A dive log is more than a dive count
Many new divers think a logbook is mainly about counting dives. It does count them, but its real value is context. A good log shows what kind of dives you have done, what conditions you have handled, and how your comfort has changed over time.
Why divers keep logging
Logs help with memory, progression, and confidence. They remind you what weighting worked, what conditions challenged you, what marine life you saw, and what skills improved. They also give instructors or operators a better picture of your real experience than a rough verbal estimate.
Why it matters later
The more dives you do, the more useful the log becomes. It turns random underwater memories into a record you can actually learn from. It also becomes part of the story of how you became the diver you are.
Practical takeaway
Start logging now, not after your twentieth dive. The habit is easiest to build early, and Coral Circuit's dive logger gives you a practical way to keep that record from the beginning.
Continue your dive journey
Log your next dive or explore dive experiences to keep the momentum going.