Fantastic divemaster internship in Raja Ampat

Ratings
Overall
5
Growth: 5
Support: 5
Fun: 5
Housing: 4
Safety: 5
Review

Here's what you can expect in doing your internship with IOP in Raja Ampat:
- Extremely high-end diving education that goes well beyond basic requirements. It can be tough at times but it pushes you to become a better and safer diver, and drives very rapid and significant improvement in your diving skills. Expect additional workshops and skills dives well above the basic curriculum, lots of marine life education, a minimum of 5 leads (only 1 is required), learning to lead scientific dives, additional course assists, etc.
- Exceptional educators who are deeply knowledgeable, engaging, and serious about their craft. They set an excellent example of what a dive professional should be, taking safety and conservation seriously, and continuously learning and passing along their knowledge
- A lot of diving - I did 75 dives during my 8-week stay, with 1 (sometimes 2) dry days per week. Expect a mix of shore and boat dives across ~15-20 sites, some of which are world-class. Also expect most diving days to have at least some productive element to it, e.g. science dives (surveys, BRUVs, benthic surveys, coral restoration/surveys), skills dives, course assists, marine education dives
- Expect to be fairly busy. Between diving, science, course work, homework, and facility duties, there's a lot to do
- The facilities are basic but comfortable. Expect basic needs like food, drinking water, and shelter to be met at all times, however occasional interruptions to running water or electricity come with the territory in such a remote location
- The remoteness of the facilities adds a layer of complexity when it comes to things like supplies, healthcare, mobile access. This can be easily mitigated by showing up well-equipped (e.g. with medications, with a working SIM card, with ear drops), and by being proactive about your health (e.g. take electrolytes, care for injuries early to avoid infection, rinse your ears after every dive)
- A fantastic social scene where you are surrounded by passionate and like-minded people (interns and staff) from all walks of life. Sharing this experience with them is one of the highlights of the internship. Interns are on a rotating schedule so expect people to leave and new people to arrive during your stay
- The one drawback was that facilities and resources are shared across IOP and the host resort, and resort guests always took priority in what is meant to be a shared space. This applies to dive rental gear, boat space, dive site planning, food, use of facilities, repairs, etc. It's all understandable, but can sometimes make you feel like a second class citizen in your own home.

Would you recommend this program?
Yes, I would
Year Completed
2024
Private Note to Provider (optional)
One thing to add privately: The relationship with Scuba Republic is obviously a complicated one, even moreso with turnover in staff. Speaking candidly, Scuba Republic often treated us like shit - replacing our working rental gear with faulty and dangerous equipment (freeflowing regs, leaky BCDs), banning us from shared areas that host the hot water and toaster, refusing to replace mouldy pillows - just to name a few examples. They don't treat us like the paying guests that we are, and the tension and resent on the ground between SR and IOP was palpable and obvious to everyone. We are a steady and substantial revenue stream for them - especially during low season - and that merits better treatment than we've been receiving. I think that leadership support is needed to reset expectations and establish a new working relationship before things get uglier.