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Dream Chasers: 3 Inspirational Women in the Professional Dive Industry

These strong women share a passion for scuba diving—and a don't-tell-me-what-I-can't-do attitude.
By Patricia Wuest | Updated On March 8, 2021
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Dream Chasers: 3 Inspirational Women in the Professional Dive Industry

Euna Zio

Euna Zio
Dive Instructor, Dive Munda

Euna Zio

The seventh annual Women’s Dive Day will be celebrated July 17, 2021, in more than 100 countries around the world by thousands of divers. On July 17, dive shops, clubs and groups will come together in what has become the world’s ­biggest underwater block party, a global celebration of scuba divers’ shared passion for the ocean.

Though PADI created the fun-filled day to support female participation in the sport, events associated with ­Women’s Dive Day have evolved to transcend ­gender. Both women and men participate in causes that are mostly inclined toward conservation and community undertakings, ranging from ocean cleanups to teaching orphaned girls how to dive.

In honor of this year’s Women’s Dive Day, we profile three female divers: a spunky dive instructor from a remote Pacific island; a free-spirited marine ­biologist-cum-liveaboard captain; and an intrepid rebreather diver and dive shop owner. They have different backgrounds, challenges and career paths, but it’s what they share that unites them: a love for the ocean, a female role model, and, most important, an uncompromising desire to be an example for young girls to defy anything—and anyone—that gets in the way of achieving their dreams.

It Takes Two

Euna Zio
Dive Instructor, Dive Munda
Hometown: Munda, Western Province, Solomon Islands
Age: 29
First certified: 2010 (PADI OW)
Highest certification: SSI Open Water Scuba Instructor (2018)
Female diver she admires: Belinda Botha. “She made my dream of becoming a scuba instructor come true. I continue to learn so much from her and be inspired.”

Euna Zio

“The Solomon Islands is one of the last wild frontiers left on the planet, and we need leaders and strong females to help protect and preserve.”

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“From the moment I met Euna, I knew I had to provide her with the ­resources to grow and develop so she could empower others,” says Belinda Botha, owner of Dive Munda.

Euna Zio is the second woman ­certified as a dive instructor in the Solomon ­Islands; Botha taught the first one too.

Zio’s curiosity about scuba was sparked while working at Munda’s ­Agnes Gateway Hotel. One of the activities ­offered was diving. Though Solomon ­Islanders consider scuba diving “unsafe and a man’s job,” Zio earned her open ­water certification in 2010. She was blown away by Munda’s reefs and marine life. “So many kids think being underwater is boring,” she says. “I wanted to show them how much fun it was.”

The resort’s struggling dive operation closed, and Zio had to put her dreams on hold. When Botha reopened Dive ­Munda in 2016, Zio approached her about ­becoming a dive guide.

“Belinda worked with me one-on-one and pushed me hard to get my instructor certification,” Zio says. After overcoming the challenges of becoming an instructor, Zio cried. They were tears of joy: “I felt so happy and proud that day.”

“Euna ignites passion and a love for the ocean that is rare to see,” Botha says. “The Solomon Islands is one of the last wild frontiers left on the planet, and we need leaders and strong females to help protect and preserve.”

The weight of that responsibility is not lost on Zio. “It is hard in this ­country for a girl to get opportunities because there are so many challenges,” she says. “I do outreach programs and speak with girls about career choices and, most important, about protecting our ocean and ­reducing plastic,” she says. “Every day I have this gift, the opportunity to be underwater and show guests this amazing country, above and below the water.”

Woman of Steel

Jo Mikutowicz
Owner, Divetech, Grand Cayman
Hometown: Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Age: 37
First certified: 1997 (PADI OW)
Highest certification: PADI Course Director (2008)
Female diver she admires: Jill Heinerth. “She’s never been intimidated by certain parts of the diving industry being a ‘man’s world.’”

Jo Mikutowicz

Jo Mikutowicz

Jo Mikutowicz

As a young girl, Jo Mikutowicz was a figure skater with big dreams.

“I skated just about every day for ­several years,” she says. “I always wanted to go to the Olympics.”

Life took her in a different direction. “Being on and in the water was my ­happy place,” Mikutowicz says. “My dad was a diver, and while on a vacation in Grand Cayman [in 1997], he signed me up for an open water course. I was hooked.”

By 2008, Mikutowicz was a PADI course director, and in 2015, she returned to the island where her scuba career was launched, taking over as owner of Grand Cayman’s Divetech.

Last year, Mikutowicz added ­another certification to her extensive scuba ­résumé­—deep rebreather—which she accomplished on Bonaire’s ­Windjammer. The three-masted ­iron-hulled ship lies in current-churned waters off the ­island’s northwest coast.

“I planned my dive the night before, mentally rehearsing failures and how I would handle each situation,” ­Mikutowicz recalls. “In the morning, I laid out my assembly checklist and put my rebreather together, double-checking everything.


Read Next: How to Become a Dive Pro

Jo Mikutowicz

Jo Mikutowicz diving with her rebreather in the Cayman Islands

Jo Mikutowicz

“As we hit 120 feet, from out of nowhere, the ship’s silhouette suddenly appeared,” Mikutowicz says. As she explored, she checked her computer. “I was at 200 feet and realized I had made it.”

Divetech instructors train all levels of divers, but Mikutowicz, who is also an avid ­freediver, loves the quiet that rebreather diving offers. “Being in the ocean down deep and in complete silence is probably one of the best places in the world to be.”

And what about the girl who dreamed of becoming an Olympian? Mikutowicz has no regrets. “If I have one message for young girls who dream about exploring the ocean, it’s this: You are capable of achieving anything in diving by setting your mind to it and making it happen.”

Born to Be Wild

Christy Weaver
Bahamas Aggressor Liveaboard Captain
Hometown: Wilmington, Delaware
Age: 34
First certified: 2006 (PADI OW)
Highest certification: PADI Master Scuba Diver Trainer (2011); SSI Platinum Pro Instructor (2018)
Female diver she admires: Eugenie Clark. “Very few women were involved in the field of marine biology at the time. She was a pioneer.”

Christy Weaver

Christy Weaver

Christy Weaver

“I am so lucky to be working outside and exploring everything the Bahamas has to offer,” says Christy Weaver, whose favorite quote—“all good things are wild and free” from Henry David Thoreau’s essay Walking—defines not only her career choice, but her life as well. The quote “also speaks to me in a different way,” she says. “Being wild and free means you live your life the way you choose.”

By the time Weaver was accepted at the University of Delaware, she knew she wanted to study ocean animals. In 2007, she earned a degree in wildlife conservation and followed that with a master’s in marine biology from Australia’s James Cook University. “The Great Barrier Reef was my backyard!”

Weaver got certified as an instructor in 2011 and landed a job on a Bahamas liveaboard. “The captain I worked with was my mentor and pushed me to get my captain’s license,” she says. “It started a completely new career path for me.”

Christy Weaver

"My advice for young girls is to follow what you love and believe in yourself wholeheartedly," says Weaver.

Christy Weaver

By 2016, Weaver was captaining for Aggressor Liveaboards, first as ­second captain on Turks & Caicos Aggressor II and today as first captain on Bahamas Aggressor. “Being a female captain is still a novelty,” she says. “It takes resolve and resilience to weather some of what comes my way.”

Thoreau also wrote, “I wish to speak a word for Nature, for absolute freedom and wildness.” That philosophy is at the heart of what drives Weaver.

“I have had so many wonderful moments. My advice [for young girls] is to follow what you love and believe in yourself wholeheartedly," Weaver says. “Not everyone is going to support you, but the people who do are the ones who matter.”