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...//... So please be considerate and stay out of the caves if you are not properly trained. ...//...
Divers pushing the limits for bragging rights or adrenaline highs tend to rate consideration fairly low. It is of the moment. Best to remind them that no previously unknown diver is going to become an overnight dive hero by dying in a cave. You become and remain a dead idiot. Then wish them luck and notify the proper authority -and let it go.
...//... I can almost guarantee you that there will be better divers overall than on almost any boat anywhere diving a reef or wreck. ...//...
Possibly a better comparison is to wrecks or dives that are comparable to even the simplest tourist cave. Those would be deep penetration or dives beyond recreational limits. The lines begin to blur.
...//... Now in cave diving the dive is the hard part and the deco is easy and in wreck diving it is the other way around from my experience. ...//...
My experience differs.
- Caves are seductive, they just draw me inward. This is what scares me about caves. you can quickly find yourself lost and a long way from home. Penetrations, even for new cave students, are stupidly far compared to wreck penetrations.
- Wrecks are dangerous collapsing structures that increasingly scare the s---t out of me with forward progress. While you are watching for sharp edges, look at what is rotting out and dangling above you on your next wreck dive.
I will offer for comment that cave divers, as a group, tend to focus much more on training and self discipline. Much of what cavers work out gets transferred to wreck diving simply because it works well in wrecks too.