Cave and Tech
Getting Started In Cavern and Cave Diving
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Each of us may have different goals when it comes to cavern and cave diving (not the least of which is just staying out of them altogether). Assuming you are somewhat interested in overhead environment diving, the question is really what do you want to do? Your answer will help determine which of the many available avenues is best for you. Just be aware that, if you decide you want to become a fully certified cave diver, you are looking at a fairly substantial commitment.
Sidemount: The New Revolution in Tech Diving Equipment
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If you wanted to stand out at the recent NSS-CDS social at Jackson Blue spring, all you had to do was wear back-mounted doubles. If you did, you would be among the half dozen or so divers wearing this rig. The remaining 70+ divers were sidemounting. Cave divers in the USA began adopting sidemount in the early 1980s, as a means of passing through bedding planes — cave passages that can be several feet wide, but only a few inches high. Now sidemounting has gone mainstream, and is used by cave, technical and recreational divers alike.
Evolution in Action at Bathtub Spring
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In 1990, five college students were staying at a laid-back, rural resort on the banks of north-central Florida’s Suwannee River. One afternoon they decided to take canoes up river to scout out potential dive sites. They soon discovered an outflowing of water on the opposite bank, known locally as Bathtub Spring. Excited by their find, the group beached the canoes and hiked inland to see what else might be in the immediate area. They soon came across a deep sinkhole, which they assumed connected with the spring, less than 200 feet away. Blinded by their eagerness to explore, little did two of these divers know they had just hours to live.
