I’ve not watched a video of people spelunking/potholing before. And now, having watched part of this, am unlikely to do so again.
I’ve experienced mild vertigo watching videos of, for example, cliff jumping, but I’ve never experienced such a visceral reaction to a video before.
Two minutes in where one of them has to take his helmet off because it is so tight, I felt such an overwhelming claustrophobia that I felt quite nauseous and had to stop watching. I’ve never felt anything like it watching a piece of video. Very bizarre.
It's certainly up there. Not just what you mentioned but also the fact the earth moves. One decent earthquake and what was 14 inches of clearance can go to 7 inches or less. Water tables shrink which removes pressure and that can also cause ground movement. This is happening in Arizona and New Mexico right now from soft drink companies draining aquifers and then trying to shift blame to datacenters and farmers. Very much a roll of the dice. I still find it fascinating to watch. Emphasis on watch. I'm not going in that cave either.
I cannot imagine anything worse than doing this!
I’ve not watched a video of people spelunking/potholing before. And now, having watched part of this, am unlikely to do so again.
I’ve experienced mild vertigo watching videos of, for example, cliff jumping, but I’ve never experienced such a visceral reaction to a video before.
Two minutes in where one of them has to take his helmet off because it is so tight, I felt such an overwhelming claustrophobia that I felt quite nauseous and had to stop watching. I’ve never felt anything like it watching a piece of video. Very bizarre.
I cannot imagine anything worse than doing this!
It's certainly up there. Not just what you mentioned but also the fact the earth moves. One decent earthquake and what was 14 inches of clearance can go to 7 inches or less. Water tables shrink which removes pressure and that can also cause ground movement. This is happening in Arizona and New Mexico right now from soft drink companies draining aquifers and then trying to shift blame to datacenters and farmers. Very much a roll of the dice. I still find it fascinating to watch. Emphasis on watch. I'm not going in that cave either.