
Originally Posted by
Chris Laughrey
For starters, Trace says a lot and says it eloquently. Well written, sir.
My own experience covers old time wreck diving, contemporary wreck diving, and cave diving since 1993. I came out of the NJ wreck diving school, doing lots of that between 1968 and 1998, much less since then because I started concentrating on Great Lakes wrecks and cave diving in 1993. I had 15 years of wreck diving under my belt when a friend convinced me to try a cave class because, "it would improve my penetration techniques". I had cavern and intro with Bird, JJ, and Berman team teaching. I lost all of my wreck diver cockiness on morning #1, dropped back to the bottom of the learning curve, and never looked back. I completed full cave with Berman, as well as trimix. In fact, Steve took me to Diepolder, Eagles Nest, and the Ozark in the same week for my trimix class so we mixed up the wreck and cave diving right from the get go. From that perspective, I took everything I learned in cave and applied it to wreck diving up this way and elsewhere. In those days, cave training and experience brought an excellent perspective to wreck diving and I recommended that route to a lot of folks. The real advantage that cave instructors, students, and divers have over wreckers was (and is) the amount of time they could spend in the overhead cultivating personal skills and comfort. The logistics are simply easier (picnic table versus a rocking boat and limited bottom time that all costs a lot of $). So I still recommend cave training as useful to the aspiring wreck penetration diver, but it is no longer really necessary. It is clear ro me that the cave community ultimately influenced a large part of the wreck community and that is evident in the wreck penetration training available today. I think the availability of specific wreck and cave training is a real step forward. The two disiplines share many similar techniques and approaches. The two types of diving are very different too and divers need to learn the specifics of each. I do not think one type of training/diving prepares a diver better than the other one for either cave or wreck. They certainly compliment one another, but are entirely different beasts.
One last thought - question: which type of diving do you folks thionk is more "dangerous", cave or wreck. Both offer unique hazards and training in these disiplines is all about hazard management. It would be fun to hear your take on that. My vote is that wreck is more hazardous. I certainly earn my gray hairs teaching wreck penetration, especially on the deep ones, but never feel as harrried when teaching cave diving. What's your take?
Chris
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