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A friend was an avid caver. He discovered news sections of Mammoth, as I recall.
e was skinny, smart & obsessive. He never mentioned his having been into caving.
I only found out by seeing a book about him (& others).
As Nicholai Hel said (in the novel, Shibumi), spelunking is not about being showy.
Sounds like you're in the 1% of the 1%.Some of my best friends, and most sensible, were cavers, although a few were a bit nutty. It would be difficult to pick between caving, mountaineering, and yachting as to which one provided the best experiences in my life.
Sounds like you're in the 1% of the 1%.
Way to go!
I'll bet they particularly enjoy food now.Missed out in other areas though.
A bit more about the order of rescue for the boys:
http://uk.businessinsider.com/thai-cave-rescue-boys-that-lived-furthest-away-left-caves-first-2018-7
Some of my best friends, and most sensible, were cavers, although a few were a bit nutty. It would be difficult to pick between caving, mountaineering, and yachting as to which one provided the best experiences in my life.
I love crawling on my hands and knees in caves. Not caving but archaeological digs looking for and investigating the cro magnon era.
Im guessing (not tried) that im too timid for real caving.
I had my first taste with the scouts, on two occasions, where we went down several caves each weekend. It sure is a love/hate decider though. I loved the sheer variety one can get, from lots of crawling, vast chambers, or endless pitches involving climbing ladders (now just ropes), and all the things I mentioned previously. Few people can definitely say they have stood where no one else has stood before, but I have done so, and the pristine nature tells one this. But it took some work - like bailing out a sump to squeeze through.
The places ive been are all 'quite easily' accessible, no main thoroughfares by any means, some unvisited for 30,000 years, but nothing that needs more than basic training.
Takes guts to go where no man has been before.
Whether it is cave art from our ancestors or natural cave art from the formations often seen in many caves (easily found on Google images no doubt), caves are well worth a visit. Many in the UK have some unique features but no doubt can't rival the bigger, longer, or deeper caves found all around the world. I've never visited any of them - like the Mammoth cave system mentioned by Revoltingest. Finding a new cave system must be hugely enjoyable, especially one unlikely to have ever been visited before.
That's because most people are very flawed people.Most visionaries are very flawed people.