mavjax
Guest
I don't know if this is appropriate under this topic but I thought I would share it as it has bothered me since yesterday.
We were diving a well known an popular spring in North Florida yesterday. The main, easily diveable part of the spring ends at about 50 ft after which there is a cave system that drops to 157 feet and a lateral distance of over 1500 feet (if I remember correctly).
Yesterday morning we were down the main shaft, hovering just above the bottom at around 45 feet watching the snails and little mite things do whatever they were doing (I know, some would say I need to get a life but such things might be appreciated here
).
All of a sudden my legs were bumped.
I turned to see a rather large gentleman with a DPV who had just bumped into me (coming down from above). I then watched him as he tried to manouver and eventually plunked the DPV on the bottom, and swam around a bit. This gent had a flashing stobe on the top of his tank, decent cave light and started looking down into the darkness. All I could think about was that if he took is DPV into that cave, I could see him not coming back.
I guess what bothers me about this is that we have more than our share of dive incidents here in Florida and it has an real impact on the public's perception of diving. However, the real issue in the majority of these cases is that people don't seem to understand that YOU CAN DIE UNDERWATER. For the life of me I can't understand what is so difficult about the concept. and that fact that you need to dive within your own personal limits (and equally important understand what those limits realistically are).
Just my thoughts on a Monday morning as I sit at my desk wishing I had a tank on my back.
We were diving a well known an popular spring in North Florida yesterday. The main, easily diveable part of the spring ends at about 50 ft after which there is a cave system that drops to 157 feet and a lateral distance of over 1500 feet (if I remember correctly).
Yesterday morning we were down the main shaft, hovering just above the bottom at around 45 feet watching the snails and little mite things do whatever they were doing (I know, some would say I need to get a life but such things might be appreciated here

All of a sudden my legs were bumped.
I turned to see a rather large gentleman with a DPV who had just bumped into me (coming down from above). I then watched him as he tried to manouver and eventually plunked the DPV on the bottom, and swam around a bit. This gent had a flashing stobe on the top of his tank, decent cave light and started looking down into the darkness. All I could think about was that if he took is DPV into that cave, I could see him not coming back.
I guess what bothers me about this is that we have more than our share of dive incidents here in Florida and it has an real impact on the public's perception of diving. However, the real issue in the majority of these cases is that people don't seem to understand that YOU CAN DIE UNDERWATER. For the life of me I can't understand what is so difficult about the concept. and that fact that you need to dive within your own personal limits (and equally important understand what those limits realistically are).
Just my thoughts on a Monday morning as I sit at my desk wishing I had a tank on my back.