by Elizabeth Zahradnicek-Haas
The Czech Republic boasts a number of flooded quarries, rivers, and caves, which attract divers from all around the world. In fact, the Czech Republic’s Hranice Abyss made headlines several years ago when professional divers determined it to be the deepest freshwater sinkhole in the world.
You don’t have to be a professional diver or aspire to plunge thousands of meters below the surface to experience diving in the Czech lands nor do you need to leave home to learn how rolling in the deep can benefit both your body and mind.
Lars Nielsen is a certified Danish Free Diving Instructor and personal coach based in Prague. He teaches snorkeling, basic freediving, and higher-level freediving, and helps people earn the Scuba Schools International (SSI) digital certificate that is increasingly required at free diving sites and on boat excursions around the world.
Nielsen wants to dispel the myth that diving is for extreme sports enthusiasts. His classes are aimed more at what he calls “joyful underwater horizontal swimming.”
“It’s very satisfying to dive with one breath, to go down but still have light and there are fish and something nice to look at,” he said.
“But even for this, you have to know how your body reacts to changing pressure and learn to do it safely.”
Nielsen typically gives instructions in the deepest pool in the Czech Republic: Aquapalace’s 8-meter diving tunnel. Right now he gives online classes focused on the breathing techniques needed to build upper body strength and lung capacity in advance of a dive.
“Breathing correctly creates a healthier body chemistry,” he said. “Your breathing mechanism is extremely important and you cannot do freediving correctly if you don’t have this under control.”
The father of five firmly believes that learning to breathe can impact other areas of your life as well – he said he lost 35 kilos thanks to the discipline and skills he learned from diving.
“Combining the skills from freediving with my personal life has made me happier with who I am, and I believe it can make others happier also,” he said of his own personal journey.
Nielsen explained how his passion for diving and his way with people would eventually dovetail into his current business activities.
“I came to the Czech Republic from Poland in 1998 where I was working as country manager for a Danish company. I stayed in Prague for two years opening retail shops selling carpets and wooden floors and then I was sent back to Denmark in 2000.”
It was shortly after this time that he volunteered to help people learn to swim in a triathlon club.
“All my life I was interested in diving but was not aware of free diving until in triathlon training when people needed to learn how to swim, not just in a pool but in the ocean with waves and grass and other obstacles. Instead of walking and watching the students swimming, I would be swimming under them upside-down watching their techniques, and through this, I found the way to joyful underwater swimming.”