Cave diving is a type of technical submersion to caves where so called overhead surroundings are present. This is a rather dangerous type of diving placing extremely serious demands on diver skills, reliability of equipment and outfit configuration. It is defined by inability to emerge immediately, location of the diver in the utter darkness, alteration of visibility from clean water to complete roiling in short periods of time, presence of narrownesses and sometimes by low water temperature.
We offer dives of various types of complexity for certified cave divers, considering their training levels. Please contact us for detailed information.
There are several kinds of caves for submersion by divers:
Coral caves may be of various length, depth and extensions. They are formed by corals with incrustations of calcareous segments, soldered together with calcium carbonate.
Blaster caves and tunnels are seen all over the world. They are formed as a result of transition of volcanic gases through stream of lava getting cold.
Ice caves are formed by ice melting at the ground of a glacier. Being extremely attractive and of an unusual form, they are also most unpredictable and dangerous.
Sea caves are formed as a result of erosion under move of land swell, periodic currents and other streams. These formations are usually not too deep, but very nice and are visited by divers most often. There are hundreds of such caves in Montenegro.
Karst caves are the most frequently occurred ones and the most multifarious. This kind of caves is the most well-known in Montenegro, and there are still more than 200 caves up to now that have not been investigated. While the dry parts of these caves are passed through and some of them are attractions for tourists, the underwater parts are still waiting for their discoverers.