Fed by the Trinity Aquifer, which pushes up
its water through the well and spills it into nearby
Cypress Creek, Jacob's Well is a spring in Hays County,
Texas, an hour or so southwest of Austin, near the
towns of Wimberley and Dripping Springs.
Its cool water has lured locals and visitors for hundreds
of years, and, for almost that long, Jacob's Well
has drawn the adventurous, too. Daredevils leap from
a nearby outcropping into the slim opening that is,
by at least one estimate, only about 13 feet wide. Free
divers probe the well, sometimes as deep as 100 feet,
maneuvering into narrow openings that lead into
underwater caves. Scuba divers make forays into what
the Jacob's Well Exploration Project calls a "challenging,
unforgiving environment." It can be a deadly.
Diego Adame, a 21-year-old from San Antonio, lost
a fin free diving the caves deep in the well last July
and had to cut away his weight belt to make it back to
the surface before he drowned.
"For a split second," he told the San Antonio
Express-News, "I thought of death and dying that day."
At least eight people have died at Jacob's Well,
which has prompted some people to call it one of
the most dangerous diving spots in the world. Two
young Texas men were caught in one of the caves
and drowned in 1979. One diver's remains were only
flushed out of the well in 1981. The other's remains
were not recovered until 2000.
Writer Louie Bond tells some of the well's story
on the website www.visitwimberley.com, in an article
called, "The Fatal Allure of Jacob's Well." He describes
at least four caves deep in the well, some with openings
so narrow that divers have to remove their tanks
to get through. Bond also notes the recovery of one of the well's victims in 2000, made by a diver from the
San Marcos Area Recovery Team:
"You couldn't tell up from down, left from right,"
Kathy Misiaszek said. "You couldn't see your gauges.
You were scraping the bottom and banging your tanks
on the top. You had nothing to fall back on except
your training. We were rather relieved to get out."
The beauty of the place belies the danger beneath,
but even up top, Jacob's Well can be dangerous. In
August, temperatures routinely hover around 97
degrees or higher during the heat of the day. If you're
looking for relief, a quick dip in Jacob's Well will do
the job. If adventure is what you're after, it's better to
stay cool-headed.
Meanwhile, in New Mexico in late March, a diver
died after getting trapped in an underwater labyrinth
of tunnels in the Blue Hole, a popular swimming hole
near Santa Rosa. 43-year-old Shane Thompson, a cave
diver with rescue and recovery experience, was part of
a two-man buddy team making an excursion on behalf
of the ADM Exploration Foundation. They got rare
access to the site, sealed to the public since it claimed
the lives of two Oklahoma trainee divers in 1976.
Thompson was participating in a two-year-long
project to map out the maze of caverns and make
them more accessible when he lost sight of his buddy
at 194 feet deep, became disoriented, and was unable
to find his way out. Presumably, they were not using a
cave line, although newspaper reports mention a cord
of some sort that came loose.
Thompson's buddy, Mike Young, is reported to
have said to city officials, "The word that was given to
me that day was these are the most dangerous caves
they've ever dived anywhere."