Quite clearly the "high skill" sets you are referring to have existed for ages. For the record, they existed long before the people that you now like to attribute these skills to, even took up the sport of diving and even well before some of these people were actually born. So the fact is, the very people who are apparently your role models, learned these skills from other divers, they did not invent them. These exact skills originated and were applied as early as in the 60s in the cave diving community, needless to say, many divers also introduced these skills to wreck and technical diving.
Quite possibly you have read the books Shadow Divers and The Last Dive, there's a lot of reference to these skill sets and the people using them on those dives. And of course this is not only the exact era, these books specifically detail the exact dives you so often make reference to. Your making assumptions and insinuating that it just *might* have been otherwise is completely unfounded.
Oliver
Oliver,
you are and lecter are wrong about this. The buoyancy and trim that is seen today by well skilled tech divers, came largely from the cave diving world where learning techniques that would not stir up silt, were more critical.
The truth of this can be seen when you consider WHEN you began seeing significant numbers of tech divers or even tech instructors, using the frog kick.
There is no question that when you have to be close to the bottom, that frog kick is less silt producing than flutter ( and modified flutter with the fins at more like 90 degrees , was certainly not being used either) ....
You just did not see wreck divers doing frog kicks in the 80s, and not in the 90's till maybe around 98 or so....Even now, it has only become cpmmon to see this in the last 4 years--common as a skill set you EXPECT in tech divers.
In cave divers this was normative in the early 90's and even in to the 80's.
My guess is that populations of tech divers, that got the opportunity to dive with cave divers, were more likely to be exposed to skills that would be appealing to them.
I have NEVER said that WKPP invented the skills....you guys are aggressively making stuff up now

Many cave groups were out there, and the skills began to spread.... However, where the skills and proficiency were never mandated, you wont have an expectation of a high level of this skill being commonly used.
I don't think think that frogkick or several other of the cave diving techniques, were commonly used by the NE wreck community in the 80's or early to mid nineties.
And if I am dead wrong about all this, then why are these skills so absent in most of the diving population today, and this to the degree that most divers find a course like Fundies to be extremely difficult to pass?
---------- Post added February 18th, 2013 at 11:03 AM ----------
Quite clearly the "high skill" sets you are referring to have existed for ages. For the record, they existed long before the people that you now like to attribute these skills to, ...there's a lot of reference to these skill sets and the people using them on those dives. And of course this is not only the exact era, these books specifically detail the exact dives you so often make reference to. Your making assumptions and insinuating that it just *might* have been otherwise is completely unfounded.
Oliver
My diving on charter boats, most weekends through the 80's and 90's', put me into a very large population or cross section of divers and skill levels. One that would have statistical significance even, for this time period, when compared to the divers seen in water in the same time period, by most here on scubaboard that are posting your viewpoint right now.
Then in the tech diving explosion of interest that occurred around 96 and 97, a very large number of tech divers was visiting South florida due to what they heard on the Tech Diver list and rec.scuba, and other internet forums, about great 200 to 280 foot deep dives off of north miami, Lauderdale and Palm Beach. We had a real tech movement, plenty of boats catering to this, but there were very few with the skill sets we are now discussing--few that would frog kick when near bottom over silt, and few that did not swim at least slightly head up and feet down.... This began changing after 97---certainly the buzz about this on internet boards, would contribute to the interest of tech divers, in what they might want to look into, skill wise.