LoL. I do have a lot of respect for those SCUBA cavers. I had a friend in school who was so disappointed when I didn’t say sphygmomanometer, and I love words so much that I try to use the longer/ less used ones when I can get away with it. :-D
You can use the words you want, although in most situations people will understand you better if you say “blood pressure monitor” – unless you’re in the medical field and need to be more specific.
The caving one bothers me because people talk about a sport they don’t do or their friends don’t do with a word only outsiders use. It shows you don’t want any connection to the actual people who do it and who sometimes die in accidents.
I’ve spoken with the cave divers at Wakulla Springs, in Florida. They’ve done a bit of serious research there, mapping it back several miles. The opening of the cave is 120 feet below the surface, and goes deeper still (I’m remembering 300 feet) once one gets inside, with the pressure of the water pushing outward. They compress for 6 hours, can be down there for 6 hours, and then decompress for 6 hours on the longer expeditions. AFAIK no one has died in that one, at least not for a very long time. There are mastodon bones at 90-120 feet, that one used to be able to see from the surface.
No one calls it spelunking who actually does it, at least in USA
I won’t cave to peer pressure, and will always call it spelunking.
Best way to show you don’t care about the actual sport imo
LoL. I do have a lot of respect for those SCUBA cavers. I had a friend in school who was so disappointed when I didn’t say sphygmomanometer, and I love words so much that I try to use the longer/ less used ones when I can get away with it. :-D
You can use the words you want, although in most situations people will understand you better if you say “blood pressure monitor” – unless you’re in the medical field and need to be more specific.
The caving one bothers me because people talk about a sport they don’t do or their friends don’t do with a word only outsiders use. It shows you don’t want any connection to the actual people who do it and who sometimes die in accidents.
I’ve spoken with the cave divers at Wakulla Springs, in Florida. They’ve done a bit of serious research there, mapping it back several miles. The opening of the cave is 120 feet below the surface, and goes deeper still (I’m remembering 300 feet) once one gets inside, with the pressure of the water pushing outward. They compress for 6 hours, can be down there for 6 hours, and then decompress for 6 hours on the longer expeditions. AFAIK no one has died in that one, at least not for a very long time. There are mastodon bones at 90-120 feet, that one used to be able to see from the surface.
http://floridacaves.com/wakullaprofile.JPG
Dude that’s awesome!! Cave diving sounds like it’s come a long way.
You ruined racing and rugby already. Not letting you americans ruin spelunking. Youre propably gonna turn it into a gender reveal thing somehow.
I don’t know what any of this means. Is spelunking what the English call it?
Not sure how Americans ruined racing or rugby. Some of my friends play rugby but I never really liked it.
what do they call it, “Get stuck in impossibly tiny hole upside down and die”?
No they call it caving.
Good thing we aren’t in the USA then.
Do they call it spelunking where you are? I’m curious if any caving communities actually call it that
I thought the USA was where it was called Spelunking. In the UK it’s called Potholing because of the small entrances to vertical caves, or caving.
I don’t know anywhere it’s called by spelunking by the people who actually do it.
The bougie name