A Day In the Cavern
After a lovely two week excursion to Cozumel to celebrate my dad's 75th birthday (Happy Birthday, Pop!) with the rest of the family, January and I came back to the mainland and jumped straight into the second half of our Cavern course. It was four long days of running guidelines and practicing skills in zero visibility.
One of the sites we used for training is a cenote called Orquidea. It's set way back off a jungle road behind an unmarked gate that you can't enter without the key to the padlock. Many of the cenotes that we use for training are close to the highway, have gift shops and snack stands, and just feel pretty touristy. The glory days of trekking through the jungle with your gear to reach the cenote entrance are mostly gone now. Orquidea, however, has a bit more of that old school feel to it. As we bounced our way along what could only be considered a road in the very loosest sense, I imagined what it must have been like here in the early 1990s when the majority of the systems were not yet fully explored.
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| The open water area in cenote Orquidea. |
We were the only ones at the cenote, apart from the owner of the property and a few members his family who were there clearing brush. Orquidea sits more or less in the middle of his farm and while we were diving he kindly left left us a huge papaya on the back of our truck.
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| To papaya or not to papaya? Definitely papaya. |
Unlike most of the cenotes in the Rivera Maya, Orquidea doesn't have a divable connection to any of the other cave systems in the area. It is, essentially, a big sinkhole. What it does have is a very thick hydrogen sulfide layer at about 65ft. It also has a large open water area and is also significantly deeper than most other cenotes, with a max depth of around 120ft. This made it perfect for the particular drills that we would be working on.
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| Most cenotes have a map of some kind showing the basic information and routes, through the level of detail varies greatly depending on the site. |
After practicing mask failures and swapping to our backup masks in the open water, we switched our lights to high and headed down the guideline into the darkness. Passing through the hydrogen sulfide layer is both eerie and fascinating. It hangs evenly in the water column and is so dense that I half expected to land on it and just stop, as if it were a giant, fluffy pillow. As we passed through the layer the visibility dropped to nearly zero. I immediately reached out with my left hand to secure myself to the guideline and I caught a brief glimpse of January doing the same further below before my vision was fully obscured by hazy white. I could taste the sulfur through my regulator and feel the tingle on my exposed hands and face. Fortunately, the layer is only a few feet thick and we emerged on the other side as if passing through into another dimension. Whereas before there has been plant matter and tree roots all around us, we were now under a large rock overhang that extended along the west wall of the sinkhole.
| January and I about to practice a gas share in the open water at Orquidea. |



Sounds like you are both having a great time and learning a lot. Thanks for the journey
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