For those of you who have followed the long story from my first questions ("What can you actually SEE in a cave?"), Peter and I completed TDI Cavern and Intro in Mexico this week. We dove with German Yanez, who is a wonderful man and worked hard with us. I was thrilled to get to see a little of what lies behind the "Peligro" sign, and came away with an enormous desire to see more, and a profound respect for what I am doing -- Which is probably the biggest thing a cave instructor can impart to a student.
A few thoughts from the trip:
1. If you follow the basic rules, what's most likely to kill you in a cave is getting lost. Losing six (or nine) lights is highly unlikely, and catastrophic gas failures are unlikely, but it would frighteningly easy to get lost. German said the two worst cave dives he has done were two where he was temporarily confused about the way out, and that that was very frightening.
2. My strategy of trying to build all the basic skills before going down there worked beautifully. German had almost nothing to criticize about our buoyancy, trim, or kicks, and we basically did very well with the reel as well. These were all things we had learned at home in open water, and it meant we could spend more time on things related to being in a cave, like dealing with my disorientation issues in the dark. GUE Fundamentals served me very, very well.
3. When you review the list of required equipment for a Mexican cave class, they will have left out one of the most important things: Mosquito repellent.
4. Leading your first cave dive is an amazing thrill. Being the first swimmer into the darkness gives you goosebumps. (German says that never goes away, and neither does the little frisson of apprehension -- and it shouldn't. The day you don't feel that, you're asking for trouble.)
5. One of the great things about cave diving is that it's almost weather-independent. We had strong winds and thunderstorms throughout our stay, and had we planned open ocean diving, we would have been very unhappy. (In fact, we DID plan one day at the beginning of the trip, and got blown out.) But it didn't make any difference in the caves!
Peter got some pictures on land as the classes were going, and some underwater pictures of the last day, and they're on our website HERE. And for those who want the blow-by-blow, the threads are here, here and here. We didn't have any internet access in the hotel except to pay by the minute for the use of one of their computers (with a Spanish language keyboard, which drove me NUTS), so all the posting I did was in a Mexican restaurant with free WiFi, and there was a limit to how many margaritas I could absorb (to keep them happy) before I couldn't type at all
A few thoughts from the trip:
1. If you follow the basic rules, what's most likely to kill you in a cave is getting lost. Losing six (or nine) lights is highly unlikely, and catastrophic gas failures are unlikely, but it would frighteningly easy to get lost. German said the two worst cave dives he has done were two where he was temporarily confused about the way out, and that that was very frightening.
2. My strategy of trying to build all the basic skills before going down there worked beautifully. German had almost nothing to criticize about our buoyancy, trim, or kicks, and we basically did very well with the reel as well. These were all things we had learned at home in open water, and it meant we could spend more time on things related to being in a cave, like dealing with my disorientation issues in the dark. GUE Fundamentals served me very, very well.
3. When you review the list of required equipment for a Mexican cave class, they will have left out one of the most important things: Mosquito repellent.
4. Leading your first cave dive is an amazing thrill. Being the first swimmer into the darkness gives you goosebumps. (German says that never goes away, and neither does the little frisson of apprehension -- and it shouldn't. The day you don't feel that, you're asking for trouble.)
5. One of the great things about cave diving is that it's almost weather-independent. We had strong winds and thunderstorms throughout our stay, and had we planned open ocean diving, we would have been very unhappy. (In fact, we DID plan one day at the beginning of the trip, and got blown out.) But it didn't make any difference in the caves!
Peter got some pictures on land as the classes were going, and some underwater pictures of the last day, and they're on our website HERE. And for those who want the blow-by-blow, the threads are here, here and here. We didn't have any internet access in the hotel except to pay by the minute for the use of one of their computers (with a Spanish language keyboard, which drove me NUTS), so all the posting I did was in a Mexican restaurant with free WiFi, and there was a limit to how many margaritas I could absorb (to keep them happy) before I couldn't type at all
