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I have a lot of hobbies / sports that I pursue, but diving is the main one. About 2 years ago I began pursuing cave diving.
Cave diving has a few major thrusts to it. Like any other sport it has its highlights, controversies, politics, tragedies, successes, advances.
Cave training is among the most rigorous dive training you can undertake, exceeded in difficulty perhaps only by introductory technical courses. This is more or less universally agreed. The training is so rigorous because the cave environment is among the most demanding environments you can dive in. It is full of both obvious and subtle dangers. Yet with proper training, recreational cave diving has a fairly good safety record. Consequently there is heavy emphasis on proper training among cave divers.
Training today is segmented into progressive modules. If you train with NAUI/TDI/IANTD/NSSCDS, they look something like this:
These are the “main track” courses. Typically the level of certification is something like:
GUE approaches training a little differently, their courses are:
There is alsohttps://www.gue.com/cave-diver-level-3, which is a “mastery level” class that is understood to be more of a formal mentorship than anything.
Then you have the various specialization courses for equipment:
Every agency has a smattering of others.
Like any other sport cave diving has its own culture. This culture is informed by a rich history which I'll touch on in another section.
Cave diving has a surprisingly rich history, replete with legendary explorers, close calls, adventures, hair raising tales, records, triumphs, struggles, tragedies. I find it very interesting. It turns out that swimming into holes underwater to see where they go is an undertaking not dissimilar from something like exploring a new continent with all the human stories that come along with that.