Are you planning a CAVE DIVE but you are . . .
Neither formally trained nor certified in Cavern or Cave Diving?
Trained
in Cave Diving, but planing a dive beyond your level of training?
Making one
of your initial dives into a spring, cave, or blue hole?
Not using
at least two dependable underwater lights, a guideline on a reel, a submersible
pressure gauge, and an additional second stage?
If your answer was "yes" to any of these questions, then you are typical
of most cave-diving fatalities. Since 1960, more than 431 divers fitting
the above description -- that is, untrained, inexperienced, and improperly
equipped -- have died in cave diving accidents in Florida, Mexico and the
Caribbean.
This web page has been prepared as a public service
by the Cave Diving Section of the National Speleological
Society (NSS-CDS) to help you avoid those mistakes that
have frequently contributed to the cave diving deaths
of others.
NO AMOUNT
OF PREVIOUS OPENWATER DIVING EXPERIENCE OR TRAINING
CAN ADEQUATELY PREPARE YOU FOR CAVE DIVING.
Regardless of their prior
openwater experience, most cave diving accident fatalities
were untrained in cave-diving procedures, inadequately
equipped for the planned dive, and/or making one of
their initial cave dives. Many were extremely experienced
in other types of diving. No less than 19 were FULLY
CERTIFIED OPEN WATER SCUBA INSTRUCTORS -- but without
any training in the specialized area of cave diving.
Interviews with the surviving
dive buddies suggest that frequently the divers originally
planned only to take a quick peek "just inside the cave
entrance" -- that they weren't really planning a full-fledged
"cave dive." But in many instances the divers got into
trouble immediately -- "just inside the cave entrance!"
In other cases, they decided to continue further into
the cave despite their plan and became hopelessly lost.
When their bodies were recovered later, there was every
evidence that their pre-death experience was panic-stricken,
horrifying, and filled with thoughts of their own stupidity,
their families, their dead buddies and their own lost
life.
Why did these divers
drown? The answer lies in part with their ignorance
of the unique HAZARDS found in caves, and their failure
to prepare for, recognize and deal with these hazards
appropriately.
For example, when cave
diving, the cave CEILING restricts direct access to
the surface, making you completely dependent upon your
equipment and its proper function. Should an emergency
such as air failure occur, you cannot make a free ascent
to the surface as you would when diving in open water
you must first swim out of the cave the way you came
in -- out, and then up. Yet many divers, unaware of
this consequence of having a ceiling, fail to plan for
such an emergency.
In addition, many divers
also fail to realize that because of the ceiling, normal
openwater rules for air reserves are completely inadequate
in a cave scenario -- that it will usually take at least
as much air to exit the cave as it took to enter, since
the divers must swim back out of the cave the same way
they went in. Any kind of time-consuming problem or
emergency, or the catastrophic loss of an air supply
by one of the dive team members, will require MUCH MORE
air -- even two or three times more air. Other divers
depend only on their dive light and memory of the cave
to navigate the cave's MAZE-LIKE PASSAGEWAYS. But should
their dive light(s) fail (which is very common, especially
when a light inadvertently bumps into the walls or floor
of a cave) or memory fail, there are only two things
that will help them exit safely: having learned special
emergency procedures (reducing the panic factor), and
having a safety guideline from the entrance, which ensures
direct access to the surface.
Another unexpected hazard
is SILT, or loose sediment that is found on all underwater
cave floors and walls. Some of the most popular cavern
and cave diving locations feature entrances which are
nearly silt free; yet just a few feet beyond the entrance,
the floors are covered with deep, potentially treacherous
silt.
Normal open water swimming
techniques can easily stir up silt, reducing visibility
from a hundred feet to near zero with only a few strokes
of a fin blade. Imagine swimming forward into clear,
beautiful water, only to turn around and see a wall
of impenetrable silt when you attempt to exit. Again,
only having a continuous guideline to the surface and
having practiced and learned emergency procedures will
insure a safe exit.
The most important single
piece of equipment for cave diving is also the most
hazardous to use. Many openwater divers have thought
that if they carried a guideline, they could explore
a cave safely. Nothing could be further from the truth,
and there have been many deaths as a result of these
divers getting tangled in their own guideline. Only
formal cavern and cave diving courses can teach you
the safe and effective procedures for deploying, securing,
and following a guideline. Many hours of classroom,
field, and underwater training are devoted to guideline
usage.
Yet despite these potential hazards, thousands of cave
dives are made each year in complete safety by those
who have learned to cave dive properly. They are divers
much like you, differing only in that they have completed
the specialized training and have learned about the
quiet, strange and beautiful environment of underwater
caves, and respect the caves' unique hazards.
If you see this sign...
and are not trained as
a cave diver, heed it's warning!
The best way to become
a safe cave diver is to first become a certified scuba
diver and to accumulate open water diving experience.
Then seek out a cavern and cave diving course. Do not
attempt to go cave diving without first acquiring cave
diving training. Remember, the vast majority of cave
diving fatalities were untrained in cavern or cave diving,
and were making one of their first cave dives. Remember
also that reading a book about cave diving is no substitute
for the in-water training and skills you will acquire
under the expert guidance of an experienced, certified
cave diving instructor.
A highly experienced
and seasoned cave diver once said that to go from visiting
an open water reef to exploring an underwater cave --
while causing the minimum damage to both the diver and
the fragile cave environment -- requires a quantum leap
in experience and expertise.
To
learn more about the risks of Cavern or Cave Diving,
the NSS-CDS offers a video showing how easily an un-trained
diver can get into trouble, the video is titled "A deceptively
easy way to die". Also an information booklet titled
"Basic Cave Diving / Blue Print for Survival" which
offers details of investigated incidents and fatalities.
Both can be purchase from the NSS-CDS web site, NSS-CDS
Business Affiliate, or NSS-CDS Instructor.
Cavern and Cave Diving can be rewarding as well as
important for the study and protection of this resource.
However, for your safety and the safety of the environment,
seek proper Training and Equipment.
Remember this;
"anyone could enter a Cave... but
only the Trained Cave Diver knows how to exit"