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OSEBJE

Fraser Bathgate

Profession: Prosessional outdoor Instructor
 
Nationality: British
 
Date of birth:
 
Address:
 
E-Mail: fraser.b@blueyonder.co.uk
 
Phone: 0044 79 73 789 070
 
 
At the age of 23, Fraser Bathgate was living in London and enjoying his career as an outdoor skills instructor for management trainees. Passionate about the outdoor life and especially mountaineering, his lifelong dream was about to come true and he was set to join a climbing expedition to the Himalayas.
Shortly before his departure, Bathgate was 25ft up a climbing wall testing his new boots when someone at the foot of the wall unwittingly unclipped his safety rope. He landed on his heels on the concrete, breaking bones in his legs and feet and compressing his spine.
Paralysed from the waist down, Bathgate moved back to his home town of Edinburgh. His life shattered, and with his chosen sport closed off to him irretrievably, he became deeply depressed. He looked around for an alternative sport, and considered learning to dive, but says his enquiries at dive centres were never taken seriously. At that time, paraplegics simply didn´t dive.
 
In 1992, Fraser´s sister invited him to visit her in Dubai. Watching a friend being taught to dive, he was surprised when the enlightened instructors suggested that he give it a try. Finding himself in the water with 360-degree mobility, no wheelchair or restraints, Bathgate knew at once that this was what he wanted to do.
It was the first time he had felt able-bodied for six years, and those around him noted an overnight transformation in his outlook.
 
The natural aptitude that had once been aimed at scaling high peaks was switched into exploring the world´s sea depths. Bathgate soon refined a swimming technique that combined hip-rotation with the use of his arms for underwater propulsion. His next step was to qualify as a scuba diver, which he did with the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) in Malta.
 
By 1994, Bathgate had gone much further - he had become the world´s first paraplegic PADI Instructor. He was determined that other wheelchair-users should not have to undergo the sort of frustration and depression he had suffered. With diving schools doing little to welcome people with disabilities, he decided to bypass them and go straight to teaching diving to patients at spinal rehabilitation centres.
 
In 1993 the International Association of Handicapped Divers (IAHD) had been formed to provide instructors, dive buddies and training programmes for people with serious physical disabilities. Bathgate joined the organisation of which he is today Vice-President and Director of Training. He rewrote its training manual and, after qualifying as an Instructor Trainer with another leading training agency, the National Association of Underwater Instructors, began teaching not only disabled divers but future instructors.
 
It can be easier to train disabled people than the able-bodied, because they tend to be so focused, says Bathgate.
 
Much of his work was with disabled children: I will always remember working with a boy who had cerebral palsy and whose carers had never seen him smile. They were amazed when he came up from the water with a massive grin on his face.
 
What was originally intended to be a UK-based training programme rapidly went global. In the course of supervising diver training, Bathgate has travelled to North and Central America, the Middle and Far East, Australia and various Indian Ocean, Caribbean and Mediterranean locations. As International Training Director for a well-known dive centre in Florida, for example, he runs a popular week of free ‘try-dive’ courses for disabled people every year.
 
And his international travels soon began to embrace meetings at government level, to discuss not only diving but wider accessiblity issues for wheelchair-users. Back home, he continued his ambitious programme of motivational presentations at spinal rehabilitation units - what he called his No Barriers tours.
 
At one point I was covering 20,000 miles a year in the UK alone, and it looked as if I was going to be forced to call it a day. The people from Ford Motor Co saved the No Barriers tours when they approached me out of the blue. They said: ´We´d like to give you a car - what sort would you like, a big one?´ They´ve been there for me ever since.
 
Bathgate became a Ford MAGIC Ambassador. MAGIC (Mobility and General Information Centre) is Ford´s free phone information service on driving with a disability, and meeting so many disabled motorists in the course of his activities, Bathgate has been well-placed to help them with any mobility concerns they may have.
 
Today, Fraser Bathgate is one of the world´s leading consultants on access for disabled people to major outdoor events. In 2001 he became Disabled Liaison Officer for Rock Steady Security, one of the UK’s largest companies of it type, which specialises in event management, safety and security services. He surveys and reports on access issues at major sporting events such as football and rugby union internationals (particularly at his home ground, Murrayfield) and major concerts.
 
Recently he has helped many disabled people enjoy Live 8, T in the Park and individual open-air concerts by Queen, REM, U2, Oasis, Elton John and Coldplay.
 
To get me to a concert now, it has to be a really good band! he jokes. He was also disability consultant for the Make Poverty History event in Edinburgh.
 
Some promoters won´t make a move now without checking with us first, he says. Sometimes provision for wheelchair-users is made but in the wrong way, such as ramps that are too steep, or space allocated to the side of a stage instead of in the middle, so that the line of sight is poor. Our main task is to make sure that people can get in and out easily and safely.
 
Bathgate works closely with the Children´s Hospice Association Scotland (CHAS), particularly Rachel House in Kinross, to make sure that terminally ill children are able to attend outdoor events. It´s vital to ensure that they´re properly looked after in terms of catering, toilets, liquid oxygen available and so on, he says.
 
Despite his other responsibilities, today Fraser is more active in scuba-diving than ever. He has continued to develop his own skills - he is, for example, an Advanced Diver Medical Technician and qualified to operate a hyperbaric chamber, for treatment of divers with decompression illness. And as Adaptive Techniques Advisor for PADI International, he has worked to develop techniques that benefit able-bodied as well as disabled divers, and has written a series of interactive diver training programmes.
 
Everything I do is designed to make people as independent as possible, he says. To that end he has recently developed a special undersuit for divers. Being warm but also easy to put on and take off, it will make it easier for disabled people to dive in colder waters.
 
He has worked with other manufacturers in the UK and the USA to develop special webbed gloves, weight harnesses and flexible fins, and has been closely involved in the design of a chin-operated underwater scooter with a long-life battery. He also works with wheelchair manufactures such as Sunrise Medical in developing its products. His next project is to work with space agency NASA in the USA on weighting systems.
 
In 2002, Bathgate´s achievements were recognised when he was the subject of a BBC documentary, one of eight Lives Less Ordinary.  And the following year he was a finalist in the ‘Great Scot - Unsung Hero’ Awards, an annual event recognising people who have made a real contribution to society, or overcome personal adversity in pursuit of their accomplishments. That was a great honour, he says.
 
In August,  2006, Bathgate completed his training to become an Instructor Course Director for the National Association of Underwater Instructors (NAUI), the world’s oldest and second-largest diver-training agency.
A Course Director is qualified to train any level of diver, including Instructor-Trainers, the qualification Bathgate already held. 
 
“Completing this course proves that scuba diving is a very accessible activity,” commented Bathgate. “For me it’s the completion of the circle that started when I became the first paraplegic scuba instructor. With incredible support from NAUI, I’ve been able to show that every level in diving can be achieved from a wheelchair.”
 
This year saw yet another recognition for Bathgate’s unique skills when he was invited to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, to help train disabled American veterans to dive as part of their rehabilitation process. The vets, many of them paralysed or missing limbs after being bombed in Iraq and Afghanistan, were amazed at the progress they made under his tuition. They have unanimously welcomed his input into their rehabilitation, so much so that Bathgate has been invited to help them on a long-term basis and will return to the USA in December to join a party of disabled veterans on a diving trip to Key Largo, Florida, one of the world’s great centres for diving.
 
“I found the courage of these soldiers to be hugely inspiring,” said Bathgate, “and I am now hoping to start similar work with our own disabled British service people.” 
 
 

 

 

 

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