wetlettuce
Contributor
Hi
Its been a while since I've posted here and I hardly recognise the place. If this is in the wrong place then I apologise. I'm sure you can redirect it or something. Anyway, I recently travelled to the Lot region of France to dive some caves there. We dived 3 different caves over the 4 day trip and had a great time. I wrote a trip report and thought some of you might like to read it. Hope you enjoy it.
A mad rush to leave work meant that I left home at about 7pm, Wednesday, to drive down to Bobs house as I had planned to stay over before the long trip to Southern France the following day. Eventually arriving at 10:30pm we had a beer and packed the car for the following day. The trip to France took a long time, due to having to wait nearly two hours for the ferry and, from an 8am start we arrived at the CDC Lot centre, Pont de Rhodes, at around 10pm. Lynne had prepared food for us and this was very welcome. The chalet we stayed in was fine and we had plenty of room for all the gear as well as a bedroom each. So on to the diving.
Day One
Emergence du Ressel; Ressel is a famous cave and one most seen in photos of Franch caves. It is about 45 minutes drive from the Centre. The viz is reported to be usually excellent and there are some nice features in the cave, one being a grey, slate like, square patch on a light coloured limestone slab...weird.
We planned to use the twin 12's of 18/45 backgas as reserve and do the circuit at Ressel on a stage of 32%, a dive Bob had done before and which had taken about an hour or so. French cave diving is a bit surprising after doing all my cave diving so far in Florida, complete with picnic tables and proper parking areas and toilet facilities. The Ressel dive involved parking at the edge of a road, and carrying the gear down a muddy path to the side of a river. The entrance of the cave is upstream about 50 mtrs or so and is signified by a loop of cave line wrapped round a branch of a tree. Follow the cave down into the muddy brown water and suddenly you find the cave.
We had been warned that the vis was uncharacteristically bad due to a period of little rainfall and so I wasnt too surprised when I had trouble seeing my gauge and needed touch contact with the line and with Bob on the way in although it wasnt the usual type of entrance I am was used to. It soon cleared a little though and I was able to stray away from the line somewhat and found that if I stayed high then the vis was much improved, up to 5 or 6 mtrs. I signalled to Bob to move up a little in the water column as we swam along andas we progressed the viz steadily improved. We reached the T junction we had planned to follow after 15 minutes or so and then left a clothes peg marker before following the line which we knew would eventually lead us back the main line to complete a circuit (or at least Bob knew. I didnt and so this was a trust me dive). The vis then dramatically improved to between 15 and 20 mtrs and the water was also warmer at around 13degC. I was swimming along smiling, thinking just how cool this is, looking at the limestone formations and the various characteristics of the cave. It brought back all the great dives I had done in my Florida in June and I was excited and delighted to see that there are similar dives to be had in France.
After 30 minutes we reached the main line and continued the circuit, I looked at my gas and was still on 120 bar of an AL80, so we had plenty of time, and I knew I wouldnt need to use any backgas, which was great, as we wanted to use that the next day for a deeper dive. As we swam along the mainline tunnel the viz steadily decreased as we progressed and the water cooled to 9degc, obviously the lack of rain had caused the river water to start ingressing into the cave and this was what was effecting the viz. At the exit we did a slow ascent finishing the dive on 60 minutes exactly, and me with 40 bar left out of the AL80 J which was 20 bar better off than Bob, a point I made reference too regularly throughout the weekend, as he always uses less gas than me.
Day 2
We got up later today as Bob had not set his alarm, and we fancied relaxing a bit anyway. The weather had warmed up slightly and this was going to be a pleasant day. Lynne has a great little gas filling setup and we managed to fill our used stage bottles with 32% ready for diving Cabouy tomorrow.
Today we had planned to do a deeper dive in Ressel, with 12s of 18/45 and a 50% bottle, which we would use for the shallow section, drop at 21mtrs and then onto backgas for the deeper section, which we planned on scootering for 10 minutes and then returning. The viz at the entrance and the first section was really poor, worse than yesterday, and I had to push against Bobs fins to make sure he knew I was there as we scootered along the best we could. After the T the vis cleared up a lot and we started to make some decent progress before we hit a snag. Bobs trigger cable snapped on his scooter and he had to try and ride it using just the wheel which has the contact for the magnetic switch mounted on it. This worked kind of OK but I could see it was a pain for Bob and I knew we would end up dropping the scooters at the stage bottle point and swimming instead of scootering, which was fair enough, but still a bit of a shame. We dropped the bottles as we planned and, as I thought, Bob signalled to drop the scooters. We then dropped down the shaft which goes to around 30 mtrs and on for another 20 mtrs or so before dropping to 45 ish metres.
The cave at this point really opens out and really is impressive, looking like something out of a WKPP video, white stone on the whole, scalloped by the water flow over time and punctuated by solid slabs of rock which have fallen from the ceiling or been washed into the cave. The line is worth mentioning as it is a mixture of telephone wire and what seems to be fishing line, which is strewn around the cave in loose coils at some parts and where it is broken it is fixed with all sorts of different coloured and different quality line. Very different to the cremantle used in American caves.
Anyway we swam along and after about 15 minutes or so I reached my turn pressure of 150 bar and this was just at the 600 mtr marker and I was happy to know how far we had swam into the cave. It gives me a measurement for next time. The trip back was pretty straightforward and we arrived at the ascent shaft thingy after about 25 minutes bottom time. We ascended doing our deep stops and then picked up our 50% bottle and scooters, switching to our deco gas and then started swimming home. We already knew it was about 30 minutes to swim back so deco pretty much took care of itself and we just paused at different points to match with the plan. Reaching the 9 mtr section we got a shock, as after having 13degc in the cave we were treated to 9degc river water! As the viz worsened I closed in on Bob and started nudging his fins to ensure he knew I was close and we exited the cave after 90 minutes. Not only my deepest cave dive but my first scooter cave dive I was cold but happy. I ended up with about 30 bar left in my 50% bottle and 90 bar left in the twinset. It was quite late by this time and we decided to drive around a bit and relax rather than try and rush to do another dive, as Bob wanted to go back and fix his scooter, in order to conduct the Cabouy dive the following day with two stages and our scooters J
You can read Part Two here, or at my scuba diving weblog
Its been a while since I've posted here and I hardly recognise the place. If this is in the wrong place then I apologise. I'm sure you can redirect it or something. Anyway, I recently travelled to the Lot region of France to dive some caves there. We dived 3 different caves over the 4 day trip and had a great time. I wrote a trip report and thought some of you might like to read it. Hope you enjoy it.
A mad rush to leave work meant that I left home at about 7pm, Wednesday, to drive down to Bobs house as I had planned to stay over before the long trip to Southern France the following day. Eventually arriving at 10:30pm we had a beer and packed the car for the following day. The trip to France took a long time, due to having to wait nearly two hours for the ferry and, from an 8am start we arrived at the CDC Lot centre, Pont de Rhodes, at around 10pm. Lynne had prepared food for us and this was very welcome. The chalet we stayed in was fine and we had plenty of room for all the gear as well as a bedroom each. So on to the diving.
Day One

Emergence du Ressel; Ressel is a famous cave and one most seen in photos of Franch caves. It is about 45 minutes drive from the Centre. The viz is reported to be usually excellent and there are some nice features in the cave, one being a grey, slate like, square patch on a light coloured limestone slab...weird.
We planned to use the twin 12's of 18/45 backgas as reserve and do the circuit at Ressel on a stage of 32%, a dive Bob had done before and which had taken about an hour or so. French cave diving is a bit surprising after doing all my cave diving so far in Florida, complete with picnic tables and proper parking areas and toilet facilities. The Ressel dive involved parking at the edge of a road, and carrying the gear down a muddy path to the side of a river. The entrance of the cave is upstream about 50 mtrs or so and is signified by a loop of cave line wrapped round a branch of a tree. Follow the cave down into the muddy brown water and suddenly you find the cave.
We had been warned that the vis was uncharacteristically bad due to a period of little rainfall and so I wasnt too surprised when I had trouble seeing my gauge and needed touch contact with the line and with Bob on the way in although it wasnt the usual type of entrance I am was used to. It soon cleared a little though and I was able to stray away from the line somewhat and found that if I stayed high then the vis was much improved, up to 5 or 6 mtrs. I signalled to Bob to move up a little in the water column as we swam along andas we progressed the viz steadily improved. We reached the T junction we had planned to follow after 15 minutes or so and then left a clothes peg marker before following the line which we knew would eventually lead us back the main line to complete a circuit (or at least Bob knew. I didnt and so this was a trust me dive). The vis then dramatically improved to between 15 and 20 mtrs and the water was also warmer at around 13degC. I was swimming along smiling, thinking just how cool this is, looking at the limestone formations and the various characteristics of the cave. It brought back all the great dives I had done in my Florida in June and I was excited and delighted to see that there are similar dives to be had in France.
After 30 minutes we reached the main line and continued the circuit, I looked at my gas and was still on 120 bar of an AL80, so we had plenty of time, and I knew I wouldnt need to use any backgas, which was great, as we wanted to use that the next day for a deeper dive. As we swam along the mainline tunnel the viz steadily decreased as we progressed and the water cooled to 9degc, obviously the lack of rain had caused the river water to start ingressing into the cave and this was what was effecting the viz. At the exit we did a slow ascent finishing the dive on 60 minutes exactly, and me with 40 bar left out of the AL80 J which was 20 bar better off than Bob, a point I made reference too regularly throughout the weekend, as he always uses less gas than me.
Day 2

We got up later today as Bob had not set his alarm, and we fancied relaxing a bit anyway. The weather had warmed up slightly and this was going to be a pleasant day. Lynne has a great little gas filling setup and we managed to fill our used stage bottles with 32% ready for diving Cabouy tomorrow.
Today we had planned to do a deeper dive in Ressel, with 12s of 18/45 and a 50% bottle, which we would use for the shallow section, drop at 21mtrs and then onto backgas for the deeper section, which we planned on scootering for 10 minutes and then returning. The viz at the entrance and the first section was really poor, worse than yesterday, and I had to push against Bobs fins to make sure he knew I was there as we scootered along the best we could. After the T the vis cleared up a lot and we started to make some decent progress before we hit a snag. Bobs trigger cable snapped on his scooter and he had to try and ride it using just the wheel which has the contact for the magnetic switch mounted on it. This worked kind of OK but I could see it was a pain for Bob and I knew we would end up dropping the scooters at the stage bottle point and swimming instead of scootering, which was fair enough, but still a bit of a shame. We dropped the bottles as we planned and, as I thought, Bob signalled to drop the scooters. We then dropped down the shaft which goes to around 30 mtrs and on for another 20 mtrs or so before dropping to 45 ish metres.
The cave at this point really opens out and really is impressive, looking like something out of a WKPP video, white stone on the whole, scalloped by the water flow over time and punctuated by solid slabs of rock which have fallen from the ceiling or been washed into the cave. The line is worth mentioning as it is a mixture of telephone wire and what seems to be fishing line, which is strewn around the cave in loose coils at some parts and where it is broken it is fixed with all sorts of different coloured and different quality line. Very different to the cremantle used in American caves.
Anyway we swam along and after about 15 minutes or so I reached my turn pressure of 150 bar and this was just at the 600 mtr marker and I was happy to know how far we had swam into the cave. It gives me a measurement for next time. The trip back was pretty straightforward and we arrived at the ascent shaft thingy after about 25 minutes bottom time. We ascended doing our deep stops and then picked up our 50% bottle and scooters, switching to our deco gas and then started swimming home. We already knew it was about 30 minutes to swim back so deco pretty much took care of itself and we just paused at different points to match with the plan. Reaching the 9 mtr section we got a shock, as after having 13degc in the cave we were treated to 9degc river water! As the viz worsened I closed in on Bob and started nudging his fins to ensure he knew I was close and we exited the cave after 90 minutes. Not only my deepest cave dive but my first scooter cave dive I was cold but happy. I ended up with about 30 bar left in my 50% bottle and 90 bar left in the twinset. It was quite late by this time and we decided to drive around a bit and relax rather than try and rush to do another dive, as Bob wanted to go back and fix his scooter, in order to conduct the Cabouy dive the following day with two stages and our scooters J
You can read Part Two here, or at my scuba diving weblog