MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Final Descent Vol. II
Episode Date: May 18, 2023Today's podcast features 3 "underwater diving" horror stories. The audio from all three stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel, which is just called "MrBallen," and has be...en remastered for today's podcast.Story names, previews & links to original YouTube videos:#3 -- "Devil's Hole" -- 2 divers disappear inside an underwater cave (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8swB7qMU7gk)#2 -- "No Limits" -- An extreme version of an already extreme sport (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVMTWygVl5c)#1 -- "Into the Heart" -- Cave diver makes a critical mistake (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtDAo7jS8Z4)For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Today's podcast will feature three underwater diving horror stories.
The audio from all three of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has been remastered for today's episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
episode. The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description. The first story you'll hear is called Devil's Hole, and it's about two divers who disappeared inside of an underwater
cave. The second story you'll hear is called No Limits, and it's about an extreme version of an
already extreme sport. And the third and final story you'll hear is called Into the Heart,
and it's about a cave diver who made a critical mistake.
But before we get into today's stories, if you're a fan of the strange, dark, and mysterious
Delivered in Story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we do,
and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday. So if that's of interest to you,
please ask the Amazon Music Follow button to take a bike ride with you, and while they're moving,
jab a stick in their front wheel. Okay, let's get into our first story called Devil's Hole.
The End world sailing race. Good on him, I hear you say. But there is a problem, as there always is in this show. The man in question hadn't actually sailed before. Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy. Oh,
and also tiny little detail, almost didn't mention it. He bet his family home on making it to the
finish line. What ensued was one of the most complex cheating plots in British sporting history.
To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus
on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
I'm Peter Frank-O'Pern.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius
that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me. Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time,
somebody who's had a huge impact on me, who I think objectively stands apart for
the level of her talent, the audacity of her message.
If I was a first year at university,
the first time I sat down and really listened to her
and engaged with her message, it totally floored me.
And the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle,
that's all captured in unforgettable music
that has stood the test of time.
Think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
On the evening of June 20th, 1965, four high school friends set off for a remote desert location
about 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada, that was within the very famous Death Valley.
They arrived at their destination, which if you didn't know any better, would just look like the
middle of nowhere in the desert. But to them, they knew exactly where they were. And so they parked
their car, they got out, and they began unloading very heavy underwater diving equipment and began walking it up a nearby hill.
The group was made up of 19-year-old Paul Giancontieri, his brother-in-law, 20-year-old David Rose, 19-year-old Bill Alter, and his younger brother, Jack, who was 16 years old.
As these four boys walked their diving equipment up this hill, they were hit with sign after sign after sign that was telling them, do not go any
farther, turn around. They made it to the top of the hill and they were met with a huge fence,
which once again said, do not go any farther. Without any hesitation, they went right under
the fence and began walking down the other side, which was a very steep 30 foot rocky slope that
led down to this very narrow strip of water that was the entrance to a very famous underwater cave
called the Devil's Hole. Their plan was to dive all the way entrance to a very famous underwater cave called the Devil's
Hole. Their plan was to dive all the way down to the bottom of the cave, which was at 325 feet.
So they get down to the bottom of the hill and they begin putting on their scuba gear. And Jack,
the youngest, he's like, you know what, guys, I'm having second thoughts. I don't want to do this
anymore. And they're like, all right, suit yourself. And so Jack volunteers himself to sit on the
outside and be their lookout. The other three, Paul, David, and Bill, suit yourself. And so Jack volunteers himself to sit on the outside and be their lookout.
The other three, Paul, David, and Bill, they're totally still doing this dive.
And so they put on the rest of their equipment.
They hop in the very warm water.
It stays at about 92 degrees Fahrenheit year round inside of Devil's Hole.
They check their flashlights a couple of times.
And when they're ready, they signal to each other.
And they begin their descent down into the dark abyss that is the Devil's Hole.
So for the next couple of hours, Jack just sat on the surface
waiting for his brother and his two friends to return.
And just after midnight, David and Bill did return, but Paul didn't.
And so when David and Bill got to the surface, they asked Jack,
hey, have you seen Paul?
Because we got separated on the way up and we figured he was already up here.
And Jack said, no, it's just you two.
I haven't seen Paul.
And so David and Bill look at each other and they know they have a problem
and they're like, we gotta go back down.
And so they put the regulators back in
and they turn and start swinging down.
Bill would say when they went back down to look for Paul,
Dave was leading and Dave was going really fast
to the point where Bill couldn't keep up with him.
And you gotta remember, it's pitch black down there
and Bill's got his flashlight.
That's the only way he can see Dave.
And Dave was creating separation and getting farther and farther away. Bill had no way to
stop him. And at some point he lost him. Dave was just gone. And so Bill, not wanting to turn this
into an even bigger problem, stopped where he was and went back to the surface. And he and his brother
Jack just sit there anxiously waiting for Dave and Paul to return, but they don't. And so at some
point Jack went and got authorities.
When the police got the report
about the two missing divers inside of Devil's Hole,
I'm sure on some level they were like,
that's why the signs are there.
You're not allowed to dive in there.
But they put that aside,
and instead they contacted a guy named Jim Hoots,
who was a professional diver
who regularly dove inside of Devil's Hole,
so he was very familiar with it.
And they got him on scene within a couple hours to go looking for these guys. And originally, the hope was Paul and David
had found their way into a section of Devil's Hole called Brown's Room, which was this big air pocket
that perhaps in an emergency situation, they had found their way in there, and now they're trapped.
So Jim and his dive partner get to the edge of Devil's Hole, they put on their gear, they hop in
the water, and they begin their descent.
It's totally dark, they've got their lights,
and they go down about 90 feet to where the tunnel
basically funnels down to a point.
And through this point, you have to wriggle through
and push through.
Once you get through that, you enter into this massive chasm
that if you shine your light in any direction,
the walls are so far away that initially,
it looks like you're shining a light into infinity
it's this massive massive space but for them to get to brown's room the first place they're going
to look for these guys they needed to push through that little funnel and then immediately turn left
and track the ceiling until they find a tunnel that goes back up again and that is the tunnel
that's very claustrophobia inducing it's very tight that if you take it 90 feet back up you get
to Brown's
room and that's that big air pocket. And so Jim and his dive partner, they make their way up this
tunnel, they get to the air pocket and there's no divers. And so they go back down through the
tunnel, back into that huge chasm. And instead of going back to the surface, they knew that if they
didn't find them in the air pocket, they were going to go down a little ways and see if they
could find them on this one area called the lower ledge. And so the lower ledge was just a rocky outcropping that was about halfway down to the bottom of the cave. It
was a natural break point before you went to the bottom. And so as they're descending in this
infinity chasm, Jim is shining his flashlight in every direction looking for signs of these guys.
And at some point, his light picks up a reflection on the lower ledge. And so they get down to the
lower ledge and that reflection was from a dive mask the the glass of the dive mask it was sitting right on the
lower ledge and then next to it was a single dive fin so jim and his dive partner they pick these
items up they go back up to the surface and they confirm with jack and bill alter that yes that mask
and that fin belonged to dave and paul and then afterwards they say to the search party look we
were in brown's room and they weren't in there.
And so there's nowhere else they could be alive.
And by now they've run out of air.
And so that mixed with the fact
that we're finding their equipment
strewn about the chasm,
it's safe to say they're more than likely deceased.
Jim and his dive partner said,
look, we'd like to go back in
and go all the way to the bottom.
We stopped at the lower ledge,
so we don't know what's down there.
We anticipate we'll be able to find their bodies
and we can at least confirm they're down there
and then shift to a body retrieval mission.
So Jim and his dive partner get back in the water.
They go down the 90 feet to that little section
you have to wriggle through to get into the chasm.
Once they're inside, they keep going down.
They pass the lower ledge
and they go all the way down to 325 feet.
Now this cave is huge, and the floor
bottom is huge, but it's not so huge that you wouldn't be able to spot two bodies that have
just recently landed down here. And so Jim and his partner are scanning their light across the bottom,
which is relatively flat. You can see pretty far because of how clear the water is, and they're not
seeing anything on the bottom. They're looking all over the place, and there's no bodies, there's no equipment, there's nothing. And they're thinking, how are we missing this? How are
we not able to see this? And it was at this point that Jim noticed a little hole in the bottom of
the cave floor, barely big enough for a full-size person with tanks to fit through, that he hadn't
seen before. And so they make their way over to it and Jim says right when he was on the edge,
he felt a fairly strong current being pulled
past his legs down into this hole. It was almost like this was a drain on a bathtub and someone
had pulled the plug and now all the water is draining into this little hole. And so Jim and
his dive buddy kind of push themselves back to make sure they don't get sucked in and Jim pulls
out a weighted piece of string that goes out to 932 feet and he would use this if there was ever
a tunnel that he wanted to
go down and he wanted to size up how deep it was. He would extend the line and he would let it fall
until it hit something and he would stop it. And on the line were marks of how deep it was. And so
he let this line go inside of this hole and it went all the way down to 932 feet without touching
any surface, meaning it's at least 932 feet deep from that point down.
So Jim just pulls his line back up
and he looks at his dive partner and he's like,
"'Yeah, no, we're not going down there.'"
Not only were they not equipped to go that deep,
they also both knew if we go in this hole,
there's a good chance we won't be able to get back out again
because the current is so strong.
So Jim and his dive partner go back to the surface
and they say, look, we couldn't find
their bodies. But what we think happened is they developed nitrogen narcosis, where you're in this
sort of drunken state. You don't really know what's going on around you. And that suction slowly
pulled them into this hole and they weren't really aware of their surroundings and they didn't stop
themselves before they got pulled in. And then it was too late and they were pulled down into oblivion.
To this day, they've never found
their bodies and scientists still don't know how deep that hole is but in 2012 there was an
earthquake in Mexico so 2,000 miles away from Devil's Hole that caused a tsunami to come through
Devil's Hole. I don't know how that actually works but the scientists say that's what happened
and so scientists believe that hole leads to an underground ocean
that connects to other parts of the world as far away as 2,000 miles.
Today, diving is still strictly forbidden inside of Devil's Hole,
unless you're a scientist and they stay far away from that hole at the bottom.
Hello, I'm Emily, and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers?
OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses
is a man in turmoil. George is trapped in a lie of his own making with a secret he feels would
ruin him if the truth ever came out. Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your
podcasts or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell.
So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away so he could get treatment.
While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later,
what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott? From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one and so many more. Every week, hosts Aaron and Justin
sit down to discuss a new case covering every angle and theory,
walking through the forensic evidence, and interviewing those close to the case to try
and discover what really happened. And with over 450 episodes, there's a case for every
true crime listener. Follow the Generation Y podcast on Amazon Music or wherever you get
your podcasts. Our next story is called No Limits.
Free diving is one of the most dangerous sports in the world,
even though technically pretty much anybody who's ever swam before
has then also freedived because
all freediving is, is diving underwater without the use of a breathing apparatus like a scuba
tank.
But when people talk about freediving, they're not talking about the kids down at the local
swim club.
They're talking about those crazy people that go out into the middle of the ocean, take
huge gulps of air, and then dive down to unbelievable depths and stay down there for several minutes
before returning to the surface. And within this already extreme sport, there's an even more extreme
version of it called no limits. Instead of the diver taking that big gulp of air on the surface
and then turning around and thinning themselves down to depth or pulling themselves down on a
weighted rope, in no limits freediving the divers are allowed to use whatever they want
to get as deep as they can possibly handle.
Again, the only rule is you can't use a breathing apparatus.
The most common no-limits technique is to grab hold of this sled
that is connected to this bottom-weighted vertical cable,
and the freediver holds onto that sled, it's released from the surface,
and the sled rockets down to whatever their desired depth is, and the diver just holds on. And then once they reach the bottom, the diver
then turns a switch, which shoots air into this big balloon that's attached to the sled. And once
the balloon is filled enough, it will pull the sled and the diver who's hanging onto it back up
the cable back up to the surface. Normally, a no-limits free dive using this technique takes approximately
three minutes start to finish. The reason no-limits is considered a more extreme version of free
diving is because it allows the divers to go to these extraordinary depths that they physically
are not capable of getting to on their own. We're talking about over 100 meters below the surface.
There's just no way a person can just kick themselves down there. You would need the sled. And then conversely, you would not be able to swim 100 meters back
up to the surface before you drowned. You would have to use that balloon. And so in no-limits
freediving, when you go down to these crazy depths, if your equipment fails, it's usually fatal.
On October 12, 2002, 28-year-old Audrey Mestry was sitting on a floating platform off
the coast of the Dominican Republic. The French native no-limits diver was mentally preparing
herself for what she was about to do. Audrey was one of the best free divers in the world,
and this day she was trying to become the best freeiver in the world by breaking the world record for the deepest depth achieved by a no-limits freediver, which was 170 meters.
And that record was actually held by her husband, Pippin Ferreres.
But as she sat on that platform, doubt must have crept into her mind because storm clouds
began to roll in.
And in the world of no-limits freediving, where so many things can go wrong, there's no reason to add in another risk factor like bad weather.
It could affect the people on the surface that are trying to support you.
It could affect the line that you're using to bring you down to depth.
It's just an unnecessary risk.
Also, Audrey was using a new piece of equipment.
She had a slightly thinner cable that was going to bring her down to the bottom that her sled was attached to, but she didn't know if it would work for this deep of a dive. And her husband, who was in charge of
safety for this dive, had been criticized in the diving community for rushing this record attempt,
that he hadn't done enough preparations, there weren't enough medical staff, there wasn't enough
standby divers that were going to be on site or on shore at the time of this dive. And Audrey was
aware of these criticisms because her husband
was regularly criticized in the no-limits free diving world because six years earlier he had had
two separate people on staff die during different diving accidents and people accused Pippin of being
very reckless. But despite all of these red flags and reasons not to do this dive on this day, Audrey
was really confident and wanted to do this
and so she signaled to her team that she was ready to start. She zipped up her yellow wetsuit and
then checked her sensors and video cameras she'd be using for the dive and then she put on her fins.
Meanwhile, her husband checked the balloon that was there to inflate and bring her back up to the
surface. And because this piece of equipment was so crucial, Pippin insisted he was
the only one that could touch it, even though normal procedure was that at least two other
people would inspect the balloon before the no limits dive. But regardless, after Pippin inspected
the balloon bag and determined it was good to go, he signaled to Audrey to tell her it was time to
start. She slipped off the platform and waded her way over to the 200 pound sled that was going to take her the equivalent of two football fields below the
surface. Just before Audrey gave the final go-ahead to actually release the sled and begin this dive,
she did a procedure known as packing, where freedivers basically take a full breath of air in
and then gulp down additional bits of oxygen to pack their lungs full.
And then when Audrey was done with this process and was ready to go,
she did give that final signal, they released the sled,
and she began rocketing down towards the bottom of the ocean.
If all went to plan, she would be back on the surface in three minutes.
Audrey's descent was going perfectly until she hit the 164 meter mark.
Now, because of the bad weather on the surface and all the rough water that new lightweight cable she had it was too light and so the waves caused it to sway and down
at 164 meters that swaying caused kinks in the line itself and so as the sled was coming down
it caught one of those kinks and stopped at the 164 meter mark and so Audrey just had to sit there
for 30 seconds
until finally that kink straightened out
and she was able to continue down
past the record setting mark of 170 meters.
Now that 30 second delay might not have mattered
if everything else in the dive went perfectly,
but unfortunately it did not.
Once Audrey had set the record by hitting 171 meters,
her sled came to a stop and now it was time for her to go back up to the surface.
On the video, you can see Audrey begins following procedure same as always.
She reaches over and turns the valve that's supposed to inflate the balloon that's going to bring her back to the surface.
But after she turns the switch, nothing happens. The balloon does not inflate.
For a second, you can see a hint of panic in her body language as she's almost out of breath. She's already had that 30 second delay at the beginning
and she's pressing up against that three minute mark and she needs to get to the surface right
now. But she stays calm, she reaches over and she turns the switch again to see if maybe she hadn't
turned it all the way the first time. But again, nothing happens. At this point, a standby diver
noticed the sled was not moving up when it should have been,
and so he rushed over and jammed one of his extra hoses with extra air up into the balloon and tried to inflate it himself.
But there wasn't enough air coming out of this tank for it to fully inflate,
and so the sled began to move painfully slowly up in the water column.
Now you would think this standby diver, who did have all
sorts of extra air, would just give the mouthpiece to Audrey to let her breathe on that. Forget the
world record attempt, let's just save her life. But unfortunately, Audrey and the standby diver knew
that because she was so deep, the pressure was so immense on her lungs, it had actually constricted
her lungs to the size of oranges, that if she took even a tiny gulp of air at depth, that air would expand so dramatically on the way
up, it would kill her. And so all Audrey could do was cling onto the sled and very slowly ascend
and try to hold her breath as long as she could, but she knew at some point she was going to drown.
And the video shows her absolutely
stoic, just riding that sled, knowing that that's about to happen. On the surface, when the three
minute mark came and went and Audrey did not surface, her husband immediately threw on scuba
gear and leapt in to try to save her. And by the time he got down to her and brought her out of
the water, she had been underwater without air for 8 minutes and
40 seconds. When she was put on the boat, she had a pulse, but there wasn't a doctor on standby to
treat her right away, and Pippin had kept her underwater for a couple additional minutes,
trying to resuscitate her underwater. Audrey was ultimately rushed to a hospital,
where she was later pronounced dead. The cause of death was drowning.
hospital where she was later pronounced dead, the cause of death was drowning. Some believe Pippin,
her husband, had intentionally sabotaged her dive in order to kill her, but the official investigation determined her death was accidental.
The next and final story of today's episode is called Into the Heart.
There's an island off the coast of Croatia called Ĺ olta.
Only 19 kilometers long by 5 kilometers wide,
this tiny island is a short ferry ride and an ideal day trip from Split,
which is Croatia's second biggest city. It's a hilly island with these beautiful pebble beaches
and absolutely crystal clear water. It's a very popular tourist destination that's actually famous
for its honey, as well as an underwater cave that kills virtually everyone who goes inside.
On September 10, 2002, 31-year-old Miroslav Kuklis
was enjoying a vacation with friends on Sholta Island.
It was a little after 8.30 in the evening
when one of his friends suggested they go scuba diving.
Because of its beautiful clear waters,
Sholta Island is a very popular scuba diving destination.
And so as such, scuba diving takes place really
at all hours around Sholta
Island, but the vast majority of it takes place in these safe little alcoves where it's not very
deep and you can see fish and wildlife and it's very controlled. But Miroslav and his friends
didn't want to do regular scuba diving. They wanted to check out the underwater cave they'd
heard about just south of Sholta Island in Poganica Bay. They had heard this cave was extremely dangerous
and only expert divers were allowed to go in there.
And even though they were not expert divers,
they were barely novice divers,
they thought, you know what, how bad can it be?
Let's go check it out for ourselves.
So they convinced one of the boat drivers
to drive them out to the area in Poganica Bay
that sat over where this cave entrance was.
And so they put on their gear, they hop in his boat,
they drive out, they jump in the water, and sure enough, right below the surface, about 10
meters down, is this hole on the sea floor. And that is the single entrance into this cave.
When you go in this hole, you have to go down head first because it's so tight. And once you
go down about 10 meters, you reach this junction, where to one side, it leads to the shallow gallery,
which is the space that goes down to 36
meters, and there's no other caves or entrances or anything off of it. It's just kind of like a chasm
inside of the cave. From the junction, if you go the other way, it brings you to the deep gallery,
which is just a bigger version of the shallow gallery, and it goes down to 57 meters. Inside
of the deep gallery, however, at the very top on the ceiling,
there is a very thin air pocket. Now there's a few reasons why this cave is so dangerous,
beyond just being an underwater cave, which in and of itself is quite dangerous. The first one
is the visibility inside of the cave is basically zero. The only light that comes in is through that
single entrance that leads to that junction, but the light doesn't make it past the junction into the two galleries. So it is truly pitch black inside
of those two galleries. You also have all this silt that's caked to the inside of the cave. So
as soon as you get in there, your flippers and your movement, it kicks the silt off the wall and
muddies the water around you to where even if you had a flashlight, it's like driving in fog. The
lights only pick up the fog right in front of you. You can't see beyond the fog. if you had a flashlight, it's like driving in fog. The lights only pick up
the fog right in front of you. You can't see beyond the fog. Well, in a tunnel, you shine
your light on silt and you're just going to see the silt, not beyond it. So basically going into
this cave, you're going to be blindfolded. Another significant danger of being inside of this cave
is after you've gone down to your respective gallery, whether it's the shallow or the deep
gallery, when you're going back up again on your ascent and you're getting to that junction point, it is possible to confuse the other entrance to the other gallery with the exit to the cave.
And so if you make that mistake and you go into the other gallery, remember, you're blind.
You got silt kicked up.
It's already dark.
You need to, by touch, figure out you've made a mistake and then backtrack and go
out the right way you came and so if you're low on air and you make this mistake you better hope
you catch it fast enough that you can get out before your air runs out so a little after 9 15
p.m miroslav goes in first followed by his other two friends miroslav reaches the junction and he
turns towards the deep gallery he goes all the way down to 57 meters he touches the and he turns towards the deep gallery. He goes all the way down to 57 meters.
He touches the bottom. He turns around and he starts making his ascent. On the way up,
he gets to the junction and he makes the critical mistake of going into the shallow gallery,
believing that is the exit to the cave. He probably got in there, bumped his head,
started feeling around. He's kicking up silt. He's starting to panic. He's looking for the way out
again. He finds the exit to the junction, but instead of taking the exit out of the cave,
he makes the same mistake again and goes into the deep gallery. And now he's in the deep gallery.
He's feeling around. He's running low on air. And based on his dive computer, he was fumbling
around in there for quite some time. And having spent some time underwater myself in the pitch
black as a Navy
SEAL, I can tell you that it's very easy to imagine, you know, oh, it'd be so easy to stay
calm and have your bearings and know where you are. But when you are completely in total pitch
black underwater, it actually is hard to tell what's up, what's down. You can feel the pressure
in your ears. That's a good way to tell where you are in the water. But, you know, realistically,
it's totally possible to get completely disoriented underwater. And my guess is Miroslav was totally disoriented. And so he
stopped and he's trying to make sense of what's happening. And at some point, Miroslav must have
looked at his air gauge and realized, I'm out of air now. And he made one last push to try to get
to the surface, but he hit a ceiling. And that's when he realized, based on maybe the touch and feel, maybe he took his gloves off and he was feeling around, he felt that he was in the
air pocket, that thin amount of air that sat right at the top of the deep gallery. He must have
realized at this point that there was so little air down here that he probably only had maybe a
few minutes that he could be down here breathing before he was going to drown. And in terms of
making his ascent to the surface on a breath hold, the only place where there's an air pocket is the deep gallery. And so probably he knew that.
And so he's thinking, I'm, you know, maybe 40, 50 meters under the surface right now,
and I can barely catch my breath now. I'm not going to be able to hold my breath to the surface.
And so staring down a certain horrific drowning death, he pulled out his dive knife and he plunged it into his heart.
And when they did his autopsy later, it would show he did not drown.
He died because he had a knife in his heart.
Back on the surface, the other two divers had gotten out successfully and they're in the boat and they're waiting for Miroslav.
But after over an hour went by and he hadn't surfaced, they contacted the police.
The police show up and they send two special divers down into the cave to look for Miroslav.
One of those divers was a 25-year-old named Oliver Marich.
And so these two divers go down and they're looking for Miroslav and they can't find him and they're running out of air.
And on their ascent, Oliver Marich makes the same mistake that Miroslav did and gets trapped inside of the shallow gallery.
The other diver initially made that mistake but managed to get out again, but Oliver went back
and forth between the deep and the shallow gallery until he too drowned in that cave.
It would take three days for the police to find and remove Miroslav and Oliver from this cave,
and to this day the police warn divers not to go in
this cave unless they're experienced enough to be going in there. But year after year,
inexperienced divers try their luck inside of this cave, and they make that same mistake.
They get trapped, and they die. Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin Podcast.
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