After a few weeks out of the water (drysuit zipper was being replaced), it was time to get some cave diving in! I had been talking with Heather about a NAUI Tech 1 course, and had both agreed to meet up for a familiarization dive with each other before class since we hadn’t dove together, and we could pick dive sites from there. One room I had heard a lot about was the “Crypt”, which is a known water source for the Peacock Springs Cave System. Since neither of us had been, we decided to attempt it. Celia and her husband Scott helped us out with directions.
Although it wasn’t necessarily required, we elected to use a stage. My first stage was dropped about 300ft shy of Olsen, and then I continued on with back gas. Because of the head start the stage gave us, we didn’t have to worry about running low on gas in the lower, more silty areas, and also had time to turn around and find a jump again if we happen to have missed it. Fortunately their directions were excellent, and we found the Crypt first attempt. Round trip was 117 minutes. The room was a disappointment for me, just a normal Peacock room with a bunch of snakes, bats, skulls, and various other man made items littering the room.
Here’s a video that someone recently posted of this dive on a diving forum.
After having swam the Mainland and Sweet Surprise tunnels a few times, I had still not done the crossover tunnel, which connects the two. Circuits aren’t necessarily all that appealing to me, I’ve only done one of them outside of training before today, but Allen has been talking this one up to me for a while, so I went along with it :). After meeting up with Rob Culbert and Allen Beard at Cave Excursions East for some tank fills, we headed to Ginnie Springs to sign in and get to diving.
Because swimming in the Devil’s cave system just plain sucks, the plan was that we would all 3 scooter to the Sweet Surprise jump, and then swim the rest of the circuit, returning to main line to grab scooters with assistance of the flow. We would each breathe a stage to breathe during the DPV portion of the drive, drop it at the jump, and swim on back gas (we had all swam at least half the circuit before this dive to verify gas). The swim would be from about 2400ft to 4000 (ish) where there’s a T, and the left side leads to the “crossover tunnel” which heads towards mainland. Once we hit mainland, the flow would be at our backs and the rest of the trip would be a breeze. Due to the small nature of the crossover tunnel, they allowed me to lead since I hadn’t seen it before, and limited visibility was to be expected from diver traffic. This tunnel is very pretty, with surprisingly little damage given how small it is. After the crossover tunnel, we arrived at Mainland, which is my favorite area of the cave to date. Unfortunately, there was substantial river intrusion, so even my 21w HID didn’t produce the beautiful blue glow I’ve grown accustomed to seeing. Once out of Mainland, we coast from 3000ft to around 2400 where our scooters were waiting, ready to spare us from any more swimming!
I saw a post over on Scuba Board by Errol Kalayci with TDS Divers about a DIR charter, with lots of people attending who I’ve chatted with quite a bit on forums, but never met in person; as well as several people who I’ve met before. Now, before reading the review, realize I’m by no means someone who enjoys ocean diving. I’ll do it from time to time with friends to be social, but I don’t exactly look forward to it like I do do when I find out about a new cave…but the diving was so great that hearing me talk about it, you’d think I was in love with it.
We arrived to the boat slightly late, my Garmin GPS doesn’t seem to know exactly where Jupiter Dive Center is for some reason. Their website notes that GPS’s don’t find it, and to use a different address…I’m thinking since my GPS has been updated that I should have used their correct address and not the one suggested. Anyways, we got there, and the boat was being loaded, and I got to meet and greet the guys we would be diving with. This was an excellent crew on the charter, and everyone diving was a pleasure to be around. Because of the DIR charter, everyone was using 32% nitrox, which meant we got to do a deeper ledge than I had been able to do in the past when diving out of Jupiter when the boat had divers using air.
On the first dive, the boat dropped us for a drift dive on Jupiter Ledge. Upon descending, we nearly immediately found a loggerhead turtle, my favorite reef animal. Matt, Cris and I followed at a safe distance to avoid harassing it, since it was swimming away from us. That made my dive, as it has been a few dive trips since I’ve been lucky enough to spot one! This site was the most “alive” Jupiter reef I had been on. A few minutes later, Cris found a shark, although I never saw it. Other highlights of the dive were the gorgeous coral, several “angelfish” and seeing a group of divers not touch the reef for once; something that happens all too often.
The next dive was the highlight of the trip for me. We dove a site called “Area 51“, which was a series of sunken cement pillars with several large Jewish and Lemon Sharks nearby. I’ve been to Jupiter a few times and never had this good of luck, there were over a dozen lemon’s, most of them more than 8ft long! At one point, you could see about a dozen of them swimming around together. As they floated with the current, they ran into a few nearby Jew Fish, which I thought would be an interesting conflict between the two species, but the Jew Fish swam directly through the middle of the Lemon Sharks , without either species paying attention to each other.
The boat ride back in was a real pleasure, Errol introduced me to Bill Mee, who had lots of stories from back when the WKPP was first starting. It was kind of interesting hearing stories of how the group introduced new technologies as needed, such as the RB80’s and PVC based scooters. These guys really laid the foundation for what we’re able to accomplish today. I have had a recent conversation with Bill Rennaker about how Sheck Exley frowned upon his “aggressive” teaching style, because he was doing training dives that took multiple dives to setup only a few years before he started teaching. It’s quite interesting to hear stories from the old timers, and other than a few Exley books, WKPP articles, and old copies of NSS/NACD magazines, this history is being lost each day.
Back to shore, we rushed to unload the tanks, grab lunch, then get to the hardware store to get some Gorilla tape for a leaky dry suit patch. I was really impressed with how quickly Jupiter Dive Center was able to fill all the tanks, and having lunch delivered was an excellent idea, as it kept everyone together.
The final dive would be about an hour long, on the “Zion Train“, a series of three wrecks. I’ve dove this before, but today was the best life I’ve seen on it, with tons of large barracuda, jew fish, angelfish, etc.
If you’re familiar with cave diving, you know that sites under active exploration are taboo to talk about. While that’s nice if you’re the one exploring it, it makes it incredibly difficult to find various sites if you hear rumors of them and want to follow up to see what all the fuss is about. That was the case with the site Andreas and I set out to find, we’ll call it “the funnel” in this blog entry to avoid giving the real name away. We had been told about it, and finally had a general idea of where it was located. After spending almost 5 hours driving around the forest, we finally found an access road that allowed us to access the riverbank near the GPS coordinates we had. Because of how late it was, we didn’t have time to dive this site.
Along the drive, we found several sinkholes which we marked on our GPS to look out for next time.
Since I was already in the South Florida area, I couldn’t leave and not go diving. Cris had some friends of hers that were going out, so I decided to join them. After borrowing a set of LP85 doubles from a cave diving friend who lives in South Florida, I was ready to dive. We met Nate and Brian at Dennys for some breakfast before heading off to Wm. J. Alsdorf Boat Launching Park where we would board with Parrot Island Scuba. As it turned out, everyone on the boat knew each other, so we were able to rent the boat out for $300, or $50/person, which is a great deal! Furthermore, we got to choose where we would dive.
After we talked it over, it was decided that our first dive would be on Wreck Trek, and the second would be on a reef. As odd as this might sound coming from a cave diver, wreck dives don’t really do much for me, but I do love reef dives. For the first dive, I brought my video camera along. Here’s some video that I took-
Tonight I finally had the opportunity to go on a photo shoot with Becky of Liquid Productions LLC, something I had wanted to do for a long time. Andreas was my buddy for the shoot, which worked well, as we had tons of time with a single stage and back gas since we’ve both dove Devil’s quite often.
This was my first shoot with a professional photographer, and I was very impressed. I had worked with Becky before when I was Vice President of the UCF Dive Club, where her and her husband David gave a presentation on shooting video and photos underwater, as well as the Weeki Wachee exploration footage. Becky did an excellent job on the surface explaining the complex shots that she had planned, and also with directing “on the fly” underwater after we completed the staged shots.
Earlier this month, I was approached by a software company to assist writing a Facebook application. I hadn’t done this, however I have read about their powerful Graph API and was anxious to give it a shot. The first step was to learn to connect to the facebook API, which was greatly assisted by using the PHP SDK that has been written and released as open source. I’ll write a longer blog soon once I develop the application, but here’s the steps to begin writing your own external facebook application.
After a great season for those of us who are Knights, we won the CUSA title and got the Liberty Bowl invite. Several friends from college decided to caravan up to Memphis to watch our Knights beat UGA, 10-6. We left after I got off work on a Wednesday afternoon, hitting the road around 7pm in an effort to make it somewhere near half way. We stopped at a cheap looking motel in Birmingham Alabama, checked in, and then grabbed some food at a local TGI Fridays. More research about which areas of town to stay in wouldn’t have been a bad thing in this case, police sirens echo’ed all night, thank goodness for Springfield’s portable XD40 alarm system!
We got into Memphis after waking up early the next morning for another long drive in time to stay at the Days Inn near Graceland. The hotel isn’t terrible, especially considering how run own everything else in the area is, but we agreed that if we go next year, it’d be worth it to spend the extra money and stay at the Westin on Beale St. After checking in, we immediately headed towards Beale St. where the pep rally, parade, and other festivities were going on. UGA fans made for a great atmosphere, and after the pep rally, there were more UCF fans left than UGA (I assume this is because UCF is a younger crowd).
I’ve been slacking on my blog posts, but this weekend had an interesting find worth sharing. It went about like every other weekend around here, lots of diving with hopes of getting a cool project to work on. Here’s a brief summary-
Saturday we went to Wilson Springs. This system goes about 3600ft, with the original line laid by Kevin Jones. Here is about the only information you’re going to find online about it. I would ask that if you choose to dive here be very realistic about your experience in low viz caves, this one is very silty and viz is never really all that good to begin with. At the time of Claire’s article, viz was close to 20-30ft, but it hasn’t been that good in almost 5 years. We went in a tiny ways here and realized that it’s just 3-5ft, with no signs of clearing up. Once the viz improves, we’ll make a map of it. For now all I can tell you is that the first 400ft is gold line, shortly after it becomes white, with a T which goes a ways before the split meets up again at the 2nd T at around 1000ft back. If you’re interested in diving here, please contact me, I do have land access via a landowner, so there’s no need to trespass!
Sunday we decided to go to Vampire Sink. This site (I think) is owned by the city, and I’m not really sure if it’s legal to dive here or not. There’s a cable gate across the access road, but you can tell there’s trails around the sink as well, so I think you just can’t drive on it. It’s right by the road, so beware of toxic runoff during high rain periods. The water has a foul smell to it and the sink bottom is often littered with trash. This sink was featured on the Water’s Journey: Hidden Rivers of Florida, but I think that they just surfaced there, splicing the cave footage from elsewhere with a surface scene here, as we didn’t really find any cave. I have been told at one time it went a short ways under the road, but not much further. maybe a collapse has blocked that fissure, or maybe we didn’t see it with low viz, but either way, we didn’t get anywhere.
Frustrated, we decided to head over to a hole that we had heard about near Newberry. I don’t know what this one is called, and again I’m not sure about the access rights. Upon arrival, we were greeted with a very steep slope, which ended in a vertical drop into an underground cavern, with the bluest water and purist white walls you’ve ever seen! I’ve heard that many of these don’t go very far, but I’m very anxious to find out!
This weekend we were off to 5 Hole, an extensive cave system at Suwannee River State Park. A few of us had been asked to help make a video to show the park staff what a beautiful system they’re protecting. Since this site is permit only, it’s very pristine, but lines aren’t kept up to date as well as park caves. We were only able to get usable video for the first 400-500ft of the system due to lines being ripped out from recent flooding. Jeff Marchand and Michael Gibby are going back next weekend to fix that. Conditions are amazing for this site right now, so we’ll be back VERY soon!