or in the tailrace below the dam at Oahe Reservoir in South Dakota, the ladies' BCs, wetsuits, and other equipment are completely reliable and comfortable.


-In all conditions. Husker Divers' December '08 Polar Bear Club dive took place with an 18-below windchill and in 36-degree water. The Pearl i3 BC performed every bit as well in those conditions as it does in the pool. At the Oronogo mine in early April, with water temps in the low 50s and depths of 90 feet, the Pearl i3 performed beautifully.

In choppy waters or calm, indoors or far from home, icy, salty, fresh or otherwise, today's women's scuba diving equipment is top-notch, looks fantastic, fits perfectly, and will give women all the comfort and confidence that excellent gear can provide. Talk to any of the Husker Divers female staff members: Donna, Linda, Beth, or Amy. They'll be glad to answer any questions you have and help you discover just the right scuba equipment for your needs.

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