Gary Monsky (Long Island, NY) wrote to ask, "Are
face masks with lenses with eye prescriptions recommended
while diving?"
I replied, "Yes, indeed." The day I had prescription
lenses fitted to my mask, my life (underwater)
changed. Some masks are available with simple plus or
minus prescriptions, and your dive store can fit them
for you. However, it depends on your prescription.
While there are numerous masks with additional
lenses that accommodate the needs of short-sighted
young people, there is less of a choice for those of us
suffering from the passing of time and arms that have
grown too short for reading comfortably.
A good mask that you can get off-the-peg lenses
for in either plus or minus strengths is the Tusa Ceos,
which is much less expensive than having a mask made
exactly to your prescription (which can be done).
I have found that for diving, a simple solution is
best. For example, I need +3 diopters lenses in my
reading glasses, but I also need a correction for astigmatism
for distance, so I used varifocal lenses in my
day-to-day specs. However, for diving, I simply use
straight +2.5 diopter lenses in my mask, and that suits
me underwater, because visibility even in the clearest
water is not sharp over a greater distance. It might
mean lifting your mask to see where the boat is when
you surface.
Your local dive store should be able to help.
Otherwise, take a look on scubaboard.com and discover
where others have found suppliers that will grind
lenses and glue them in to your mask. An example: https://prescriptiondivemasks.com
--john@undercurrent.org