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Date: Thu, 09 Jan 1997 20:17:41 -0500
From: Mark Welzel <mark@mr*.co*>
Organization: MRW Consulting
To: techdiver@terra.net
Subject: Re: My Goodness
You would think that certain Neanderthal characters on this
list would sooner or later give way to thoughtful, intelligent
discussion - but it is obviously not to be. The name calling,
the flaming, the content of messages devoid of technical
anything are making a name for the techdiver list, alright.

There is so much more to diving than Florida caves and hogarthian
configurations. The egotistical, machismo, pontifications by the
WKRP is quite ridiculous.

That the tens of thousands of wreck dives conducted safely in
the North East amount to nothing, and yet WKRP's safety record
is tell all is the kind of double standard people are exposed
to here. That there is a "cult" of cave divers is obvious. That
they might stay on the cavers list is too much to hope for.

The day George realizes that there is an awful lot more to this
planet than his little caves and the pieces of string that mark
his manhood, techdiver will be a better place. Yes, the cave
diving community has a lot to offer in way of technique and
experience. They do not have THE ONLY WAY. They have one way,
wreck divers in the North East have another, Richard Pyle has
his and you can be sure that there are hundreds of differing
ways to dive in thousands of different environments. That one
way is best for all? I would discuss that point with anyone.

Mark Welzel
come on George, maybe you can call me a NEW name this time, bully!

----------------------------
Richard Pyle wrote:
> 
> >  Richie, you really need to quit recommending stupid shit to people -
because
> > you are such a nice guy, they think you know what you are talking about -
you do
> > not - not even close.
> 
> Once again, I find myself marveling at the irony of how your statements
> about me EXACTLY match my inclinations about you.
> 
> >  There are far greater condsiderations in diving that Mr Wizzrdry, and I
just
> > proved it by beating your mentor senseless in cave diving rebreathers - this
> 
> Who is my mentor? More importantly, who is Mr. Wizzrdry? (Wizardry?) Does
> this have something to do with hanging stage bottles on a line, or have I
> missed something?
> 
> >   Convoluted "wouldn't it be nices" are crap, and the real test is getting
it
> > done and getting it done with the least risk and greatest flexibility to
deal
> > with situations .
> 
> I've been "getting it done" (finding new species, etc.) at depths in
> excess of 200 feet since the early 1980's.  That works out to be almost
> half my entire life.  How long have you been "getting it done"?  Granted,
> most of this was "naked with the magic stone", and it earned me a year of
> paralysis early on, but these are the ways I have learned how to do this
> stuff "right" (by finding out how to do it "wrong" the hard way).  You
> see, you had real mentors - people like Parker and Gavin.  Florida cave
> diving has a long history of other cave divers (Sheck, Martz, etc.) with
> good examples to follow. My only instructor was the guy who gave me my
> Basic (not open-water) PADI certification.  I picked up a few more cards
> after that one, but never learned anything from the instructors. Back when
> I was figuring this stuff out on my own - in my teens - I didn't even know
> there WERE caves in Florida, let alone people who dived in them. I didn't
> know about the Andrea Doria, or that people dived on it, or that anyone
> dived in that area at all, either. Until AquaCorps came along, I thought
> I was the only guy in the world doing this stuff. I was incredibly
> relieved to find out that I was not.
> 
> If you understood evolution (the bioilogical kind), you'd understand the
> significance of concepts such as convergence, and different adaptive
> peaks.  Remember when I gave you the lecture about adaptive peaks?  Please
> don't tell me the cotton was in your ears. The Florida cavers, and the New
> York wreckers, and the Hawaii fish nerd all arrived at different adaptive
> peaks through learning from their own mistakes and (in the case of the
> cavers and wreckers but not the Hawaii fish nerd) the mistakes of others.
> Many of the early cavers and wreckers died.  The Hawaii fish nerd almost
> died.  The smart the ones with the right combination of intelligence,
> talent, and luck are still alive today.  They've all arrived at different
> adaptive peaks partly because they dive in different environemnts, partly
> because they are conducting different tasks, and partly because they
> devised different solutions to similar problems.  In a surprisingly large
> number of cases, they've independently arrived at identical solutions to
> similar problems - this is what we evolutionary types would call
> "convergence".
> 
> Now, the only measure I can think of to even roughly approximate a
> comparison between the "rightness" of the different adaptive peaks is
> accident rates (RATES mind you, not shear numbers - that is, the ratio of
> accidents to number of dives done).  The Hogarthian system has a large
> number of dives, and a superb (low) accident rate.  I don't know what the
> numbers are for the wreckers, but I have a hunch they have both larger
> numbers of accidents, AND larger numbers of dives.  What I don't know (and
> I don't think you, or anyone else knows), is what the accident RATE is.
> Personally, I don't care one wit, because the Hawaii fish nerd has the
> best accident rate of all - he's still alive and well.  While he doesn't
> have as many total dives as all the cavers combined, or all the wreckers
> combined, his ratio of number of dives to number of divers is probably
> right up there near the top.
> 
> >    Your one-dimensional solutions which are based on ignorance of
> > available gear
> > and techniques are not the answer, and give away the fact that you have not
> > really put this into play
> 
> Dude, get your math right.  A cave is linear - it has one dimention.  The
> ocean is much more volumetric - it has three dimentions.  What does this
> mean?  It means stage bottles are one HELL of a lot harder to find in the
> ocean than they are in a cave.  That's why we clip them off on lines.
> Come to think of it, don't you guys clip your stages on lines also?  It
> seems to me that the only difference is that your lines are horizontal
> and always within your reach, while our lines are vertical and must be
> found with other forms of navigational skill.
> 
> >     Bullshit does not work underwater
> 
> I couldn't agree more.  As you say, the proof is in the pudding, and the
> eating thereof.  I'm starting to get a little sick of eating so much
> pudding, and I suspect you are as well.
> 
> Whew!  That was very....theraputic.
> 
> Aloha,
> Rich
> --
> Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'.
> Send subscription/archive requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.

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