Fox-Cousteau
Senior Member
It wasn't hard to find virgin cave 30 years ago. It is today.
Unfortunately, it's difficult to find a virgin anything today...
I'm not wanting us to get off topic, but I just couldn't resist...
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It wasn't hard to find virgin cave 30 years ago. It is today.
It's important information to read, and heed . . . and not just for the beginners.
I was guilty, not too long ago, of doing a dive with two friends, one of whom has FAR more experience than I have, and one of whom had just finished her Cave class. We did several dives together during the week, and one of the last ones involved a stage, complex navigation, and a camera . . . and after I got home, I got to thinking that that was probably a more ambitious dive than our third buddy ought to have been doing at that point. She didn't say anything, and at the time, I just didn't think about it . . . but I remember doing a complex nav dive at roughly the same point in my career, and coming out, realizing I wasn't sure just how many jumps we had done, and that that was proof that I was in over my head (so to speak) on that dive.
Beginners need to take things slowly, and those of us who are used to doing bigger dives, need to remember not to encourage them to push their limits, even if that's done inadvertently.