gerardnealon
Contributor
I was just curious, is the temperature of the water inside a cave different from outside. I wasnt sure since there isnt any light inside if it would be a lot colder.
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gerardnealon:I was just curious, is the temperature of the water inside a cave different from outside. I wasnt sure since there isnt any light inside if it would be a lot colder.
mavjax:They all run between 69 and 72 all the time, regardless of the temp outside. The only variance may by if the system is flooding.
mavjax:They all run between 69 and 72 all the time, regardless of the temp outside. The only variance may by if the system is flooding.
gerardnealon:You mean every cave in the world? So it is safe to assume most caves are warmer inside than out?
mavjax:Sorry, Florida springs and caves run 69 to 72 all year. Can't speak for anywhere else. Yes, at this time of year in North Florida, particularly for the morning dive, the water is much warmer than the air. Now, in a couple of months, the water is a nice cool off (at least initially) from the blistering heat.
roakey:In general, temperature inside a cave (wet or dry) is the average temperature of the region where the cave is located, averaged over thousands and thousands of years.
Not always true, nor exact, but in general.
Roak
gerardnealon:That's interesting. btw how is TDI's cavern class? I have been looking into it and it sounds pretty cool.
mavjax:As has been said in many other threads it's more the instructor than the agency. There are a number of good instructors on the board. I personally use Rick Murcar and so far have moved through Cavern and Intro Cave. You can find him here as GDI.