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  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by SuPrBuGmAn View Post
    Its next to the deep section in Jackson Blue and where Die Polder meets the Floridian Aquiffer.
    Ah ok, thanks for clarifying that up. I know exactly where you are talking about now!


  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by SuPrBuGmAn View Post
    Its next to the deep section in Jackson Blue and where Die Polder meets the Floridian Aquiffer.
    You need to stop telling people about these, Mat! Pretty soon those passages will be damaged from all the traffic there!!!

    Rob Neto
    Chipola Divers, LLC
    Check out my new book - Sidemount Diving - An Almost Comprehensive Guide
    "Survival depends on being able to suppress anxiety and replace it with calm, clear, quick and correct reasoning..." -Sheck Exley

  3. #23

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    Quote Originally Posted by RN View Post
    You need to stop telling people about these, Mat! Pretty soon those passages will be damaged from all the traffic there!!!
    It still looked pristine last night!


  4. #24

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    Let's see, the alternate entrance to Morrison's is near Jackson Blue? Yeah....


  5. #25
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    Only relatively... Its more in between the deep section at Jackson Blue(not on the map-secret!!!) and where Die Polder opens up to the huge passage that is the floridian aquifer. So if you meet the two systems halfway... you might be close to... Ginnie(Oh snap!).

    Quote Originally Posted by ShagMan View Post
    Let's see, the alternate entrance to Morrison's is near Jackson Blue? Yeah....
    If there's something closer, we'll need to take one of our boats.

    Last edited by SuPrBuGmAn; 04-23-2009 at 10:08 AM.

  6. #26

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    Yeah, that's still on my to-do list... have to wait for the water to be low again!

    -Josh Murrah

  7. #27
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    I have studied the talus slope at the bottom of the spring just outside the restriction. IMHO, the only way to safely excavate the restriction would be to jet/install about 15 lineal feet of sheet pile 6 feet into the base of the sand slope. This would provide a retaining wall to prevent a downward shift of the talus slope and infilling the restriction. Obviously, any kind of approval for such a structure would be impossible to obtain.

    Several months ago I meet one of the retired Navy divers that blew the arch that collapsed onto the entrance of the lower chamber. He was so proud of his effort. I was doing my best to keep my hands from closing in around his throat.

    Last edited by OutlawCaver; 04-27-2009 at 10:49 AM. Reason: typo

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by OutlawCaver View Post
    Several months ago I meet one of the retired Navy divers that blew the arch that collapsed onto the entrance of the lower chamber.
    You should have told him, "You know, there's a bunch of cave divers that would like to meet you."

    Whoever said money can't buy love never bought a puppy.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by OutlawCaver View Post
    I have studied the talus slope at the bottom of the spring just outside the restriction. IMHO, the only way to safely excavate the restriction would be to jet/install about 15 lineal feet of sheet pile 6 feet into the base of the sand slope. This would provide a retaining wall to prevent a downward shift of the talus slope and infilling the restriction. Obviously, any kind of approval for such a structure would be impossible to obtain.

    Several months ago I meet one of the retired Navy divers that blew the arch that collapsed onto the entrance of the lower chamber. He was so proud of his effort. I was doing my best to keep my hands from closing in around his throat.

    Vince, I disagree. I believe that with about a 12 inch airlift, 175 CFM compressor,and about 150 feet of 12" flex discharge hose, using surface supplied gear, you could get most of that junk out of the way in two or three days. Hell, give me two weeks, and I could suck all the silt out also. We can just discharge into the spring run, right? Then a day or two with a 90 pound jackhammer, and there you go.

    "Have you ever noticed
    When you're feeling really good
    There's always a pigeon
    That'll come shiat on your hood?" John Prine 4-7-2020

    "Into the blue again; in the silent water
    Under the rocks, and stones; there is water underground" Talking Heads

  10. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by OutlawCaver View Post
    I have studied the talus slope at the bottom of the spring just outside the restriction. IMHO, the only way to safely excavate the restriction would be to jet/install about 15 lineal feet of sheet pile 6 feet into the base of the sand slope. This would provide a retaining wall to prevent a downward shift of the talus slope and infilling the restriction. Obviously, any kind of approval for such a structure would be impossible to obtain.

    Several months ago I meet one of the retired Navy divers that blew the arch that collapsed onto the entrance of the lower chamber. He was so proud of his effort. I was doing my best to keep my hands from closing in around his throat.
    I can't say that I'm happy about your restraint there, Vince! Geez, it would have been a completely justifiable choking!

    For those interested, Sheck included a map and some interesting stories of dives there, pre-explosives, in "Caverns Measureless to Man."

    I Semper Fi, Cameron David Smith, my son, my hero. 11/9/1989 - 11/13/2010

    Never forget, we were all beginners once. Allain Burrese

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