Greenjuice
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The UK cave divers returned on a flight back to London this morning, and were interviewed for BBC Breakfast TV. Much of what was said was consistent with reports on this thread. However, there was one snippet of new information. On questioning, Rick Stanton said that when he first surfaced to find the boys, they still had some light. So somehow, they had managed to conserve the little light they had between them to last those 9 days.
Reuters also reported this, this morning:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-thailand-accident-cave/thai-soccer-team-planned-to-be-inside-the-cave-for-only-an-hour-idUSKBN1K30PU
The BBC Radio interview posted by Miyaru above expresses much more vividly how much of a team effort this was, with contributions from many individuals without which the whole operation would not have succeeded.
He also described one time when the visibility for him was, 'less than an inch'. Please can I ask the cave/tech divers on this forum what your methods are for monitoring and managing your gases when it is not possible to see your gauges?
(I would like to think you have a method apart from setting an audible alarm on an air integrated dive computer...)
Reuters also reported this, this morning:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-thailand-accident-cave/thai-soccer-team-planned-to-be-inside-the-cave-for-only-an-hour-idUSKBN1K30PU
The BBC Radio interview posted by Miyaru above expresses much more vividly how much of a team effort this was, with contributions from many individuals without which the whole operation would not have succeeded.
He also described one time when the visibility for him was, 'less than an inch'. Please can I ask the cave/tech divers on this forum what your methods are for monitoring and managing your gases when it is not possible to see your gauges?
(I would like to think you have a method apart from setting an audible alarm on an air integrated dive computer...)