Kevin Carlisle
Contributor
it's not so bad
Got a hard noggin too EH?
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it's not so bad
a good quality hood goes a long way. bounced on my arm off my head. kinda hurt my arm a little
Has the possibility of such a collapse altered your approach to cave diving? Yes, in terms of my risk assessment and ways to reduce risk. I came out of class thinking that ignoring accident analysis, my lack of skills/experience and equipment failures would be the cause of an untimely demise in a cave. I accepted that whatever precautions and training I had accumulated in my toolbox so far, was worth the risk.
July 4th a year ago I had a life threatening IPE in JB and my symptoms began at the bottom of this chimney just a few moments after I descended. I have slowly worked my way back into diving over the past year starting with OW shore diving, springs, then caverns, then back to at least an p800ft, even going back by this same spot where it occurred and beyond.
Almost exactly a year later, either the 5th or 6th of July of this year, at the same spot in the cave, there is a collapse. I wasn't in this cave July 4th weekend but I was at Madison diving with one of the buddies I was with when the IPE happened and this was the first time we had been diving together since last July 4th weekend.
I am not a superstitious person but that is freaky to me. It wasn't so much the collapse, but everything lining up like it did. Neither occurrence was something any diver could control. Like Drydiver said, you think you can rely on your training, your experience, your planning, your equipment, your redundancy, your buddy. We like to think we are in control of a situation. Both of these are instances when we are not.
Before I head back to Florida, I'll check in with you to see where you are not going to be.