I have not written a dive report in a few years, but this one was very interesting. On Friday February 9, a few buddies and I arrived at Edwards Spring. This is a pretty interesting site: a narrow entrance shaft that drops straight down to 120 ft. with connections to Suwannacoochee Spring and possibly to the Cathedral-Falmouth system. Access is a little tricky as the banks are very steep, but there are a few well-positioned vines and footholds in the limestone. The plan was a 40-45 minute bottom time on TMX 21/30 with O2 for deco. Although I was going to deco out on my VR3, I cut a couple of tables before hand with DPlan both to get an idea of what the curve should look like and to use as backup. I was looking at a 75-87 minute runtime with 17-20 minutes on O2. The first stop was at 60 ft.
It took about 16 minutes to hit the bottom of the shaft what with finding and tying into the main line, dropping the deco bottles and finding a way through the tight spots. I had been here once before, but it was a few years ago. Vis was very poor, less than 10 ft. The passage in Edwards is fairly small, but even with my new 20W light, I often couldn’t see into the alcoves on the opposite wall. After 43 minutes of no fun, we headed up.
My VR3 called for the first stop at 80 ft., followed by 60, 30 and 20. As usual, I filled in some time at 70, 50 and 40, arriving at 20 ft with 18 minutes on O2. I surfaced with a run time of 88 minutes.
I knew immediately that something was wrong. I was hit by a jolt of adrenaline, and began to feel very cold, confused and tired. After floating around for about 15 minutes surface deco, I climbed up the steep bank, taking one rest on a convenient rock. When I arrived at my truck, I was bone cold, and very fatigued. A buddy fetched my O2 bottle and I just rested a while sucking down the gas. It didn’t help much. After a while I changed into all the dry clothes I had, cranked up the truck’s heater and got out of Dodge.
After about an hour I was warm again, but still bone tired. I also had the distinct feeling that my brain wasn’t firing on all cylinders. I spent the next six hours waiting to feel better before I went to visit the nice people at Shand’s Hospital. Poor Catherine was pulled out of a warm bed to sit in the chamber with me while Patty drove us on a Navy Table 6. The hatch was cracked around 6:00AM Saturday morning and I went right to bed, feeling a different kind of fatigue. Otherwise, I was fine.
I’ve spent a lot of time since trying to figure out what went wrong. The profile was very similar to ones I have used before. I downloaded the dive out of the VR3, fed the depths, descent and ascent rates into V-Planner and came up with the same deco schedule that I had used. I wasn’t dehydrated. I never felt cold during the dive, only after. The next day though, I found out that I wasn’t diving in nice warm spring water; Suwannacoochee Spring, which connects directly to Edwards was happily siphoning down river water. No wonder the vis was so bad. I wasn’t using an Argon inflation system either. I know climbing out of a steep sink can bend you, but I was bent when I hit the surface. Maybe the climb made it worse.
One other possibility comes to mind. As a 50 year old geezer and AARP member, I just may not be able to dive the profiles that I used to.
Anyway, I thought it was useful to post the experience. We learn more from a CF than a hundred good dives. - John


. Otherwise, I was fine.
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