http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/cavedive/producer.html
Quotes from the producer:
** The U.S. National Speleological Society defines a successful cave
dive as "one you return from."
** In the end, I took away a great appreciation of the divers'
self-reliance. I'm a PADI Rescue Diver—which on this shoot was a
qualification about as useful as being a good singer
--
gmail originated posts are filtered due to spam.
Airs next week on PBS.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/cavedive/producer.html
Quotes from the producer:
** The U.S. National Speleological Society defines a successful cave
dive as "one you return from."
** In the end, I took away a great appreciation of the divers'
self-reliance. I'm a PADI Rescue Diver�which on this shoot was a
qualification about as useful as being a good singer
********************************************************
http://www.intotheplanet.com/IntoThePlanet/Home.html
> ** The U.S. National Speleological Society defines a successful cave
> dive as "one you return from."
Yup, the dead bodies cluttering up the caves are a nasty pollutant. Note
it doesn't actually say return from *alive*. Just be sure someone pulls
your remains out, please - that's what buddies are for, and it spares
some other poor sucker from having to clean up your litter.
Before I learned to dive, I thought cave diving was somewhat odd and
possibly interesting. After learning to dive I think cave diving is nuts
and I want no part of it; An opinion that has not changed in a good many
years, and is not likely to. They are welcome to it.
--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
There was a NOVA a couple years ago on cave diving to map the links
between the cenotes in eastern Mexico (Mayan Riviera area, IIRC). Much
of it looked relatively benign - though some parts looked a bit risky.
What's propose above, at least in the producer's claims looks outright
evil. Certainly my little tunnel jaunt of 30 meters (where I could see
the other, very open, end) which had me decidedly nervous, was not in
the same category at all.