Moorebooks
8 years ago
Martyn Farr, Sb. 416pp, 189 x 246, colour photographs £25.00

Publishers summary; Martyn Farr's The Darkness Beckons charts the history and development of cave diving, from early underwater expeditions in France in the late nineteenth century, through to cutting-edge dives across the globe, where iron-willed individuals are pushing the limits of equipment and techniques in the pursuit of exploration.

Cave diving is the natural evolution of caving, where cavers and open-water divers overcome the challenges of water-filled passages by using specialist breathing apparatus to explore further and deeper than ever before. The challenges are many - distance, depth, temperature, visibility, rockfall and simple restriction in passage size - together with the physical and mental demands placed on an individual in an environment where, despite meticulous preparation, equipment can malfunction and one cannot expect to be rescued if something goes wrong.

Early cave dives were made using Standard Equipment diving suits, before 'frogman' equipment was adopted by British and Italian divers in the 1940s. Around the same time, Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Emile Gagnan designed the compressed-air aqualung, the first scuba equipment. The development of breathing apparatus has continued, alongside solutions to evermore challenging projects, especially those at extreme depth.

British cave divers, including the author, have been at the forefront of many developments, such as the explorations at Wookey Hole in the Mendips, Keld Head in the Yorkshire Dales and Pozo Azul in Spain. Cave diving today is a truly international endeavour, and Farr gives detailed and engaging accounts of developments in Europe, the Americas, Australia and New Zealand, Southern Africa and more. Farr introduces cave diving's pioneers and chronicles their achievements. Among a cast of many are the Britons Graham Balcombe and Mike Boon; the American Sheck Exley, who died while attempting to establish a new depth record in the Zacaton sinkhole in Mexico; and the outstanding German cave diver and equipment innovator Jochen Hasenmayer. The stories of their adventures are charged with courage, danger and excitement, and some have led to tragedy.

First published in 1980, this 2017 edition of The Darkness Beckons has been fully revised and updated to reflect the latest developments. Featuring over 400 breathtaking photographs and illustrations, and with a foreword by renowned American cave diver and explorer Bill Stone, it is an inspirational read for anyone with an interest in exploration and adventure.

Mike

WWW.moorebooks.co.uk
Grumpytramp
8 years ago
I have a copy of the original issue of Darkness Beckons. I was going to describe it as an inspirational read, but in that respect it was a failure, on reading I was even less likely to take up cave diving than before!

I first read a library copy some 35 years ago and was lucky enough to find a cheap pristine secondhand copy which I have browsed frequently for the last 30 odd years. I can only imagine it looks even better than the original (one for Santa to deliver me thinks)

Moorebooks
8 years ago
"Grumpytramp" wrote:

I have a copy of the original issue of Darkness Beckons. I was going to describe it as an inspirational read, but in that respect it was a failure, on reading I was even less likely to take up cave diving than before!

I first read a library copy some 35 years ago and was lucky enough to find a cheap pristine secondhand copy which I have browsed frequently for the last 30 odd years. I can only imagine it looks even better than the original (one for Santa to deliver me thinks)



It certainly is a lot better than the original as most photos are in colour , that of course was hardback -

Im offering this post free, I forgot to say on the original message till the end of July

Mike

Disclaimer: Mine exploring can be quite dangerous, but then again it can be alright, it all depends on the weather. Please read the proper disclaimer.
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