The property owner warned them not to go in there . And the girl simply blew him off saying . " We're all diving instructors." Apparently the cave didn't care about their credentials .
@starrgazer10005 ай бұрын
Complacency at its worst, no sympathy for them
@gehtdianschasau83722 ай бұрын
@@starrgazer1000 That is fair, but what about their friends, relatives,... what did they do, to deserve losing a dear person? They are the ones suffering, the dead don't care any more.
@RemotelairАй бұрын
ego is a son of a gun isnt it ??!!
@nyanbinary17175 ай бұрын
When I hear stories like this, I’m so glad I have zero need or desire to go places no one else has gone before.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣
@williammackintosh64715 ай бұрын
@@waterlinestorieso
@ShariAbner12 ай бұрын
Good for you 😊
@ftroop8462Ай бұрын
"Sometimes the road less traveled is less traveled for a reason" - Seinfeld
@-MattMcCauley-5 ай бұрын
I was certified in 1979, six years after this tragic incident, but still the same general era. While the procedures then were somewhat less developed and the gear was a bit more primitive these people still made a ton of mistakes, even for that time, at least by US standards. I doubt AUS was too different from the US then, either. For example, the "Rule of Thirds" was well known then. But that one uses 1/3 of their air to reach the farthest point in the dive; the next 1/3 is for the return; the final 1/3 is kept as emergency reserve. Decent lines/reels/spools were in standard use then. Redundant dive lights/torches were in use. Stage decompression tanks tied off on the decent line and leaving 1-2 at depth at the rockpile would have been a basic measure then, too. Set buddy teams would have also been the norm, the large gaggle with no assigned teams is why people got split up and others separated without anyone noticing. And then there is the narcosis issue. There was no recreational mixed gas in '73, which would have reduced narcosis to a very minor level, but a tolerance can be developed in many divers, so what we'd do in that era is make a series of dives over days or weeks gradually increasing depth after about 80-100 feet to work oneself up to a depth like 250 feet, which is 120 feet deeper than the (US) maximum recommended recreational sport diving depth (after that one enters the realm of what is now called "tech diving", which requires special training and gear more specialized than the standard recreational diver's kit). I thought this video did an outstanding job telling this story, a great balance of explaining the basics to the non-diver viewers, but still providing the details to anticipate and answer the questions popping into the heads of those of us who do dive. BTW, I have seen the "It's OK, we're instructors" overconfidence get a lot of people into trouble over the years, as it did here. That one is trained to teach beginners in basic SCUBA techniques does NOT mean one is magically qualified to engage in various speciality areas of diving that require special training and equipment. Cave/overhead diving alone is highly specialized, as is deep diving, but to combine BOTH was a recipe for the disaster that did in fact occur. Very sad story, but well-told.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. I was only just born and didn’t start diving till 20 years later. I think a lot demented in those 20 years. As well as lots of stories of mistakes that make people realise the dangers and the learning.
@-MattMcCauley-Ай бұрын
@ Yes, absolutely! The "J valve", a tank valve that had a second knob. In up position it held about a 500psi reserve. When you lowered the valve via the steel rod you mentioned that 500psi was released to let you get safely to the surface. Those were invented before submersible pressure gauges were in widespread use, so the idea was that essentially running out of air and needed to summon the reserve was how one knew it was time to come back up, lol! Seems crazy looking back, but that was just how things were, you are exactly right!
@Teampegleg29 күн бұрын
Sheck published Basic Cave Diving: A Blueprint for Survival which started the movement toward cave diving was published in 1979. So while the knowledge existed in 1973 it wasn't widespread nor seen as the hard fast rules like they are today.
@nobleeso6335 ай бұрын
The good thing about cave diving is that you don't have to do it.
@bruh-wy2ih5 ай бұрын
No one has to lift weights, do archery, camp and hike, or play baseball either
@LockDOTspot5 ай бұрын
@bruh-wy2ih and I don't, which is why I'm alive, without life long injuries.
@WineScrounger5 ай бұрын
Word. I will never.
@joshuarisker55255 ай бұрын
Amen
@Arsenic715 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's my favorite part of it.
@suitejodi5 ай бұрын
You could not pay me to go down into something like that.
@stephanrosos49575 ай бұрын
And that's exactly the reason cave diving nuts find it irresistible. They seem to thrive in terrifying conditions.
@Snarf_Le_Wombat5 ай бұрын
Pay me Zaddy ☺️
@knarftrakiul38815 ай бұрын
Cave diving sounds cool to me. Going in tight places were u have to take tanks off sounds fuking stupid 😅
@knarftrakiul38815 ай бұрын
It's safe if you go by the rules.. use rule of thirds for your air, take 3 or 4 flash lights and some long tie off line
@stephanrosos49575 ай бұрын
@knarftrakiul3881 the majority of KZbin fatal cave diving stories involve divers with extensive experience and the best equipment and ample safety measures. Even the most prepared outings encounter an unexpected x factor that proves fatal.
@pieterveenders97935 ай бұрын
That saying "rules and regulations were written with the blood of the dead" definitely applies A LOT to cave diving. Even now, cave diving is still incredibly dangerous (in fact together with BASE jumping it's considered the most dangerous sport on earth), but the 60's and especially 70's were sheer madness, the frontier of (cave) diving. No training for cave diving existed back then, there was pretty much no knowledge or expertise on it, let alone easily accessible sources for it. And as a result, a lot of incidents like the one in this video happened, where mistakes
@mrjjman20105 ай бұрын
Reminds me of F1 back then. I believe at some point it was like a 20% chance of a death of a driver per race. Not sure if people just never think it will happen to them or what, but that’s insane.
@michaelogden59585 ай бұрын
well said, Sir!
@Teampegleg29 күн бұрын
Cave diving is no where near the most dangerous hobby on Earth. Modern cave diving probably has a similar safety record as sky diving. We lose about one or two trained cave divers per year in non-medical accidents. Just based on new certifications there are 16,000 cave dives per year, that doesn't account for the hundreds of non-training dives every week just in Florida alone, not accounting for all the sites around the world.
@equarg5 ай бұрын
My mom had no problems diving in the ocean. But when she went into a massive 30 meter in and out (like a tunnel) a few hundred feet long…. She got vertigo. She thinks because it was night, and the sight of the fish swimming sideways and upside down that set her off. She panicked. Started clawing at the walls and went thru a 1/2 hours worth of air in minutes hyperventilating. Dad, in the military, grabbed her immediately and yeeted out of there. Got to the surface just as she ran out of air. Took her weeks to even think about going diving again, just during the day. Eventually she dove at night again, but she 100% refused to go in, much less near an underwater cave again. Apparently the kids trapped in that cavern in Thailand years ago brought back some traumatic memories and she told me her tale. She voice shook slightly recalling her trauma…..over 30 years ago. So, cave diving is no joke in my book!
@wendellthomas4644 ай бұрын
Did you ever dive? I wasn't the best diver but competent. I got my son involved in diving in his teens.
@Azurie-n2i2 күн бұрын
@@wendellthomas464 sorry for your future loss
@dfuher9685 ай бұрын
This was such a reckless dive. Skipping safety precautions, a "secret" plan for a record and then pulling recreational divers with them without telling them about the very risky thing, they were planning to do, which is just beyond reprehensible. Risk ur own life, whatever, thats ur choice. But deliberately risking the lives of others, less experienced divers? And not even telling them, what ur doing?
@timtim84682 ай бұрын
"secret" plan, a cover girl, towing a group down, this tale is unbelievable. In the end, we got what we get everywhere, regulations, and a certification racket.
@roselightinstorms72716 күн бұрын
Yes. Sadly. RIP
@AnimeSunglasses6 күн бұрын
Seriously. They did SO MANY THINGS WRONG.
@Stuff_I_Watch5 ай бұрын
Joan made a good choice. These days we always ask trainees if they are FIT & WELL prior to every dive. This doesn’t just mean, do you have a cold? - it means physically & MENTALLY well. Are you feeling safe & calm? Joan knew from the first dive that her ladder issues probably caused her to start the dive anxious. So it was best to remain at the surface. I have hundreds of dives under my belt, but even I have to occasionally call off from a 3rd dive in the same day if a boat chucks out a load of diesel smoke, as it makes me physically sick. I’m more of a sailor than a boater!
@crabarmy17765 ай бұрын
Diesel gets me as well. You're right about Joan. Good point about being 'well and fit' before a dive. On that note - I was having some sinus issues like a cold one time before diving in Mexico. Not wanting to miss 1 of the 2 days of diving I took some afrin to make sure I could equalize. This increased my heart rate and respiration more than I realized. I kept track of my air level throughout the dive (duh) and as it got really close to the planned dive limit I couldn't understand why the guide we went with wasn't starting the ascent. I grabbed thier fin and showned them my gauge - I don't think I have ever seen eyes go so wide (as we were about 60% through the dive). They had me buddy breath for like 10 min across 3 divers (group of 5 including guide) along the ocean floor and through part of the decompression stop. They managed everyones air and we all had air left over as well as ascended at the planned point so the guide we went with did a great job in my book. If I had a timer I could have tracked how quickly I went through the planned amount of air and been more proactive. I got a dive computer not long after that. But anyway - the simple rule of being 100% fit and well to dive is one I always follow now, and to the standards you speak. Diving seems easy and straight forward and partly because of this it is quite dangerous. Small things that seem easily dismissed can compound underwater to deadly levels...fast.
@6AlphaMikeCharlie93 ай бұрын
Exactly, It's the same with a lot of things even like taking mushrooms don't do it if you're not in a good headspace. I bet she's made some good decisions in her life after that incident.
@michaelohair37154 ай бұрын
As an ex North Sea commercial diver from the 70s, and as an inland commercial diver for 13 years and commercial diving instructor at DIT , 85/86, I recall at least three people, diving scuba, who did very, very stupid things. One, diving repeaedlly to 200 feet in Lake Washington to raise a WWII fighter plane, did not suffer at all, either from nitrogen narcosis or 02 toxicity. Another was a scuby-doo boat cleaner who taught, for money, scuba diving without ever having heard of 02 toxicity, who when I mentioned that he should be teaching it to his students scoffed and replied sarcastically that such toxicity didn't exist. And a third was a guy who in a commercial venture died in scuba gear while trying to save a fellow diver who, surface-supplied, had become tangled in an anchor line at 300 feet. The tangled diver was later found, he wasn't. I have never cave dived and would not have except for good money. I would never ever do so without a strong safety line, extra air or mixed gas supply, good lights, and good communication, with the surface, and to hell with the fun and adventure. I have gone into small spaces to work in cold, dangerous conditions, but as far as I'm concerned caves are just deep, scary holes, and no fun at all. I'd as soon dive in a sewer.
@waterlinestories4 ай бұрын
🤣 at least a sewer follows a predictable pattern. Caves are something else
@Curt_SampsonАй бұрын
@@waterlinestories I don't know what you guys have against sewers. They're like any other pipes: you get out of it what you put into it.
@jenniferk92425 ай бұрын
What a terrible waste of young lives. The thought of drowning absolutely terrifies me. Thanks for another great video, i really enjoy your presentation style and narration.
@SkullyX995 ай бұрын
I will never dive. Ever. When I was a kid I saw a movie where a monster in the water would go after divers and remove the oxygen tanks. Then it would just watch them drown and swim off. That was more than enough to keep me away.
@serenasorensen67345 ай бұрын
See, this is how I know I would survive a horror movie. I don't feel the need to explore dark, deadly places. 😂
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣 Hey let’s go into that dark abandoned house. Uh no thanks. The end
@OptimalToast5 ай бұрын
So many young mavericks back then pushing themselves and their equipment. Wild how many had died in the sinkhole, looked like a very simple layout at those depths, amazing how fast inexperience, recklessness, silt outs and narcosis can flip a situation.
@The..Dark..Knight5 ай бұрын
Sorry, but if you have a secret plan behind my back, and put you and your team in danger, and don't listen when I warn of low air, you're on your own buddy boy.
@Squatch_Rider665 ай бұрын
Very similar to the Dave Not Coming Back story where they went 280 meters down to recover a deceased diver. Great presentation.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. I think one of my very first videos was about Dave.
@dabootvv5 ай бұрын
@@waterlinestories you have so many great ones!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
@dabootvv thanks 😀👌🏻
@akiko0095 ай бұрын
Technical diving is just like parachute jumping. The risks can be reduced, but never eliminated. (Diving for 27 years.)
@CryptoInvest-LunaticCapital5 ай бұрын
by seeing hundreds of these over youtube while washing dishes, i believed i am an expert now in saving life in deep waters.
@slinkerdeer5 ай бұрын
You make probably the best production quality disaster videos I've yet seen.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Amazing to hear. That’s for that 😀👍🏻
@slinkerdeer5 ай бұрын
No worries, credit where it's due :-) The only other channel I might compare the quality to is Disturban, and he is a true legend not only as a content maker but as a person, he fundraised 8,200 USD to give to (and gave to) an unfortunate lady who was acid attacked so she could move away before her assailant is released from prison.
@martinlintzgy13615 ай бұрын
Check out Mentor Pilot.
@nyanbinary17175 ай бұрын
@@slinkerdeerDisturban is one of my favorites.
@andrewmorke2 ай бұрын
Your presentations are top rate. Dankie.
@slinkerdeer5 ай бұрын
8:50 I think I speak for the majority of us viewers when I say we all chose we would be Joan in this story lol. Make some food, help out. Much nicer than going down a deep dark underwater hole
@jenniferk92425 ай бұрын
Yes, I'm definitely Joan!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Well done Joan
@SonofGalahad5 ай бұрын
Yes, be more like Joan. Make some food and watch the body count pile up.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
@SonofGalahad pass the popcorn 🍿
@slinkerdeer5 ай бұрын
Hey better theirs than mine lol, though that's only cause if you voluntarily dive down that honestly what happens should be of no surprise
@FilipAus5 ай бұрын
I've dived The Shaft half dozen times. It's actually more fun getting in and out then the actual dive. Wanted to add that after this period of time where there were a large number of deaths in the caves, and the land owners started banning divers, the divers got together and started a training organising, Cave Divers Association of Australia and began a licensing system with extremely stringent training. Since then, there have been very few deaths and those that occurred have been from not following training and the 5 golden rules. Edit: lol only got to watch the end after i wrote this.
@bennyd3455 ай бұрын
Wow, real sad tale this one, brother. Fantastic job, research, animation and follow up story. Although not a diver myself, I really appreciate the effort you put into these videos. One of my favourite weekly places to visit. Great accent for commentary, too. Keep up the sterling work. 👏👏👏
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks mate, I really appreciate that 👌🏻
@corthirteenth945 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for all the hard work you do and all this great content!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching👌🏻😀
@FreeFinca5 ай бұрын
A new nope added to my list of nopes!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣 Nope
@wickets5 ай бұрын
I was diving in small cave decades ago and it scared the s*it out of me. Never again.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Yep. I’m not a big fan either
@atoitoh29895 ай бұрын
I have gone open water diving exactly once, to a depth of about 35 feet. It was ok, nothing went wrong, but I don't feel any need to ever do it again.
@mikko0015 ай бұрын
Thank you, scary dive without proper equipment.. I have dived 57m deep on open water in a place where one diver died few years before, they had plan to go to 80m with normal air. One young member of the group didn't stop when they should have. I have done some cave diving too, but not over 40m, not very wise without trimix-gas.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Yep. Need to have a plan
@michaelmoorrees35853 ай бұрын
I got certified in late 1974. Equipment was primitive. Not having a depth gauge was common. Also many don't even have a tank pressure gauge, relying on a J-valve, which cuts off the air, when air drops to 500PSI (~35Bar), that's when you flip a valve, to use that remaining air as your reserve. A watch is used to measure your bottom time. A dedicated bottom timer was an uncommon, but existed. BCDs (Buoyancy Compensator Device, aka stab jacket) would not be a thing for another couple of years. True dive computers would not show up for over another 10 years !
@kylehill44375 ай бұрын
Dude I've been binge watching your channel. You are an amazing story teller on par with MrBallen and your animations are excellent. Well done and thank you for your content.
@jnmrn40695 ай бұрын
For being a bunch of dive instructors, they sure broke some basic rules… always use the buddy system and always use a safety line if you are cave diving. I agree with the other comments here… I have absolutely no interest in cave diving. Another thing is that they were going so far past the 100 foot depth where nitrogen narcosis sets in. I’m only certified for open water diving. I can still remember my instructor from 1982 saying “don’t go into caves unless you get certified for cave diving”. This was before some of the special cave diving certifications mentioned in this video. We were also told not to go past 100’ due to nitrogen narcosis although I’ve heard some classes say you can go a little deeper. If you go that deep, you’re really limiting your bottom time.
@foo2195 ай бұрын
I can't believe they were dive instructors. Isn't there some kind of certification for that? At least some kind of basic aptitude test?
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Young and dumb
@OptimalToast5 ай бұрын
@@foo219 Going by what's in the video, and given it was before I was alive, if there were certificates, there didn't seem to be a sanctioned national body to overlook it until later. It wouldn't even surprise me if there was no State body set up either, least not one with proper expertise and oversight.
@foo2195 ай бұрын
@@OptimalToast Yeah, I forgot this was quite some time ago.
@ericstephens43075 ай бұрын
My same thoughts on the stupidity here and I am only PADI rescue diver certified for 32 years. I'm at my halfway level on air but hey let's just keep going deeper and longer even tho we are all instructors.....(Other instructors on the dive) Yeah man that sounds like a great idea I'm having too much fun so let's go fuck our gauges/computers and air supply. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.🤷
@FrazerBoorman5 ай бұрын
The quality of these videos is fantastic Very matter of fact, clear, concise and well balanced audio Thank you for your work :)
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. That’s the aim👍🏻
@trainwreckinadumpsterfire5 ай бұрын
@waterlinestories Good presentation. Many divers did not respect cave systems, get a hold of Sheck Exleys "Cave Diving Basics - A Blue Print for Survival". I've dived The Shaft and many sites in Mt Gambier. Not sure of the water level in the shaft back then, but when I dived there, the distance from the opening to the water was considerable, and the only out was via a ladder. If someone were to pull the ladder out, there was no way you could exit the cave. This gives you deep respect for that cave system. As I've told non-diving friends, you don't know the dark until you're underwater at the back of an unlit cave.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@dava735 ай бұрын
Absolutely love this channel. Proper scary stories. Never catch me in there. Ever. 😮
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@gwhiddon15 ай бұрын
This was not an accident - they were incompetent.
@zz57825 ай бұрын
When you got to describing the shape of the cave I realized I'd seen this exact story done by a different youtube channel, but due to the amount of divers they simplified with "diver A, B, C" etc so as not to confuse folks. Hearing you cover the story, it's apparent that simplification is just unnecessary. I appreciate how you can paint a clear picture without losing track of things along the why like that other guy feared he would. There's no substitution for thorough research and respectful recounting.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes there’s quite a lot to keep track of. But the break down is step by step and you can see how it unfolds.
@JFirn86Q5 ай бұрын
So strange, they didn't even know they had insufficient air for diving that deep? Seems like a RANK 1 PRIORITY to consider in the plan for a dive.
@jake41015 ай бұрын
Just finished listening to Jill Heinerth's excellent book, Into the Earth. Can highly recommend it to anyone interested in the adventure, risk, and rigours of submerged cave exploration. The tragic consequences of poor preparation & planning, hubris and panic are also spelled out. Dive safe
@frannymcb_4 ай бұрын
"into the planet", I just ordered the audiobook
@jake41014 ай бұрын
@@frannymcb_ haha yes, thanks for the correction
@serfranklin60225 ай бұрын
I've heard about this story before a long time ago but you always have the most comprehensive, clear, cohesive and thorough explanation out there 👏🏽🤗
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. That’s the aim 👍🏻
@thomasbolton83733 ай бұрын
did a sink hole dive in darwin once, i was a semi experienced diver, training to be a divemaster. we planned to dive to 50 mtrs limit, ,we had a long line, it was just straight down , then up, dirty hot water first 10 mtr, crystal clear cold water down to 50. fun experience, didnt notice any ill effects, until,, 1st stage reg fail , it was an old unbalanced eg, couldnt handle 50 mtr presure, there were 6 in our group, i signalled to my buddy that i had no air, ,, we did buddy breathing as we headed up, eventually my reg started to work again at about 40 mtrs. arrived safely at the surface, a good experience in working as a team, and testing the equipment. rule 1 Do not Panic, its the panic that kills you, so train for any possible circumstance. i bought a new balanced 1st stage a week later. it works well at even deeper depths. thing is , stick with your buddy and have a plan, plan the dive,dive the plan,
@abesouth38055 ай бұрын
Thank-you for the effort in making this video. As always superbly told.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks for that 👍🏻
@hellohelloington94425 ай бұрын
wow i got here fast... anyways, i love your channel! keep doing what you're doing!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks will do
@divexplore215 ай бұрын
Plan your dive, dive your plan.
@davidturner69955 ай бұрын
Helps if you actually plan the dive
@liammhodonohue2 ай бұрын
My old deputy headmaster in the run up to exams - "If you fail to prepare, you are preparing to fail" Exam outcomes are not life-ending, unlike not enough air in your scuba tank!
@erintyres36095 ай бұрын
11:56 Divers today often carry a "scuba rattle". It gives you a way to get the other divers' attention.
@WineScroungerАй бұрын
Or a tank banger, a plastic bead on a bungee to fit to your tank. Pull and release for a good loud “bong”.
@DustyHoney2 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite caves as an equestrian. Since I started riding I’ve had it engrained in me to be careful for holes because a horse can easily trip and get very hurt if they step in a hole unexpectedly. I really resonate with the farmer and how he attempted to fill the hole with rocks.
@mattunderwood7865 ай бұрын
All of your reports are great, but I think your ones about dives are some of the best. Thank you.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks👌🏻
@tomsanborn41565 ай бұрын
Been diving since 2006. I average about a dozen dives a year. I’ve never grown tired or bored sticking to warm, clear water sites.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Touché
@bennyd3455 ай бұрын
I don't wanna go where no~one has gone before, I'll leave that business to star trek.
@Dharmarenee5 ай бұрын
The best swimmers are always at risk of drowning. When you think you possess all the knowledge that exists the universe steps forward to expose your folly.
@gordonpeden62345 ай бұрын
Collectively known as: An Arrogance of "experts"
@nodidog5 ай бұрын
Except that the story is about the failures of people who were very clearly not experts.
@gordonpeden62345 ай бұрын
@@nodidog They were all diving instructors, who broke every rule. You've gotta pay attention, and listen dawg.
@mathiasbartl9035 ай бұрын
Lot of people who died in caves were experienced open water diving instructors.
@shootingbricks8554Ай бұрын
@@gordonpeden6234caving diving is another animal. Open Water Scuba Instructors don't have any business in caves.
@pucioy2 ай бұрын
First time I see such a good video about dive accident. No crap, no horror stories - just info. Thank you for your work.
@rainerpitsch63475 ай бұрын
Great Report, I feel narcosis by tasting a metal taste from my air. This can happen much earlier then 50m, depending on your day condition.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Oooh interesting. I’ve never had that taste. Good you know that about yourself.
@Soprano913965 ай бұрын
I got my open-water certification in the mid-80s. I learned very quickly that I start feeling nitrogen narcosis at about 80 feet, and it can be insidious. My deepest dive was the Blue Hole in Belize; even knowing I was susceptible to narcosis, when we got to our max depth of 130 feet, I kept right on sinking without realizing it until my dive buddy hauled me back by my BC. The hubris displayed by these divers -- espcially the recreational-only ones -- is mind-blowing.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
@Soprano91396 you said it
@danielkarlsson93265 ай бұрын
So many alarms went of in my head that i cant even count them. I mean im not a diver and probably never will be more then snorkeling and i think the most ive done is about 5-7 meters at a maximum. Yet even i know to always leave spare airtubes when going down with a group. And for the love of Kraken when the landowner advices you and maybe even beg you to not do it , YOU DONT BLOODY DO IT!. It's like pissing on the sheep fence....you know it will hurt and you know it will end with you spraying yourself......yet you bloody did it...... And yes ive seen girls do it and yes it get even messier........Especially when they fall backwards from the jolt and electrocute their more tender regions. Best Regards.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Oh geez that went south really quick 🤣
@dabootvv5 ай бұрын
another new setup! I like it and as always great job on the video! sad to hear siblings were involved, imagine the survivor's guilt :((
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Yeah, imagine having to live with that. Hard
@Parapon3ra5 ай бұрын
"If you dive long enough into the shaft, you will get shafted." --Friedrich Nietzsche
@RobMancusoJr5 ай бұрын
Always good to see a Waterline upload! Thanks m8
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👍🏻😀
@Captyogi5 ай бұрын
Good video bro love the effort you put in keep it up with these cave diving vids
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks I appreciate that
@BobSpector-up7lw3 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@dhmacher5 ай бұрын
As a recreational diver myself, I'm flabbergasted by the gung-ho attitude and lack of planning. How on earth would you just go and descend to 60 or 70 meters without nitrox, reserve tanks, briefings, buddy pairs, lines, etc? It must truly have been a different time, I suppose.
@majorbruster59165 ай бұрын
Yeah. Not to mention a nominated dive leader, an abort criterion (such as one diver with DCS, or low on air) or a buddy pair system. An emergency set on the rock pile would have been a life saver. There's so much more they could have done, had they thought about it. I'm afraid this was a tragedy in the making from the start. Very sad.
@Real_Steve_Sharpe5 ай бұрын
@dhmacher @majorbruster5916 Couldn't agree more. I bet these imbeciles also drove around in cars with no head restraints, rear seat belts, anti-lock brakes or even yaw control! And don't even get me started on tetraethyl lead, deep fried everything, government sponsored cigarette smoking, or this so called "health and safety at work" shit... How stupid have you got to be for getting born without 20/20 hindsight??!?
@voomastelka43463 ай бұрын
Recreational diving limits are very conservative (for a good reason). You can go much further and apparently that's what people did back then.
@valerieabney79664 ай бұрын
I love to listen to you telling these stories. How did I miss these? Thank you.
@waterlinestories4 ай бұрын
Found em now 🤣
@villadesmetcontractorsllc86144 ай бұрын
You're attention to detail is appreciated.
@waterlinestories4 ай бұрын
Thanks 👌🏻
@ShauniePeezy5 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video and the metric conversions💪🏾
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣👍🏻
@gastonlavigne78245 ай бұрын
That was the best job of Narating a story I've yet hear! Very well done. Kudos 👍
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks. I really appreciate that
@ats-36935 ай бұрын
I can only imagine the horror level panic you must feel as you run out of air while diving, with no choice and forced to breath in water, choking on the water as you feel yourself drowning and dying 😱
@roselightinstorms7272 күн бұрын
Stay swimming safely. You live❤
@rachelmoore34185 ай бұрын
Love all your videos! Well researched, engaging, great sound design, and a real human narrator; what's not to love? Keep it up, dude! ❤❤❤
@evanofelipe4 ай бұрын
The real hero’s here were the Rescue teams and particularly the Pathology staff who although unnamed had the grimmest duty of recovering the bodies and extricating the decayed human remains from wet suits in which the bodies were encased to determine the cause of death. A job that that is unimaginable. As one who has witnessed several autopsies following normal and traumatic deaths, I cannot guess how awful that task must have been for those professionals involved.
@BackseatGamingJesus4 ай бұрын
Small correction mate, 1 ton of rocks isn't 46x36m - the majority of the rocks at the bottom are going to be from the cave collapsing, not the farmer.
@jimreilly97495 ай бұрын
Your videos are so very very good. Brilliant research and calm presentation. I look for them. (Jim Tasmania Australia)
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks Jim. I really appreciate that. That’s what I aim for
@samiraperi4675 ай бұрын
Shafted, so to say.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣
@luisromero34435 ай бұрын
Really appreciate the videos!
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👍🏻 thanks
@WisKy64VT5 ай бұрын
0:04 he looks at his what now?
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
🤣 get your mind out the gutter
@jarefawver36015 ай бұрын
@@waterlinestoriesi guess we’re all doomed 😂
@Kroggnagch5 ай бұрын
His weemar
@MrEast-jg2us5 ай бұрын
The episode is called "the shaft" lol
@Jolis_Parsec5 ай бұрын
@@waterlinestoriesYou knew what you were doing with that intro, and I applaud you for it. 😂
@Mfiltre5 ай бұрын
A classic case of the Dunning-Kruger effect 😢…..and they all left out the all important “Cave “ part of the diving instructor
@Nx2.15 ай бұрын
Deep respect from the other hemisphere of the planet.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@freezepeach94545 ай бұрын
Thank you for great videos.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍🏻
@HULLGRAFFITI5 ай бұрын
I'd be really curious to know how it goes from a farmer finding a smallish hole on the absolutely colossal landmass of Australia where farming neighbours can be hours away to it been known about by what must be a very small niche group of ppl in the 70's ? Wonder if cave discoveries go on some type of ordinance survey database that cavers loo out for
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Those cave divers. They’re a nosy bunch. So have you got any sinkholes in your back yard?
@miapdx5032 ай бұрын
Taking public transportation is about as adventurous as I get. Whatever is underground can stay there. I don't need to see it. It's there...😒
@margarita84425 ай бұрын
that girl was cute
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
That’s why they put her on the cover 😂
@-MattMcCauley-5 ай бұрын
Yeah, such a waste, smh.
@anthonyellsmore453223 күн бұрын
As usual a great program...i learn a lot ...thanks again
@nomagic-t1l5 ай бұрын
Mr. Darwin claims another prize. Regarding regulation this is a great quote: 'If you protect a man from folly, you will soon have a nation of fools.' FAFO should be the rule eh?
@Kroggnagch5 ай бұрын
Rule of thirds: use a third of your air for the way down, after that first third is gone, time to go back, so you have a third for the way back, another third of your air for unforseen problems, reserve basically. A third for the way down, a third for the way back up, a third for reserve. If you dont have line or a lin isnt established, DO NOT GO. Always have line. Bring AT LEAST 3 light sources, every person, 3 sources. Don't go anywhere above your skill level, and be cave certified. If you're not cave certified, stay your butt outta underwater caves. Also, if you arent diving anywhere near Edd Sorenson, better not go lol.. Edd Sorenson is a rescue/recovery diver, if you've never heard of him, go check him out. He's one hell of a guy with some incredible rescues and recoveries. Edit: oh, and dont kick up and down to paddle forward when in caves, it kicks up sediment then youre in zero vis, then youre screwed, especially without a guide line. You kick your feet towards one another when you go in caves, and try to disturb as little of the sediment as you possibly can.
@bluedistortions4 ай бұрын
Yeah I don't think these guys had any cave diving experience. And they decided that on their first cave dive, they were going to set a new depth record. The magazine articles were already dancing in their heads, and the boon it would be to the family diving business. Hubris leads to tragedy. It's a shame there was no strong leader to talk some sense into the young numbskulls.
@michaelmichaels1385 ай бұрын
One time I was gonna go cave diving but at the last minute I decided to stay home, rip some bong hits and watch Waterworld again before it leaves Tubi.
@BrunoDoghor5 ай бұрын
Your videos scare me more than horror movies 😢😢
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
There’s no emoji for ‘Mwahahahaha’ 🤣
@mac52375 ай бұрын
Your videos are soooo… what am I trying to say here… entertaining for one thing lol but also, they agitate this primal fear I have of the unknown. Except it isn’t like a deterrent fear, it’s more of a fascination that is enhanced by fear. And it’s so fun to be mentally put into that eerie/stressful atmosphere that’s conveyed through your content. I think it’s entertaining for my subconscious as much as it is for my conscious self, if that makes sense lol
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
I think that makes sense. Thanks for saying so.
@jessdigs5 ай бұрын
This channel has some fantastic content.
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍🏻
@romanempire81392 ай бұрын
I have seen enough diving & cave videos to fully understand that if the place has the name of a body part. Stay away from there. The intestines. The birth canal. "The shaft". " yeah let me go down the 'shaft' " doesnt sound right to me
@deejaemma90215 ай бұрын
I just passed my PADI open water, telling myself to never do cave diving.
@fabbrorandomlife5 ай бұрын
It's been awhile since last video about scuba diving accident. ❤ thanks
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👍🏻
@moman875 ай бұрын
Some people think the earth is flat Some people go cave diving
@TrevorJohnson-hp1ph5 ай бұрын
Thank you my friend 🇯🇲👍
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Thank you too 🇿🇦
@tanyabrown983924 күн бұрын
So many crazy things went on during this dive that even someone with any common sense would know not to do eg I can't believe that someone who was feeling dizzy was left to go back ALONE,. It also defies comprehension that someone who is being affected by the depth and knew it would choose to keep swimming on deeper.
@delilahboa4 ай бұрын
Brilliant video, tragic story…… no amount of money would entice me to dive to ANY depth never mind these depths, the thought of not being able to breathe and being lost in dark water terrifies me x
@waterlinestories4 ай бұрын
👍🏻
@study_legal_history2 ай бұрын
Accidents don't happen by accident, they are carefully planned.
@meredithcarter31754 ай бұрын
The safest way to cave dive? Don’t. Just … don’t.
@Ob1sdarkside5 ай бұрын
Things that aren't for me, cave diving, cave diving, and cave diving
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
👌🏻 so true
@DrDeuteron5 ай бұрын
For me its: Caves Diving You can get the 3rd.
@SuperMegaWoofer30005 ай бұрын
@@DrDeuteron diving is great as long as you don't do it in a cave!
@ToskaForsite5 ай бұрын
До чего же стрёмная ситуация. Жуть.
@gfexc4 ай бұрын
Instructors that run out of air. Like flight instructors who run out of gas
@GolfKata5 ай бұрын
Hey guys lets go to the bottom of this cave, if we only touch the bottom for a second we might survive, but if we're down there for 2 minutes we all die. Sounds fun!
@JorgeSuarez-f4o5 ай бұрын
Cape diving is the most dangerous type of diving when I took my advanced classes. They taught us the proper way to die first you take your knife scratch your message on your tank then start swallowing water.
@chrisure43275 ай бұрын
I was diving in Piccininni Ponds and Ewens Ponds in 1970-1971, perfectly safe. Then heard about the Shaft accident. So awful and so sad but shows the need for safety measures at the highest level.
@OffendingTheOffendable5 ай бұрын
"the shaft" long and hard
@waterlinestories5 ай бұрын
Oh my 🤭
@MarieJesne5 ай бұрын
Even in dry caves walking around I get an eerie feeling. You can go places no other humans have been before. But you may not come back...