Cave Diving - One Of The Least Talked About Extreme Sports

Cave DivingWhat image comes to mind when you think of cave diving? Do you think of the shows you watch on the educational channels where they go into dark, murky caves with a string so they can find their way out and come back with treasures? You may think, “Wow that looks pretty cool”. What exactly is extreme cave diving?

Cave diving exposes you to risks that you would not encounter on a recreational dive (open or ocean dive) and risks that could be life threatening if you are unprepared.

Cave divers are not concerned with injuries, as they are fully aware that the only injury that could occur, death is permanent. This is a big reason why cave diving is considered an extreme sport. You can’t get much more extreme than the possibility of death.

Pushing to the depths of the watery darkness when you are told you can only go this far is a great draw to the daredevils of extreme sports. Part of being extreme is being told the limits and not only moving past them, but also pushing past them.

For most, that usually does not occur on the first try. There are several tries and possible injuries before this is accomplished. What happens when that boundary has been claimed? You start all over again to push it even farther.

Cave diving in its extreme, is the knowledge that you may be the first one to either go to a particular cave or find something no one else has. In addition being the first to accomplish anything has an adrenaline rush all its own.

Cave diving presents the challenge of testing the boundaries of your skills and making sure that you have the highest technical advantage to survive the elements.

Cave divers find unique elements that you will not see in Normal Ocean diving or underwater diving such as the formation of stalactites and stalagmites along with possible archeological finds.

Another aspect of cave diving that makes it extreme is not only the perils of the dive, itself but also the return. A cave diver has to be prepared for many unknown elements. One is the ability to keep their senses when everything around them is telling them something different is happening.

Another is learning the depth of the dive. Yet another is the return that can be quite long and complicated, as their body has to readjust to breathing air and not mixtures of oxygen and nitrogen.

These thrill seekers like the sensation of gravity as they return to solid ground. If this were not enough to excite the senses, the sheer fact that nature has the ultimate control, can send the adrenaline soaring.

A wrong step taken along any part of this cave diving can have perilous consequences – hence the reason cave diving is extreme.

Extreme cave diving is done in a passageway that has no overhead air pockets and is flooded. If the equipment should malfunction, you can’t simply stop. You have to continue the dive and return to the surface, which means you are still underwater.

This is one of the reasons you have to be master over your senses. They body has a way to override reality when it perceives a threat of any kind and it takes great control to convince your body that what it is experiencing is not the true reality.

Cave diving is not performed with a direct descent, but rather what is called penetration diving. This means that the diver has no space to simply do a vertical ascent to reach breathable air if they were to have a complication with the dive. Cave divers are trained in technical diving, but this does not lessen the rush they get from going beyond the limits.

Extreme sports of any kind are popular for the sheer fact that you have gone into unknown territory and survived and not only survived, but completed the task more confident in yourself and your abilities. This self-confidence spills over into all other areas of your life as well.

You faced the unknown, you did what others thought could not be done and you came out a better person for it. For the cave diver what could be more thrilling than looking death in the face and conquering it?

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