Cavern Class
Lynne and Valerie,
Have a great time with your Cavern Classes! I think my cavern class was really the most useful class that I ever took. I learned more in those few days of training than in any class I had taken up to that point.
Of course once the hook is set, you'll soon be planning your next adventure for some Cave Training...
Have a great time with your Cavern Classes! I think my cavern class was really the most useful class that I ever took. I learned more in those few days of training than in any class I had taken up to that point.
Of course once the hook is set, you'll soon be planning your next adventure for some Cave Training...
Already there . . . GUE Cave 1 is scheduled for the end of April!Of course once the hook is set, you'll soon be planning your next adventure for some Cave Training... Applause
"Sometimes, when your world is going sideways, the second best thing to everything working out right, is knowing you are loved..." ljjames
Well, we're back from Mexico. We not only did cavern, but went on to Intro. We had a fantastic time. The classes weren't easy, and we didn't exactly breeze through, but things got better with each dive. I have detailed reports of each day in the cave diving forum of the Dive Matrix site (http://www.divematrix.com), and Peter has some good pictures up at http://www.tsandm.com/cave .
I would highly, highly recommend to anybody thinking about doing this, that they take GUE's Fundamentals class first. Having familiarity with the equipment, with the kicks and buoyancy and trim, and with the emergency procedures, made the cavern class MUCH easier than it would otherwise have been. Our third class member was really hampered, not only by diving equipment that was strange to him, but by not having done things like mask-off or blind swimming, or midwater air-sharing. We were in much better shape, because we were used to such things.
I would highly, highly recommend to anybody thinking about doing this, that they take GUE's Fundamentals class first. Having familiarity with the equipment, with the kicks and buoyancy and trim, and with the emergency procedures, made the cavern class MUCH easier than it would otherwise have been. Our third class member was really hampered, not only by diving equipment that was strange to him, but by not having done things like mask-off or blind swimming, or midwater air-sharing. We were in much better shape, because we were used to such things.
"Sometimes, when your world is going sideways, the second best thing to everything working out right, is knowing you are loved..." ljjames
Yeah, it looks like a concrete pad where somebody's working on a bunch of radial engines. No sign, no marker -- just a dirt road winding off into the jungle. Your first navigational test as a cave diver is whether you can find the place again . . .
Scott, I hope we run into you some time down there. As I've said before, your pictures and reports were a bad (or maybe good) influence on me!
Scott, I hope we run into you some time down there. As I've said before, your pictures and reports were a bad (or maybe good) influence on me!
"Sometimes, when your world is going sideways, the second best thing to everything working out right, is knowing you are loved..." ljjames
Thank Lynne, that would be great fun! I'm headed back down there in four weeks.....LCF wrote: Scott, I hope we run into you some time down there. As I've said before, your pictures and reports were a bad (or maybe good) influence on me!
That will be my third trip to Mexico this year. Now if I can just remember to stop trying to order food in Spanish when I get home....