I have been very busy this year, and I will try to have a number of updates in the next few days.
So lets start with Febuary 2012....
Every year since I was thirteen we have made an annual trip
to Jug Hole. Jug Hole is just one of the
springs that feeds the Ichetucknee river. This blue ribbon transects harwood
hammock and eventually intersects with the Santa Fe River. This is a Mecca for photographers,
kayakers and tubers. In the wintertime the park closes to tubers and opens to
cave divers.
Here is the Website for the park: State Park
The cave is relatively short, but it is full of challenge
and beauty. The dive begins a half mile away at the parking lot. Several
hundred pounds of scuba equipment must be portaged 2500’ down a trail to the
springhead.
This year Andy was not able to make it so we brought our
good friend Sean. This was his first trip to the cave. Sean is a CCR diver and
has been carrying his bailout in a sidemount configuration for years. I believe
this was his first true sidemount dive.
The cavern is picturesque, in the early afternoon the sun
pours through the round entrance and a beautiful column of blue light paints
the white sand floor.
Just a hundred feet in we reach the first restriction, the
bedding plane. This is a low wide section of cave is formed when a softer layer
of a sedimentary rock dissolves leaving behind the harder floor and ceiling.
This bedding plane averages 16” high and acts a “nerd gate” for the now rare
back mount diver.
The cave continues through two tall dome rooms and then
pinches down at the Diamond Sands Restriction. Here the course orange sand
shifts in the current and glistens in our lights. It really is a beautiful
sight. The restriction is not that tight, but it is an odd shape. It is
somewhat of a puzzle to get through here if one has not done it before.
From here the cave changes there is a jump to the right
where most of the flow originates. It is a very tight bedding plane restriction
9-10” high. But the cave continues straight to the loft some 50’ shallower. The
cave abruptly ends and a thin layer of grey silt covers everything. There is
typically a collection of “glory markers” here where people like to brag about
their incredible feat of cave diving… Do not leave line markers unless they are
needed.
The dive was load of
fun we got some awesome cave footage and great pictures.
To see the video of this dive, follow this link: Jug Hole Video
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