elgoog
Contributor
"Arm up. Big loop up and around. Back down in front of me. Nope, nothing. Scootch forward a bit. Man, I can FEEL the silt I'm stirring up. Arm up. Big loop around. Ow. Did the back of my hand just hit something? Frick, those scalloped rocks are sharp. Wait, how did I hit it on the upward movement? There's no way I'm near the ceiling. Did she drop me below the shelf the line's on? She did, didn't she?"
*record scratch*
*freeze frame*
How did I end up here? I'm gonna blame a YouTube video - I can't remember exactly which one but it was of a cave diver in Nohoch Nah Chich. That led to other cave diving videos (a lot of them) which led to me lurking on cave diving forums which led to thinking (for over a year) about doing it and then to finally getting the training.
I went to Mexico for a week to learn from Natalie Gibb of Under the Jungle with a pretty open mind and no particular goal. Depending on how I did and how much I actually liked being in an overhead environment, I had decided that I would do guided cavern dives, the Cavern course or at most up to Intro to Cave.
I wrote a report on my blog and am far too lazy to copy-paste it here so you'll have to go there if you're interested in an account prone to hyperbole. This post is meant to complement the blog and is more about what my thinking was regarding a bunch of decisions I made about the training and my overall thoughts about it.
The instructor
Nat has a great reputation online and I personally know quite a few divers from my local GUE group who train and regularly dive with her. She is super flexible about how to go about the training which was important to me because, honestly, I didn't really know how much I would like it and having the choices I did made me feel a lot better.
Sidemount vs backmount
I dive BM at home and have no reason to change that. Nat is known for SM but my thinking was that I'm going there to learn how to dive caves from her, not how to dive a specific configuration. I had discussed this with her in detail before the trip and was glad that we were both on the same page. After a week of diving, I can confirm that there were zero issues with her being in SM and me in BM. If anything, I learned what to look for from a buddy who is in SM so that was a bonus.
As far as the layout of the caves themselves and SM being "needed" in Mexico, I think my tolerance for being comfortable in a passage is going to be a limiting factor long before BM will be and there's tons of cave even at the Full Cave level to keep a BM tourist cave diver like me pretty busy.
The training
For reference, I have never been in an overhead, am a Fundies grad, regularly dive doubles+drysuit and completed Intro to Cave in 5 days (with a shakeout day before the class to get used to the new tanks).
It is a LOT of new stuff going on in addition to being able to just dive (buoyancy, trim, position, propulsion, etc) at a fairly high level. The diving part needs to be close to automatic if you want to do the cave stuff well. You're still likely to make a mess of it but the learning curve would be prohibitively steep if you don't have your act together. I'll admit I was pretty nervous about being in the overhead and am a conservative diver but just keeping track of the line and making sure I was paying attention to my buddy's light took up pretty much all of my bandwidth. I darn near had an aneurysm the first time it hit me that I had to drop a marker on the line. It definitely got better as the week progressed but it's still something I had to consciously think about. Handling the reel for the first time was it's own special clusterfudge.
From posts here, it seems like the Cavern portion is treated as the Fundies/ITT equivalent by divers who live near caves. I can't fathom how they manage it - I would have floundered without my Fundies skills and >100 dives after Fundies to get better at them. Similarly, going straight to Full Cave is also difficult to imagine. Personally, I think I'll need a bunch of week long trips of diving the mainline before I feel confident enough to move forward.
In my week there, I dove at Eden (Ponderosa and River Run), Chikin Ha (both cavern lines), Aktun Ha (Carwash cavern), Tajma Ha (goldline and Sagrado line), Mayan Blue (A and B tunnels) and Nohoch Nah Chich (mainline upstream). It was pretty amazing how uniquely beautiful they all were. I could go back there for a week, repeat the exact same dives and still be really happy about it.
I was also super stoked that Nat got some amazing photos with me in Nohoch. It was an amazing graduation dive!!
Planning a trip to Florida next and, hopefully, another one back to Mexico before the end of the year. The downside is that my tropical diving destination bucket list schedule is going to take a bit of a hit now. I'm OK with that
- elgoog
*record scratch*
*freeze frame*
How did I end up here? I'm gonna blame a YouTube video - I can't remember exactly which one but it was of a cave diver in Nohoch Nah Chich. That led to other cave diving videos (a lot of them) which led to me lurking on cave diving forums which led to thinking (for over a year) about doing it and then to finally getting the training.
I went to Mexico for a week to learn from Natalie Gibb of Under the Jungle with a pretty open mind and no particular goal. Depending on how I did and how much I actually liked being in an overhead environment, I had decided that I would do guided cavern dives, the Cavern course or at most up to Intro to Cave.
I wrote a report on my blog and am far too lazy to copy-paste it here so you'll have to go there if you're interested in an account prone to hyperbole. This post is meant to complement the blog and is more about what my thinking was regarding a bunch of decisions I made about the training and my overall thoughts about it.
The instructor
Nat has a great reputation online and I personally know quite a few divers from my local GUE group who train and regularly dive with her. She is super flexible about how to go about the training which was important to me because, honestly, I didn't really know how much I would like it and having the choices I did made me feel a lot better.
Sidemount vs backmount
I dive BM at home and have no reason to change that. Nat is known for SM but my thinking was that I'm going there to learn how to dive caves from her, not how to dive a specific configuration. I had discussed this with her in detail before the trip and was glad that we were both on the same page. After a week of diving, I can confirm that there were zero issues with her being in SM and me in BM. If anything, I learned what to look for from a buddy who is in SM so that was a bonus.
As far as the layout of the caves themselves and SM being "needed" in Mexico, I think my tolerance for being comfortable in a passage is going to be a limiting factor long before BM will be and there's tons of cave even at the Full Cave level to keep a BM tourist cave diver like me pretty busy.
The training
For reference, I have never been in an overhead, am a Fundies grad, regularly dive doubles+drysuit and completed Intro to Cave in 5 days (with a shakeout day before the class to get used to the new tanks).
It is a LOT of new stuff going on in addition to being able to just dive (buoyancy, trim, position, propulsion, etc) at a fairly high level. The diving part needs to be close to automatic if you want to do the cave stuff well. You're still likely to make a mess of it but the learning curve would be prohibitively steep if you don't have your act together. I'll admit I was pretty nervous about being in the overhead and am a conservative diver but just keeping track of the line and making sure I was paying attention to my buddy's light took up pretty much all of my bandwidth. I darn near had an aneurysm the first time it hit me that I had to drop a marker on the line. It definitely got better as the week progressed but it's still something I had to consciously think about. Handling the reel for the first time was it's own special clusterfudge.
From posts here, it seems like the Cavern portion is treated as the Fundies/ITT equivalent by divers who live near caves. I can't fathom how they manage it - I would have floundered without my Fundies skills and >100 dives after Fundies to get better at them. Similarly, going straight to Full Cave is also difficult to imagine. Personally, I think I'll need a bunch of week long trips of diving the mainline before I feel confident enough to move forward.
In my week there, I dove at Eden (Ponderosa and River Run), Chikin Ha (both cavern lines), Aktun Ha (Carwash cavern), Tajma Ha (goldline and Sagrado line), Mayan Blue (A and B tunnels) and Nohoch Nah Chich (mainline upstream). It was pretty amazing how uniquely beautiful they all were. I could go back there for a week, repeat the exact same dives and still be really happy about it.
I was also super stoked that Nat got some amazing photos with me in Nohoch. It was an amazing graduation dive!!
Planning a trip to Florida next and, hopefully, another one back to Mexico before the end of the year. The downside is that my tropical diving destination bucket list schedule is going to take a bit of a hit now. I'm OK with that
- elgoog