Follow us on Twitter
Join our 6,688 friends!
Like us on Facebook

PADI Cavern Diver Specialty course



by Nevin on July 22, 2010

What is Cavern Diving?

Cavern diving is the exploration of an overhead environment while remaining within the portion of the ‘light zone’, which is the section of the overhead environment illuminated by sunlight. The light zone of a cave is defined as that part of the cave from which natural light illuminating the entrance is visible at all times.

Cavern diving differs from cave diving in that cave diving allows a diver to penetrate deep within a cave or enclosed environment well beyond the visible entrance, whereas in cavern diving the diver is restricted to within 40m or 130 feet from the surface including vertical and horizontal distance and must remain within sight of the entrance at all times. Cave diving is considered a part of technical diving, and requires a lot of training and specialized scuba diving equipment whereas cavern diving comes under the sphere of recreational diving.

cavern PADI Cavern Diver Specialty course

Why do a specialty course in Cavern Diving?

One of the most beautiful and exciting places to dive underwater is in a cavern. Caverns, or overhead environments such as an overhang jutting out of a sea wall, a volcanic lava tunnel in the ocean or a limestone cavern or sinkhole in a spring fed lake often house interesting marine-life or rock formations showing-off natures beauty. The famous Cenotes or cavern diving of the Riviera Maya , Mexico are perhaps one of the most beautiful dive sites in the world. Florida is famous for its scuba diving limestone sinkholes and caverns which only experienced cavern divers can witness.  A Cavern diving specialty course acts as a stepping stone introducing the diver to full cave diving by building up the confidence and skills of the diver and increasing his/her awareness and proficiency. The course in no way allows you to perform closed environment cave diving.

cenote PADI Cavern Diver Specialty course

What does the Course cover?

The Cavern Diver course includes four training dives, which are conducted over at least two days. The first dive is conducted in open water, practicing the use of special scuba diving equipment such as lines and reels as well as emergency procedures are practiced. The final three dives are conducted in the cavern environment where the skills learnt on the first dive are put into practice. This course covers the knowledge and techniques of cavern diving and describes the dangers involved with cave diving which prepares and trains the diver for the new environment.

The course covers the following:

  • Planning, organization procedures, techniques, problems, and hazards of cavern diving
  • special equipment considerations including use of lighting, guidelines, reel handling and redundant breathing systems
  • Buoyancy Control
  • Air-consumption management and body positioning
  • Emergency Procedures
  • Specific hazards of cavern diving such as silting, line entanglement and breakage, disorientation and emergency

There is no written exam to successfully complete the PADI cavern specialty course however the diver must successfully complete the knowledge sessions on all the key information areas and perform the four training dives to the satisfaction of the instructor.

mntrj 300x300 PADI Cavern Diver Specialty coursefeatured above is the Manta Junior (Jr) Reel available at Leisurepro.com

Prerequisites to do the Course

To qualify for the Altitude Diver course, an individual must:

  • Be certified as a PADI Open Water Diver, PADI Junior Open Water Diver or have a qualifying certification from another training organization.
  • Be 18 years of age or older.

cut PADI Cavern Diver Specialty course

photos from flickr by: Lance.Gardner, mjwinoz and Nemo’s great uncle

Want to get these articles sent automatically to your email every week? Sign up below!
  • Would you like to also receive the LeisurePro.com newsletter for the latest deals on SCUBA equipment and travel?

Buy SCUBA Gear

Scuba Diving Insurance

If you enjoyed this article, please consider sharing it on your favorite social network, subscribing via RSS or email.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

angela September 7, 2010 at 11:45 am

how many day?

Reply

Leave a Comment

Click on a tab to select how you'd like to leave your comment

Previous post:

Next post: