Josh Richards - The Engelbrechts east extension, Mount Gambia

Josh Richards - The Engelbrechts east extension, Mount Gambia

Josh Richards may not have decades of caving experience under his belt, however what he does have is a love for Wombats and the desire to act like one at times. Joking aside, Josh's thirst for adventure started whilst diving as a kid with his father, continuing into a military career as a soldier and Royal Marine, a comedian, a science geek, and even as a candidate with a one way ticket to inhabit Mars!

Josh talks openly about his journey through life and its various stages leading up to his discoveries with his dive wife, Matt Aisbett and in detail about the discovery itself. The Engelbrechts east extension.

Englebrechts cave history

1865 - Originally described in a publication by Julian Tenison-Woods, the cave system was referred to as Vansittarts cave.

1885 - Carl Engelbrecht's purchase of a flour mill located nearby, which he converted into a whiskey distillery (good man!) used the cave as a dumping ground for his waste products. This led to the cave system being referred to as the Engelbrecht cave.

1929 - the land on which the cave is located was purchased by the then District Council and the cave was sealed off.

1969 - The council invites expressions of interest to open the cave for potential tourism. Reportedly, it was not suitable for tourist development and remained shut.

1979 - The Lions Club of Mount Gambier commenced a project to beautify the cave to the tune of $10,000

1995 - Engelbrecht Cave was added to the South Australian Heritage Register 

2019 - Dive buddies Matthew Aisbett and Josh Richards mooch around the end of the east cave system and find access to an enormous previously undiscovered cave system running under the centre of town. 

2022 - Josh joins me on the show to reflect on many of his life adventures and what is now known as the Engelbrechts east extension. 

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Podchaser - The Scuba GOAT Podcast


00:00:09
Matt Waters: Hey, there dive buddies. And welcome to the

00:00:11
penultimate show of season three. Today I'm talking to a

00:00:14
man who doesn't actually know how to say no in life. A diver,

00:00:18
soldier, Royal Marine, comedian, author, ginger cave diving

00:00:23
Wombat, and even a candidate for a one way trip to Mars. Josh

00:00:28
Richards has hit the mainstream media recently with his findings

00:00:31
of a cave extension in Mount Gambia, and Josh joins me today

00:00:34
to talk through some of his life adventures. And of course, that

00:00:38
fantastic find, and it's exploration. Welcome to the

00:00:41
show, buddy.

00:00:41
Josh Richards: Hey, think I'm good. Thanks for having me.

00:00:44
Matt Waters: Now, we've obviously brought you on the

00:00:46
show to talk about caves and stuff like that. But let's back

00:00:50
it way back up and just find out a little bit more about you

00:00:54
because I think this is the first time I've ever had well,

00:00:59
not only a comedian, but a ginger and someone that could

00:01:02
possibly have lived on Mars. Ticking a lot of boxes.

00:01:07
Josh Richards: I try. I definitely try it. Yeah, I've

00:01:10
always called it career add. So let's try and do things at once

00:01:14
all at once and do them all relatively poorly. But just keep

00:01:18
crashing out it as hard as I can.

00:01:23
Matt Waters: Well, how did you how did you get into the diving

00:01:26
side of things to start with?

00:01:27
Josh Richards: I started diving very early, to be honest with

00:01:30
your dad was a was a diver for the Army for a very long time.

00:01:35
He started doing recreational civilian diving, sort of in the

00:01:39
early 80s, I think, became a Scuba instructor. So I grew up

00:01:44
with it right from before I was born. That was diving and

00:01:48
teaching and all that sort of stuff. So by the time it finally

00:01:51
rolled around to me sort of hitting 12 I was already well

00:01:55
and truly ready to do sort of my junior open water. I think my

00:01:59
oldest Patti certification is from when I'm nine I think it's

00:02:03
like a junior skin diver or something like that. And so

00:02:05
like, very much a water baby started very, very early.

00:02:08
There's a great photo of me with my dad's like his old aqualung

00:02:12
regulator and one of these masks in the bathtub at age six. So

00:02:18
yeah, it started very early. I kind of stepped in and out of

00:02:22
it. It became very much a thing that I did with my dad, mom and

00:02:26
dad was Dad had left the army a long time before. And sort of

00:02:31
all through my teens, it was mainly sort of Cray fishing and

00:02:34
I don't I don't like Cray fish. I don't eat Cray fish. But it

00:02:38
was a it was a thing to do. Obviously, also ginger, which

00:02:42
meant going out on the boat got sunburned. I tend to get a

00:02:46
little bit seasick. So it's like it wasn't a great combination of

00:02:49
things. There's still a little bit of like, teenage trauma of

00:02:53
being sort of dragged out to go on these fishing trips with Dad

00:02:56
go to place like gnarly fishing station and dive with Tiger

00:03:00
sharks and hammerheads, and all that sort of stuff while trying

00:03:03
to fish. And that was my teenage years. And I sort of went you

00:03:06
know what this, this kind of sucks, stepped away from it,

00:03:10
went to university, joined the army myself and started showing

00:03:16
an interest in the diving side of things. From there, I kind of

00:03:20
went down the pathway of becoming a open water

00:03:23
instructor. I did all my technical diving, all my

00:03:26
technical training now open circuit tech, probably early

00:03:29
20s. Same year that I became a PADI instructor. Same year I

00:03:34
became an SSI instructor, again, multi add overload ad to do all

00:03:39
the things at once. I kind of stepped back from all that I

00:03:43
left the army and moved across to the Navy as a diver, which

00:03:47
was fairly short lived. Lots of paperwork, lots of being stuffed

00:03:51
around and sort of going through the whole defence circus was not

00:03:56
great. So I kind of turned around to the Australian Defence

00:03:59
Force and went you know, you can you can stick this and move to

00:04:02
the UK and join the Royal Marine commandos. And the idea was

00:04:06
Yeah, going through and becoming a combat swimmer for those guys.

00:04:09
So why the

00:04:10
Matt Waters: hell? What? What sparked that one? I mean, I'm ex

00:04:13
forces myself not not a boot neck like you guys, when you

00:04:16
guys were digging trenches. I was booking into five star

00:04:18
hotels.

00:04:19
Josh Richards: Nice. Yeah. My grandfather on my again, on my

00:04:25
dad's side, there's quite a lot. There's a long military history

00:04:29
through my both sides of my family, particularly my dad's

00:04:32
side, I think. I don't say this too often to folks from the UK,

00:04:36
but the furthest we've traced the family name back to is is

00:04:41
actually the the Oliver Cromwell's right hand man that

00:04:45
brought some of the engineering across from the Dutch to knock

00:04:47
down castle walls. Wow. Yeah. So our army Army engineers, I was

00:04:51
an Army engineer. dad was an engineer as well. They're called

00:04:54
sappers, and it comes from the Dutch term SAP where you would

00:04:58
dig trenches towards a castle wall We'll dig under the wall

00:05:01
and then pack it full of hay and wood and set it on fire and it

00:05:04
will drop the walls down. And that's where the Army Engineers

00:05:07
sort of get their name from. And yet turns out my great, great,

00:05:10
great, great, great, great, whatever was the guy that

00:05:13
brought that technology across from the Dutch to help Oliver

00:05:16
Cromwell knocked down castle walls. So I don't say I didn't I

00:05:20
never said that. When I was a botnet. I never told anyone that

00:05:22
while I was in, but yeah, it's long history on that side of

00:05:28
things. So I kind of Yeah. After I got washed traitor with the

00:05:32
ATF, I sort of went What do I do? And that sort of turnaround

00:05:37
sent Well, there's two options for it. You can either learn

00:05:39
French and become join the Foreign Legion or you can use

00:05:43
your your ancestry visa, use your your heritage, and go and

00:05:48
join the Royal Marines. So I opted for number two.

00:05:52
Matt Waters: Okay. And dad, Dad's originally British is he?

00:05:57
Josh Richards: Dad's dad's family's British, so dad was

00:05:59
born in Australia, but all the rest of the family is Welsh. So

00:06:04
my 240s and let's see, I know, I know, the white lines a lot.

00:06:11
Well, ironically, that's quite dark. Like it doesn't. doesn't

00:06:16
explain Yeah, anyway.

00:06:20
Matt Waters: I was life in the in the Marines. I mean, I've got

00:06:22
a lot of respect for the Marines.

00:06:24
Josh Richards: It was interesting. The reality for me

00:06:28
was that I was very good at it. But I hated what it was turning

00:06:32
me into. I felt myself falling into a role where I was pretty

00:06:38
much an enforcer was a few years older than most of the guys that

00:06:41
I was going through training with. I was one of the few that

00:06:44
had previous experience. And I was scared of the things these

00:06:48
guys were doing, that was going to wind up them dying. They were

00:06:54
different. We had recruits die during training. There were

00:06:57
things that happens where Yeah, and I, I stepped into quite a an

00:07:02
aggressive, nasty role that I really didn't like this angry

00:07:05
little five foot six ginger kid from Australia, screaming at

00:07:08
these six foot three county rugby players. Because they

00:07:13
would, they were making mistakes and not realising how dangerous

00:07:17
the mistakes they were making were. So I didn't like what it

00:07:21
turned me into. They were very much at the time, this is all

00:07:25
2010. So it was, we were all gearing up to here to head out

00:07:30
and deploy on Herrick 1314. And so it was everyone's going to

00:07:34
Afghanistan, everyone's heading out. Everyone was on a war

00:07:38
footing. Everyone would be going out. If you weren't doing

00:07:42
training afterwards. To become a driver, or modern or whatever

00:07:46
you were doing casualty replacement, like you were

00:07:48
heading straight out. And quite a few of the guys that I trained

00:07:51
with, went straight out as soon as they finished training. So

00:07:55
it's one of the unique things about the Royal Marines, they're

00:07:57
the only unit in the world where you're your final sort of your

00:08:02
final four months of training is preparation for war, you can

00:08:07
deploy directly out of basic training, and are the only unit

00:08:10
that does it. So it was pretty scary on that front. I got a

00:08:14
real test for recognising I suppose that I didn't want to be

00:08:21
there. So

00:08:22
Matt Waters: So from you know, you've done the Marines bit and

00:08:26
then decided it's time to bang out was that the return to

00:08:30
Australia then a

00:08:30
Josh Richards: little bit. I actually love living in the UK.

00:08:33
And the reality with the with the Royal Marines was I got

00:08:36
sick, we got bitten by a tick out on double. Didn't sort of

00:08:40
recognise it. I didn't know it was gonna I've been bitten by

00:08:42
hundreds of ticks with the Army here in Australia. But didn't

00:08:46
didn't give it a second thought came back off this this

00:08:49
midwinter exercise that we've done, pull the tick off my

00:08:53
stomach and sort of went all right over whatever. And five

00:08:56
weeks later couldn't walk up a set of stairs that picked up

00:08:59
Lyme disease, and it just annihilated me. So I ended up

00:09:04
spending, I think it was about 1012 weeks in rehab, the hill

00:09:09
and the stepping back from the high intensity and stepping back

00:09:13
from the push, push push. I had an opportunity to actually think

00:09:17
about what I was doing, had an opportunity to see the guys that

00:09:21
I was training with, and some of the attitudes that they had

00:09:24
around different things and kind of recognise that I it's not

00:09:29
somewhere I wanted to be. And the the biggest reality out of

00:09:32
all of it was that I didn't I didn't really belong in the

00:09:36
military. I was very good at it. It was one and this is a common

00:09:39
theme for me being good at different things, but actually

00:09:42
not belonging there or not wanting to be there. And seeing

00:09:46
nasty elements in my personality sort of come out because of the

00:09:49
jobs that I'm doing. So yeah, it was. In the end it was a fairly

00:09:53
easy decision to make to leave. My dad regularly asks like do I

00:09:58
miss it? And I know he misses it now I have never missed any part

00:10:02
of folks talk about like missing their mates and boba and I do

00:10:06
still have some really great mates. But not that many. And I

00:10:12
certainly wish I could unlearn some of the things that I

00:10:15
learned. So I, but I love the UK, and I loved being there. It

00:10:20
was an interesting time to be there. And yeah, I ended up

00:10:24
sticking around for a few years. And that's essentially how I got

00:10:27
into comedy. So I done a little bit of stand up in Australia

00:10:30
before I left, and didn't really know what to do with myself and

00:10:36
kind of went well, I can do this comedy thing. While I try and

00:10:39
find a job, it'll give me something, something sort of a

00:10:42
centerline that I can hang on to, while I reshape my entire

00:10:46
life that has previously been based all around the military.

00:10:50
And, yeah, it drew me into comedy. I ended up working for,

00:10:54
for an artist, or we ended up working for Damien Hirst, out in

00:10:57
Gloucestershire for a while, as his science advisor setting

00:11:01
things on fire. And yeah, doing doing stand up. That's

00:11:07
essentially how I got into stand up. And it was actually the

00:11:09
maths stuff that brought me back to Australia. I'd been doing it

00:11:12
for a few years, I've been doing stand up for a few years, I've

00:11:15
done a few tours, and was getting burnt out with it,

00:11:20
decided write a comedy show about sending people one way to

00:11:23
Mars is kind of a metaphor for me leaving comedy, and found

00:11:27
this organisation that was planning to do it. So I signed

00:11:29
up and I decided the UK media would not going to want to chat

00:11:33
to some random Ozzie living in Brighton. So I came back to

00:11:37
Australia and started speaking to the media and speaking to

00:11:40
schools and folks like that here instead. So

00:11:44
Matt Waters: let's see how

00:11:45
Josh Richards: that's a bit of an adventure.

00:11:48
Matt Waters: Adventure. Yeah, yeah. Okay, so we've we've done

00:11:52
the military book, we've done the UK, we've done comedy, we've

00:11:54
come back, and we're now talking about Mars. Now, let, let's get

00:11:58
into the weeds of this one. Because I kind of guarantee that

00:12:02
I'm never gonna have a possible Martian on this. What's the

00:12:09
what's the background, so it could be a bit more detail on,

00:12:11
on what you found.

00:12:13
Josh Richards: So I going way back. I originally did a degree

00:12:18
in Applied Physics and psychology. And as part of my

00:12:21
physics degree, we were looking at all sorts of different

00:12:23
things. And I ended up reading a paper by a fairly well known guy

00:12:27
by the name of Professor Paul Davies, who was essentially

00:12:30
arguing that the first people going to Mars would have to go

00:12:33
one way based on the engineering based on the the changes to

00:12:37
their body, you realistically should be planning to send

00:12:40
people one way, the challenge is to bring them back orders of

00:12:44
magnitude more than what it is to get them there and keep them

00:12:47
alive. So why not send them and keep them there? And I remember

00:12:50
reading it back in the early 2000s. And thinking, This is

00:12:54
awesome. Like, why the hell would you want to come back

00:12:56
what's so great about Earth, like, get a chance to go and

00:12:59
live on another planet? Sign me up. And that idea kind of

00:13:03
circled back as I was looking at getting out of comedy. And I

00:13:08
sort of went, you know, what I do really, this is, it's a nice

00:13:11
metaphor, it's a chance to talk about science, a lot of the

00:13:13
shows that I've done, had done, were based around science. The

00:13:18
science and religion have doomsday and all sorts of weird

00:13:21
and wonderful, different things I loved using comedy as a

00:13:25
vehicle for science communication. So I went, you

00:13:28
know what we can write this whole show about Mars. I know

00:13:31
lots of stuff about Mars, let's write a show about Mars. And

00:13:33
we'll talk about how we should have gone should go in there

00:13:37
2030 years ago. And again, bear in mind, this is 2010. So sort

00:13:42
of arguing that we've probably probably should have gone in the

00:13:44
90s and had the technology to go in the 90s. Why didn't we do it

00:13:48
in the show was originally going to be quite better. I just

00:13:52
finished it. Edinburgh Fringe for the third or fourth year, I

00:13:55
think, and things have not gone well. And I was pretty dark. And

00:14:01
I was done with comedy and wanted to write this quite

00:14:03
bitter, angry show about how humanity sucked because we

00:14:07
hadn't gone past low Earth orbit since 1971. And yet, the whole

00:14:13
thing spun around in a heartbeat. I again, was sitting

00:14:16
in a little cafe in Brighton and started researching the show

00:14:19
typed Mars One way to try and find the original article to

00:14:22
start sort of basing the show around it. And Mars One had made

00:14:26
their first sort of public announcement about two or three

00:14:28
days before. And so my entire feed from Google was filled out

00:14:32
with this announcement from this bizarre Dutch based organisation

00:14:37
saying they were going to open applications up for astronauts

00:14:39
and anyone from anywhere who was over the age of 18, fit and

00:14:43
healthy and had the right sort of aptitude would be able to

00:14:46
apply. And so the comedy show instantly changed. It went from

00:14:50
being said quite dark, quite bitter and saying why didn't we

00:14:53
do this? Humans suck, too. I am signing up for this. They're

00:14:57
looking for a crew of four who are the other three going to be

00:15:00
And I basically shaped the entire that particular comedy

00:15:04
show around the structure of a band, you need four different

00:15:09
kinds of personalities, and they kind of roughly meet up with the

00:15:11
same stereotype. So you get a four piece band. So like, you

00:15:15
know, a quirky, high maintenance lead singer that's sort of

00:15:18
leading and driving things forward. A bass player who kind

00:15:21
of keeps them in check a little bit, a weirdo keyboard player

00:15:25
who's got specialist skills that no one really understands. And a

00:15:28
drummer who just kind of keeps everything together. And as

00:15:31
always happy, just consistent. And always looking for those,

00:15:35
those three other band members, I suppose. And that was, which

00:15:38
was

00:15:40
Matt Waters: Which one were you to start with,

00:15:41
Josh Richards: I was arguing that I was the lead singer.

00:15:45
Because I was writing the comedy show, the reality is I'm not.

00:15:48
The reality is I'm probably much more of a quirky weirdo keyboard

00:15:51
player who does Nietzschean and get really involved in

00:15:55
specialist skills. Yeah, but I often I need to be offset by

00:16:01
other folks who I can take charge, I will live willingly

00:16:04
take charge, but it's not something I want to do. So I'm

00:16:07
much more interested in Yeah, having a specialist set of

00:16:10
skills that I can help out with rather than trying to run the

00:16:13
whole thing. So I ended up writing another three shows

00:16:18
around all of it, and turn two of them into books and all sorts

00:16:22
of stuff. So it's been, it's been a big 10 years. And it's

00:16:25
realistically only in the last couple of years, I've stepped

00:16:28
back from all of the Mars side of things, focused on cave

00:16:31
diving, the programme itself shut down at the end of last

00:16:35
year, they sort of went, they couldn't get the funding, they'd

00:16:38
run into a lot of roadblocks, and they sort of finally decided

00:16:42
that it was going to be a little bit too much for that particular

00:16:44
project. But I still speak about it a lot. I still visit schools,

00:16:49
I still had I had a school contact me last week sort of

00:16:51
booking me for National Science Week, in August, next year.

00:16:56
There's still a lot of interest, still a lot of people who want

00:16:59
to talk about it. It's just a shame that the specific

00:17:02
programme that I was involved with has shut down. But

00:17:05
Matt Waters: well, it's it's it's such a an amazing, you

00:17:08
know, concept, you know, let's let's, let's do this thing,

00:17:11
what's, you know, you sign up for it and say, Hey, you can

00:17:14
apply? What's that? What's the procedure that you're gonna have

00:17:17
to go through though, because, I mean, you've only got a look at

00:17:19
those two on the screen right now you're five foot six. And

00:17:23
twice your body weight, I'm gonna take up far too much.

00:17:25
Josh Richards: So I'm out, I fit a little bit better. It's, it's

00:17:30
an interesting one. There's a lot of a lot of preconceptions

00:17:33
around what people expect an astronaut to be. And the reality

00:17:38
is what we actually want for people going to Mars is

00:17:41
radically different from the right stuff. It's been a running

00:17:44
joke for all of us that the right stuff is the wrong stuff

00:17:47
for Mars. Those a type personalities very driven, very

00:17:51
competitive, you know, fittest I can run further, I can do more

00:17:54
push ups, all that sort of nonsense. It's the exact

00:17:57
opposite of what we actually want. I've joked quite regularly

00:18:01
about us really wanting to send for Homer Simpsons, to Mars.

00:18:06
Homer Simpson is blended with like MacGyver. Richard Dean

00:18:10
Anderson, not the new MacGyver, but like Richard Dean Anderson

00:18:12
with a mullet, MacGyver. As a skill set, you really want folks

00:18:17
who can fix lots of problems, they can improvise, they can,

00:18:21
you know, they're generalists. They're not the top of any

00:18:24
particular game, they are very, very broad in their knowledge,

00:18:27
they can always get specialist information and backup and

00:18:31
support from people back on Earth. But because of the time

00:18:35
delay between the two planets, it takes anywhere between three

00:18:39
and 45 minutes to send communications backwards and

00:18:42
forwards between Earth and Mars, you can get that information.

00:18:45
But if something's gone horribly wrong, you need folks who can

00:18:48
act quickly in an emergency to stabilise the situation, and

00:18:51
then get guidance and advice back from Earth. So you kind of

00:18:55
want couch potatoes, who sit around not do a whole lot, watch

00:18:58
a whole lot of Netflix, keep an eye on the plants keep things

00:19:02
running, especially for the first two years. And then later

00:19:05
on, you might have the more adventurous types who will start

00:19:08
going outside the habitat going and exploring different areas

00:19:12
going and venturing out. But we're, we're actually there's a

00:19:15
lot more parallels between folks going to Mars and folks that we

00:19:19
send down to Antarctica, or we see on nuclear submarines or

00:19:23
long range Arctic patrols. There's a lot of parallels with

00:19:27
those kinds of personalities. And I don't know if you've ever

00:19:30
dealt with submarines, but they are weird. And that's the kind

00:19:35
of personnel that's, that's actually the kind of people we

00:19:37
want to send rather than these high performance fighter pilot

00:19:41
types. We want we kind of want to send folks who create their

00:19:45
own culture. They know what they need to know really well, but

00:19:48
they're also very general and they're happy to learn and happy

00:19:51
to laugh and they might appear weird from the outside, but

00:19:54
inside their particular group, they've got a very strong

00:19:58
culture that supports each other

00:20:00
Matt Waters: I think one of the main things there is you're

00:20:01
going to have to have four people that are gonna get on for

00:20:04
a long period of time in a very small space.

00:20:07
Josh Richards: And the other interesting one, this is

00:20:09
probably one that the military doesn't deal with as much is

00:20:12
it's also a mixed gender crew. So it's two men or two women. So

00:20:16
there's all those other dynamics that come in, when you you have

00:20:20
a mixed gender crew, we need that, basically, for stability.

00:20:24
Because you put four guys together, they're going to kill

00:20:26
each other within a few months. For women together, they're

00:20:29
probably going to kill each other within a few months. But

00:20:31
there's all these complex dynamics that need to be

00:20:33
navigated through all of that as well. So the big thing that Mars

00:20:37
One was going to do, they were screening us out. So they were I

00:20:41
shouldn't even screeners that we were screening ourselves out,

00:20:43
they were asking us really hard questions, getting us to do

00:20:47
these applications to fill out videos, and getting us to think

00:20:50
about what we were doing. And most folks actually dropped out

00:20:53
themselves. They weren't kicked out by miles one or excluded or

00:20:56
anything like that. They decided, Oh, actually, no, now

00:20:59
that I've thought about this, this is not for me. And they

00:21:02
pulled themselves out of the programme. We went from 202,

00:21:08
initially, down to the last 100 candidates. And realistically,

00:21:13
it was the cut from it was the psych interview that we did,

00:21:18
that reduced the group from about 660 down to that final

00:21:21
100. That was the first time Mars One actually were excluding

00:21:24
people, they had good candidates, good people in that

00:21:27
list. But they decided not to go with them because they weren't

00:21:30
as good as someone else was. So it was a really interesting

00:21:35
process to go through the actual selection process all up,

00:21:38
started in 2013, from memory applications closed in August of

00:21:44
2013. And actually announced that 100 In February of 2015. So

00:21:50
realistically, the five, six years after that, that we've

00:21:55
been sort of, it's just been waiting. And it's been a whole

00:21:58
lot of waiting for the next phase, where they'd start

00:22:00
putting us together, put us into stressful situations, see how we

00:22:03
work together and teams problem solve, all those sort of things

00:22:06
that never eventuated? Unfortunately,

00:22:09
Matt Waters: yeah, yeah, I can imagine that the last thing that

00:22:11
we're looking for is alpha males that are just going to upset the

00:22:13
applecart

00:22:14
Josh Richards: we, I'll say it now that the programme shut

00:22:17
down, we had a, we had a few. And we, we also had a little

00:22:23
secret Facebook group, a secret Facebook group, where all of us

00:22:26
could get in there and chat amongst ourselves. And I don't

00:22:29
think I would be alone in saying that. There were a lot of us out

00:22:33
of that 100, that were very concerned about a couple of

00:22:36
specific individuals turning up, not yet no point delving into

00:22:43
into it too deeply. But those sorts of folks, they showed

00:22:47
their colours very early on. We all tried to give everyone as

00:22:52
much as best a chance as possible. And I had a couple of

00:22:55
interesting situations where I had potentially a really great

00:22:59
impression of someone that I'd seen do interviews, I'd emailed

00:23:04
them, I'd done all sorts of different things. And then I met

00:23:07
them in person and went, Oh, God, no, no, no, there is no way

00:23:10
we're going to Mars together. And likewise, folks who I

00:23:14
absolutely wrote off folks who I sort of thought no, like they're

00:23:18
an idiot, based on their interviews based on all sorts of

00:23:22
different interactions, I would then meet them and sort of go or

00:23:26
not 100% Sure. And then step back from the situation and go,

00:23:30
Oh, wait, no, no, he's, he's 22. Like, he's still figuring

00:23:35
himself out. Or he, you know, she was in an incredibly

00:23:40
stressful situation at that particular time. And so yeah,

00:23:44
it's been interesting, interacting with all of these

00:23:46
different candidates and getting an impression of who they are as

00:23:49
people. And actually seeing them over 10 years or five, six years

00:23:54
that we've all been shortlisted, seeing them actually develop as

00:23:57
people as well. It's been really interesting. I've made some

00:23:59
really fantastic friends out of it. But yeah, there were

00:24:03
definitely a few folks that we were we're hoping wouldn't be

00:24:07
further shortlisted later on, because they would not be the

00:24:10
great would not be the kind of people you'd want to go camping

00:24:13
with.

00:24:14
Matt Waters: Yeah. Oh, well, it would, you know, from the guys

00:24:18
that are running the show, it would make sense to leave people

00:24:20
like that and just to see how you react

00:24:23
Josh Richards: to it, then they discuss that as well. There's

00:24:27
definitely testing that would go on, and there are definitely

00:24:31
elements, they were deliberately they weren't being very upfront

00:24:34
about deliberately creating stressful environments for us.

00:24:38
There was going to be five or six days of essentially

00:24:40
corporate team building, but with all the controls taken off

00:24:44
it so the kind of, you know, you go and do a corporate team

00:24:47
building weekend and you kind of built do challenges and build

00:24:50
things together. Now make those same things competitive. Now

00:24:54
make everyone it completely and utterly exhausted with sleep

00:24:58
deprivation and Make it an environment where you know,

00:25:02
you're pushing to be part of a select group of 12 to 24 people

00:25:06
that would start the training, it probably would have gotten

00:25:10
quite ugly quite quickly. And so those more hostile

00:25:15
personalities, hopefully would have been filtered out in the

00:25:17
first couple of days. But I know that they would have left some

00:25:20
people in because some folks, it's, it's that whole thing of

00:25:24
some folks push limits, and other folks pull back. And you

00:25:28
don't want a completely conservative group. And you

00:25:31
don't want to complete the progressive group, you want that

00:25:33
internal tension. But it's about that group finding a balance

00:25:37
with that tension, so that, you know, so and so pisses me off,

00:25:41
but they come up with fantastic ideas, and so and sofas has me

00:25:45
off, because they are always holding things back. But

00:25:49
sometimes I need to be held back, so I don't go and do

00:25:51
stupid things. So it's about finding that crew dynamic that

00:25:55
works for everyone.

00:25:57
Matt Waters: Yeah, yeah, for sure. Now, how confident are you

00:26:01
that you got down to the whittling stick?

00:26:04
Josh Richards: I, I don't know. I am still not entirely

00:26:08
convinced that I have got the right personality type for and

00:26:11
since the programme shut down, and I've started getting

00:26:13
involved in other things, I've become even less certain about

00:26:17
that. At the time I was quite I was like, you know, I'm, I'm not

00:26:22
certain, but I'm going to do everything I can to make this a

00:26:24
reality. I've shaped my entire life around this, I've become an

00:26:27
ambassador for I've cut off relationships, I've done all

00:26:30
sorts of different things to make Mars my life. And then as

00:26:36
we all started to sort of lose a bit of faith in it. And then

00:26:39
eventually the project shut down. I started questioning a

00:26:42
lot more of that, and started to sort of recognise that, hey, I

00:26:46
do have a lot more to offer here on Earth, I've got a lot of

00:26:48
things that I could be doing. And maybe, you know, completely

00:26:54
and utterly obsessing on this one thing, which To its credit,

00:26:58
kept me focused for 10 years, which nothing else has ever done

00:27:01
for keeping me on the track for that. Maybe there's other things

00:27:07
I could do. So I'm still uncertain. I'm glad that I got

00:27:12
as far as I did. I feel like I would have been in for a decent

00:27:16
chance to get through the next cut into this into the group of

00:27:21
the 12 to 24 people that would actually start 10 years of

00:27:24
training. Whether or not I would have been on that first crew, I

00:27:29
I've always said I don't care. And I that's one thing I'm very,

00:27:32
very certain about. I've never actually cared about any of it,

00:27:36
whether I was specifically part of it, the important thing for

00:27:39
me was that someone was doing it. It was always about someone

00:27:43
getting involved. And the best way for me to advocate for

00:27:46
people going and living on other planets was to put my hand up

00:27:49
and sign to be there to be one of the folks who go yes, I would

00:27:52
have 100% do this, and advocate for that. So whether or not I

00:27:57
personally was the right person for it. I don't know. I may

00:28:01
never know. But I knew the best way to support the ideas to

00:28:07
support what I wanted to see happen was to put my hand up for

00:28:12
Matt Waters: effort at first. And what a hell of an experience

00:28:16
Josh Richards: it was there. It was an adventure. I think we we

00:28:18
figured it out that I spoke to something like 130 kids over

00:28:22
the space of seven or eight years like it was Yeah. And to

00:28:25
me, that's the biggest thing that was the far more important

00:28:28
thing out of it. If, if an astronaut had come and visited

00:28:32
my school, when I was in year seven, when I was 12, or

00:28:35
something like that, it would have changed my whole life, I

00:28:39
almost certainly wouldn't have gone into the military, I

00:28:42
probably would have gone down a far more focused pathway with

00:28:47
science engineering, even more than what I did. I'm glad for

00:28:51
the experience that I had, I'm glad that I went off and did all

00:28:54
the different things that I did, because it did make me a good

00:28:57
candidate for what they were looking for. But if someone had

00:29:01
come along and visited my my school when I was in primary

00:29:04
school and talked about how when I grew up, I'd have the

00:29:08
opportunity to you know, potentially live on another

00:29:11
planet, it would have made a huge impact for me. So that was

00:29:14
the much bigger thing that was far more important for me than

00:29:17
whether or not the project ever succeeded. It was being able to

00:29:20
basically go and speak to year six and sevens in particular,

00:29:24
and sort of say hey, science is pretty awesome don't lose

00:29:28
interest in it get involved. And there's really cool things that

00:29:31
you can do if you if you pursue this so yeah, I'm happy about

00:29:36
that right.

00:29:37
Matt Waters: It's a great age to get them as well because perfect

00:29:40
I even going on nearly 50 years old I still remember being a kid

00:29:44
and wishing that I was going to be an astronaut one day and fly

00:29:47
through fly to the moon. You know what to have a dude rock up

00:29:50
and say, you know, this is what we're gonna do. It's it's like

00:29:53
wow,

00:29:54
Josh Richards: yeah. And even if my biggest hope with all of it

00:29:58
was not that I would Don't necessarily walk on Mars, it

00:30:02
would be that potentially one of the 130, something 1000 kids

00:30:06
that I spoke to, they would do it, it's far more important for

00:30:11
me that that idea is supported. And of those kids, you know,

00:30:16
maybe one or two would have the opportunity to go and walk on

00:30:19
another planet. But 10s of 1000s of the others would be involved

00:30:23
in industries that would be supporting that would be making

00:30:26
life better on earth, all these different elements. So it's a

00:30:30
bit like, you know, a kid wanting to be a fighter pilot,

00:30:33
when, when I was in my early teens, I wanted to be a fighter

00:30:37
pilot, I want to fly FA teens. And learning more about that

00:30:43
later on. It's like, you've got one fighter pilot, but you've

00:30:45
got a crew of, you know, 100 plus people who refuel it, do

00:30:51
maintenance on it. Like, directed after a flight. So you

00:30:57
know, there's hundreds of, of people hours that go into a

00:31:01
single flight hour for an F 18. Same as you know, driving f

00:31:05
ones, you've got this enormous crew of people that support one

00:31:09
driver, the drivers just at the pointy ends, and we all sort of

00:31:13
go, Oh, that's amazing. But there's a massive crew of people

00:31:16
that are there to support it. So I suppose I wanted to inspire

00:31:22
kids by talking about walking on another planet, but also

00:31:25
encourage the ones who wouldn't necessarily do that themselves,

00:31:28
but then might go and build rovers that support the people

00:31:32
on Mars, and all those different things. So that was far more

00:31:35
important for me than actually succeeding. Ever was

00:31:40
Matt Waters: good on you, mate. And, obviously, you're still

00:31:43
very active, we're doing the public speaking for the kids is

00:31:45
that going to just continue as long as you can,

00:31:47
Josh Richards: I'd like to, I don't actively pursue it

00:31:51
anymore. It is a little bit complicated for me, because I

00:31:54
have to add that sort of that little asterix on the end of it

00:31:58
turn around and saying, I'm not going anymore. If someone

00:32:02
offered me an opportunity, I'd sign up again, in a heartbeat.

00:32:06
But the project that I was involved in has shut down. And

00:32:09
that kind of, especially when it comes to the corporate speaking

00:32:12
side of things, corporate want to talk to someone who's who's

00:32:17
who's doing going places, schools are much more flexible.

00:32:21
They're sort of go oh, you know, we'd like you to come and talk

00:32:23
about Mars, you're a math specialist. But the corporate

00:32:27
speaking, the keynote side of things is definitely dialled

00:32:29
down quite a bit. And COVID knocked a huge hole in it as

00:32:32
well, that basically put a stop to pretty much everything for a

00:32:36
while there. And, but you know, different things. One of the

00:32:40
cool things about the cave diving side of stuff was

00:32:42
shifting out of as Mars One was kind of winding down. I found an

00:32:48
interest in the love for cave diving. And so I'm in the

00:32:52
process at the moment of sort of going well, if I'm not talking,

00:32:55
if we're not doing corporate keynotes about Mars anymore.

00:32:58
Maybe I can start doing corporate keynotes about cave

00:33:01
exploration. So it's, yeah, I'm, I'm writing that transition

00:33:06
phase. At the moment, I think the next few months will decide

00:33:08
whether or not I want to pursue that if I actually want to talk

00:33:11
to people anymore. Or, or, if I yeah, I focus on on book

00:33:17
writing, which is one of the other things that I've

00:33:19
absolutely loved for the last 10 years or so.

00:33:23
Matt Waters: Well, it's, I think it's a nice transition that you

00:33:28
know, the concept of living on another planet. And then I

00:33:31
explained to people, you know, people ask why I go dive and

00:33:34
it's actually visiting another world without leaving this

00:33:37
planet. And you know, what you do and what many other awesome

00:33:41
dudes and dudettes do is cave dive in, which is taking that to

00:33:45
the extreme even more. I hats off to you. Yeah, crazy.

00:33:54
Josh Richards: So Kate diving is an interesting one. For me. I

00:33:57
again, I've been diving most of my life, but it's mostly felt

00:34:02
like work. So you know, diving with dad getting crayfish, you

00:34:07
know, animals that I don't eat. And it's that always kind of

00:34:11
felt a bit like work but you know, you're doing it with that.

00:34:14
It's kind of an you know, that's a fun experience. And then doing

00:34:18
with the Navy, obviously was actual work. If I'd gone on to

00:34:21
do it with the Royal Marines, it would have been more work.

00:34:25
Teaching Scuba always felt like work to me always felt like I

00:34:28
was pushing people through a course. So we'd be able to go

00:34:33
and do cool stuff afterwards. It was never about them learning or

00:34:36
I'm not a I'm not a teacher like that. I'm not the kind of person

00:34:40
who goes are you know, I see the joy in someone's eyes when they

00:34:44
finally understand. I'm like, good you finally learnt this

00:34:47
crap. Let's move on and go and do something cool. And I've I

00:34:51
suppose in the last 12 months or so I've kind of stepped into a

00:34:55
bit more of a especially amongst cave divers a bit more of a

00:34:57
mentoring role where I'm not Teaching people anything, but

00:35:01
I'm helping them get through their, their their dives, if

00:35:05
they need to log a certain number of dives in a certain

00:35:07
number of sites, I will go and do that with them. And I won't

00:35:11
say that's felt like work. But it's been more of a case of I'm

00:35:15
helping them. I'm helping facilitate them move forward.

00:35:19
But yeah, definitely, I suppose I've had numerous people through

00:35:23
the years tell me Oh, you'd be an amazing teacher. I'm like,

00:35:25
I'd be a terrible teacher. Like I, all I do is I push people

00:35:30
through to try and get them to a certification so that when we're

00:35:34
allowed to go and do something much cooler, like can you hurry

00:35:37
up and get through this? So we can go and do that over there?

00:35:40
So the cave diving is very different from me. There's no

00:35:45
sun. There's no Wrigley's to grab you. There's no, it's

00:35:50
literally you put your gear on. You get in the water. And it

00:35:53
does. Doesn't matter what time of day it is, it doesn't matter.

00:35:56
Like you've always got lights on. So I've gone in and done

00:36:00
dives come out. And it's, you know, the sun is set afterwards.

00:36:04
And you're like, holy crap, like where did that go? Or surfacing

00:36:09
especially in somewhere like Mount Gambier, it's raining as

00:36:12
you're gearing up, you'll get into the water and you'll come

00:36:14
out and then you'll get a sunburn as you're getting out of

00:36:16
the water, because the weather is cleared. So it definitely

00:36:21
feels like a disconnect, you completely disconnect from the

00:36:24
rest of reality. While you're on the dive. You're focused on the

00:36:27
dive, you might occasionally have stray thoughts about other

00:36:30
things, but generally, you're focused on how deep are my how

00:36:34
far into the cave? Am I? Where are we going next? Where do I

00:36:37
leave my stage? Cylinder? You're, there's a whole raft of

00:36:40
different things all happening at once. Why are we doing this?

00:36:43
Where are we We're trying to get to all those. And I love that.

00:36:48
diving in the ocean. Like the running joke with my partner is

00:36:53
that why would I dive in the ocean whales shit in the ocean?

00:36:57
Like it's not it's not for caves. Caves seem to be my

00:37:04
thing. I would cave dive every day, if I could. Whereas I never

00:37:09
felt that level of passion for diving in the ocean or teaching

00:37:12
people or anything else. I found my niche, I suppose.

00:37:16
Matt Waters: Yeah. Well, so let's just wind it back a little

00:37:19
bit. How did we go from from Mars? And then back into dive

00:37:25
in? Did you have that that dry spell where you just literally

00:37:28
walked away from Scuba dive and then came back to it?

00:37:30
Josh Richards: Yeah. So I didn't dive for about seven or eight

00:37:32
years all up. And even after I left the military, I sort of I

00:37:38
looked at maybe teaching again and sort of went, I really know

00:37:42
not for me. Weirdly enough, it was I ended up doing three

00:37:47
comedy shows about Mars. And the last show that I did was called

00:37:52
Cosmic nomad. And I, the entire focus around that book and show

00:37:59
the focus of the show at the time it was originally a show

00:38:02
was looking at the things that you would do before you left

00:38:06
Earth. So you know, you've got 10 years left on Earth, what do

00:38:09
you do with your time, and I've had a book 101 things to do for

00:38:13
you die that was given to me by a friend from high school. I've

00:38:16
had that for years, and I've worked through it and ticked a

00:38:19
lot of different things off, but it started to reach a point

00:38:22
where it felt like a box ticking exercise. Yeah, I started as

00:38:26
part of this show. And then I did it even more. So when I

00:38:29
turned it into a book, I really started to ask myself, what are

00:38:33
the things I would want to do before I left Earth. And then

00:38:36
one thing that came through crystal clear through all of it

00:38:38
was cave diving. I'd never learned to cave dive, I'd read

00:38:42
about Dave shore, the Australian pilot for Cathay Pacific, who

00:38:47
died in Bushmans hole in 2005. At 286 metres or whatever it was

00:38:54
trying to recover. Dion dries body. And I that that book was

00:39:00
supposed to terrify people, like when I read raising the dead it

00:39:03
was supposed to be this is terrifying. This is so complex,

00:39:07
but I read it and went, Oh my God, I want to learn to dive on

00:39:11
a rebreather and I want to dive in cave. So that was my instant

00:39:13
reaction to reading raising the dead and it took a lot longer.

00:39:19
It took a very long time before I actually circled back around

00:39:22
to that and went this is the one thing if I if I move to Mars and

00:39:27
had to live on a cold, dead, dusty planet, like an

00:39:31
underground Martian vampire for the rest of my life. What's the

00:39:36
one thing I would miss? And it was I said Scuba diving, and

00:39:39
then I started thinking about it more. I was like, it's not the

00:39:42
Scuba diving. We'd be a little bit weightless. It's only 1/3 of

00:39:45
Earth's gravity on Mars. We'd have all that weightlessness

00:39:48
getting there. It's not the Scuba diving. It's actually

00:39:52
learned cave dive. It's discovering more and where does

00:39:55
this go and does this connect to this and all those sorts of

00:39:58
things. So And it was, yeah, it was a fairly big realisation for

00:40:03
me that I really wanted to learn to cave dive and I actually

00:40:06
stopped writing the book. I turned, I was turning the show

00:40:10
into a book. And I actually paused right in the book for

00:40:14
about four or five months to go and learn to cave dive. So the

00:40:19
book is still written as if I hadn't learned to cave dive, I

00:40:22
kind of had to put myself back into a mindset of I haven't done

00:40:25
this yet. But it made a huge difference. And it held up the

00:40:31
finishing of the book by quite a bit. Because I had found

00:40:35
something that I'd always wanted to do my entire life and I was

00:40:38
finally doing it.

00:40:39
Matt Waters: Yeah. And by this time, were you in Mount Gambia,

00:40:43
Josh Richards: I ended up moving to mount Gambia for it. So I

00:40:47
went to Mount Gambier March 2019. For my we call basic cave

00:40:53
entry level cave diving cause through the CDA, it was a week

00:40:57
long. I had already organised a house set afterwards to work on

00:41:03
the book immediately afterwards. And so I kind of I wanted to

00:41:06
stay I really wanted to stick around. I had a series of house

00:41:09
sets after that, and I didn't manage to get back to my Gambia

00:41:12
until the August, at which point I did the level to the cave

00:41:15
rated course. And during that course, got offered a job at the

00:41:20
dive shop that was in Mount Gambier there for a while and

00:41:25
had another house set to go and work on the book again, and then

00:41:28
came back in the October of that year, and started working there

00:41:32
and started living in Mount Gambier, essentially. So, I was

00:41:36
only there for about four months without delving into it too

00:41:41
deeply. That dive shop was pretty, pretty hostile, a very

00:41:45
hostile working environment. And I do not miss it. made some good

00:41:50
friends out of it. But yeah, the management was pretty subpar.

00:41:56
And I escaped in about February, and at the time, my, like, my

00:42:01
partner at the time, ended up nearly dying in a car crash

00:42:04
right before COVID started. So yeah, 2020 was pretty intense.

00:42:10
We I wound up we, yeah, we were broken up but I wound up being

00:42:14
who live in carer for 10 months to sort of help rehabilitate her

00:42:19
through COVID in Melbourne. And then yeah, it wasn't until the

00:42:23
end of 2020 that I moved back out to Mount Gambier properly

00:42:26
and took over the habitat the accommodation for cave divers

00:42:30
out there, which I've now just sold as well. Always like a

00:42:35
hermit crab.

00:42:40
Matt Waters: And let's just bear in mind that we're we've got a

00:42:43
fair few listeners that know nothing about Australia and

00:42:46
Mount Gambier. Can you paint a picture of kind of see and what

00:42:49
it's like down there,

00:42:49
Josh Richards: short version, Mount Gambia probably looks and

00:42:53
feels a lot like the West Country of the UK. So it's

00:42:57
actually not doesn't feel dissimilar from where I was with

00:43:01
the Royal Marines around lympstone and Exeter and places

00:43:04
like that, rolling countryside, lots of pine forest. And all

00:43:09
that pine forest is there because it's an enormous

00:43:12
limestone cast. So the whole region, it's, it's all

00:43:16
limestone. It's all very soft. The entire area has also been

00:43:20
lifted by volcanic activity. So the most recent sort of volcanic

00:43:24
activity we've had in Australia has lifted that whole region up.

00:43:27
And so we are essentially cave diving through old coral reefs

00:43:33
old sort of compacted what used to be the ocean floor has now

00:43:37
been lifted up by this volcanic activity, the water running

00:43:40
through it has created these caves. And so the whole areas

00:43:44
very lush, very green, gets lots of rain, and has holes open up

00:43:50
in the middle of paddocks all the time or in the middle of

00:43:52
town that then sort of create these opportunities for us to go

00:43:57
diving freshwater cave diving throughout the whole region. So

00:44:01
it's Australia's most extensive freshwater cast system. And it's

00:44:08
probably the highest proportion of little holes, little areas.

00:44:13
It's it's a strange, it's realistically it's Australia's

00:44:15
cave diving sort of hub. It's the capital for cave diving in

00:44:19
the whole region.

00:44:21
Matt Waters: Yeah, yeah, that's definitely definitely. And let's

00:44:26
start let's have a little look at a little look. Let's have a

00:44:30
good look at this this dive that has led to you you know, find

00:44:37
him find him okay. Yeah, well, effectively. It's a it's a is it

00:44:42
a completely new covert? It's just a it's an extension.

00:44:46
Josh Richards: Yeah, so the the short version is angle breaks

00:44:48
cave is right in the centre of Mount Gambier. Literally Jubilee

00:44:52
Highway, which runs through the middle of town is right next to

00:44:56
it. There's a little cafe that sits on the top of this cave

00:44:59
opening. And for divers, we talk about angle bricks east and

00:45:03
angle bricks West. It's a central Boleyn. And like I said,

00:45:06
the cafe sits on the top of the doline. And people go down and

00:45:09
they go for a little bit of a drive tour and see all sorts of

00:45:13
different weird and wonderful things. The divers carry their

00:45:15
gear gear down to the water, and you can either go east or west,

00:45:19
people who've been diving both sides for the last probably 3040

00:45:23
years, the western side has always been more extensive. So

00:45:27
it's a bit more complicated. It's a it's a level three, it's

00:45:30
advanced cave. And you've got to squeeze through this little hole

00:45:35
at the start, swim for 7080 metres that pops up into an air

00:45:39
chamber and you can get out climb over the air chamber and

00:45:42
there's a series of tunnels that run off from that as well. If

00:45:46
people make the effort to go and dive at angle bricks, they

00:45:49
generally advanced cave divers and they generally go into West

00:45:52
because it's much more extensive. East has always been

00:45:55
considered a bit of a puddle. So you crawl you walk down this

00:45:59
area, get to the water, climb into the water, there's maybe 30

00:46:04
metres of passage at the most. We've We've joked about it quite

00:46:08
a bit recently that people could pretty much free diver if they

00:46:11
wanted to, they could free dive through. There's another air

00:46:14
chamber on the other side with quite a large rock pile. There's

00:46:18
a bit of a side passage or what round one little area but

00:46:21
realistically, there's maybe 40 metres of passage in engelberg

00:46:27
seats. It has been a place where a lot of Level Two cave divers

00:46:32
have gone because there's only rated for cave, or it was only

00:46:36
rated for cave levels. So quite a few cave divers would go to

00:46:39
the effort of carrying all their gear down there, go and do this

00:46:42
30 metre swim, muck around for a little bit and then come back

00:46:46
and log one of the 25 divers that they need to log as K rated

00:46:50
divers before they can move up to advanced. But generally, it's

00:46:54
a one dive and done. Yeah, I did my level two course in August

00:47:01
2019. And before we went down to angle Brexit just before we went

00:47:06
and jumped in there mate of mine and I, we both recently

00:47:09
certified, chatted to a another diver who sort of mentioned that

00:47:14
there was a bit of a puddle at one end. So once you pop up into

00:47:17
the surface, this is huge rock pile. But if you go and scramble

00:47:21
over the whole rock pile, climb up a series of rocks and climb

00:47:24
down into a hole, you'll find that there's a bit of a pullback

00:47:27
there. So we're like, let's go and check it out. Technically,

00:47:30
we probably weren't qualified like we will get technically

00:47:34
we're entering a second sub, we might have been breaking a few

00:47:36
rules here and there. But it didn't feel seem like much of a

00:47:41
big problem. And I know the rules have changed since then.

00:47:44
So it wasn't it's not a problem now, but at the time, we were

00:47:46
sort of like, Oh, we're not sure if we're doing the right thing

00:47:49
here. We climbed over all these rocks carrying cylinders. It's

00:47:53
like this is deeply unpleasant, climbed down into this hole,

00:47:57
I've got into a war and realistically the puddle that we

00:48:01
got into would probably be about the size of my office here. So

00:48:06
maybe, I don't know, maybe five or six metres wide and maybe

00:48:11
sort of eight, nine metres long. And probably only two or three

00:48:16
metres deep. We jumped in there went Yep, this is a bit of an

00:48:20
adventure swam around. And as we're swimming around, I I'd

00:48:23
read a little bit about how some of the caves on the Nullarbor

00:48:27
had been sort of extensions had been found by people looking at

00:48:31
holes in the roof. So rather than looking down for leads and

00:48:35
looking sideways for leads looking up, and so I sort of

00:48:38
shine my light up and it bounced off a reflection, suddenly saw

00:48:42
this mirror, bounce off the roof. I'm like what the hell is

00:48:45
that swam over to her, and it was a surface. So we popped up,

00:48:49
put her head through and shone a light and climbed up onto this

00:48:52
sort of this beachy type area and shone a light through could

00:48:56
see beyond that there was a muddy room and there was a bit

00:48:59
more water in one corner and a few other things. It was a

00:49:01
nasty, dry squeeze, like it was ugly to go through there. So we

00:49:05
sort of had a look. We're in dry suits and went, you know what,

00:49:08
this is enough adventure for today. Let's go. But I got a bee

00:49:12
in my bonnet about it. I sort of went now there's something else

00:49:15
back there. And Maddie and I sort of went back a few days

00:49:19
later we took wetsuits, we went back to the same place squeezed

00:49:22
through, got into this muddy room at the back. There was

00:49:27
quite a large puddle in one corner. And I sort of looked at

00:49:30
it and went I'm gonna go through that, put the gear back on,

00:49:33
wriggled through this ugly, ugly hole and popped up and found

00:49:39
essentially a series of sumps on the other side and went holy

00:49:42
crap. This is amazing. Like we've definitely found something

00:49:45
bizarre back here like I don't know, this is not on the maps.

00:49:48
This is very new. We don't know what this is very, very cool. It

00:49:53
was what December 2019. Matt ended up getting a job with the

00:49:58
Antarctic Division so He's actually down in Antarctica has

00:50:01
been down in Antarctica for the last 15 months. I've kept going

00:50:05
with the diving but obviously COVID has happened a bunch of

00:50:08
different things happen. So it wasn't realistically until

00:50:10
maybe, or mid 2020 that I actually got back in there to

00:50:16
have a second look and have a look at it properly. I'd gone

00:50:21
through a pool. So once we've gone through that ugly little

00:50:23
hole, there was a pool on the other side. And I sort of went,

00:50:26
Oh, this is pretty cool. There's another pool back here. Didn't

00:50:29
give it a whole lot of thought because I thought I know there's

00:50:31
a series of sumps let's keep following the sumps. And when I

00:50:35
got back in May 2020, I kind of dislodged a bit of silt, I

00:50:40
dragged my fin through a dislodged a bit of silt, and I

00:50:43
just laid on the surface of this lake and watch the silt roll

00:50:46
down and went, Oh, that's really pretty. And as I'm watching the

00:50:48
silt rolling down this hill, suddenly it whips away to the

00:50:51
right hand side and completely the wrong direction. And I'll go

00:50:54
Ward is that and I've swum down and essentially found the start

00:50:59
of what we now know is the angle breaks extension. So it was the

00:51:02
start of Yeah, so far, we've laid a bit over 400 metres of

00:51:07
line in the new tunnel, and it just keeps going. Like it just

00:51:10
keeps extending in all different directions. The cave is

00:51:14
completely hooked back around on itself. We talked about Engel

00:51:17
bricks East so it's heading you know, on a South East line, but

00:51:20
this thing is actually hooked all the way back to go west

00:51:23
again. There's a branch that then heads almost directly south

00:51:26
like and it breaks off in two different directions. Like

00:51:28
there's Yeah, it's a spider web. We always knew there was a

00:51:31
spiderweb network of caves under Mount Gambier. We just weren't

00:51:35
expecting it to be at the back of this crappy little puddle

00:51:38
that people have been ignoring for last 40 years. So it's, it's

00:51:43
pretty exciting to be involved in this definitely more to be

00:51:45
discovered. The logistics of getting there as the challenge

00:51:49
for a lot of people carrying gear over rock piles dragging

00:51:54
things in. It feels like more of a Nullarbor dive than it does a

00:51:58
normal Mac Gambia dive normally Mount Gambier, you pull up

00:52:01
somewhere, put your gear on, get in the water, go for a dive.

00:52:05
This is put your gear on, drag it down seven flights of stairs,

00:52:09
go through some water, drag it over a 70 metre rock pile, get

00:52:13
into some more water, drag it through more dry cave, drag it

00:52:16
through a god awful hole that I've had a friend nearly drown

00:52:19
in to then then start the dive. So the logistics of getting in

00:52:26
there as is hard and quite dangerous at times have been

00:52:29
quite dangerous at times. But we've it's certainly a lot safer

00:52:33
than it used to be. Just from traffic, people actually going

00:52:37
in and out of there. It's sort of smoothed off some of those

00:52:39
really jagged rocks, and it's made it a lot safer. But it's

00:52:43
still very difficult to get in there. It's not a cave, that's

00:52:46
gonna get a lot of traffic, but it's probably the most exciting

00:52:49
area of development that we've got in Mac Gambia and have had

00:52:53
for a long time.

00:52:55
Matt Waters: And you say it's, you know, it's quite

00:52:58
restrictive. I'm assuming that someone my size, it would

00:53:00
probably be a no no.

00:53:02
Josh Richards: It depends so it's interesting. We we've had a

00:53:05
few different folks at different sizes go through okay, I've got

00:53:09
a mate who is recently become advanced cave. So they've

00:53:13
they've changed the rating for the cave, the the entrance part,

00:53:17
the part that everyone has known about for years and years

00:53:19
remains level two remains cave rated, but the extension has

00:53:23
been made level three. And it's going to be interesting. We've

00:53:27
got a mate coming back hopefully soon. He's just done his level

00:53:31
three courses advanced cave course. And he's huge like

00:53:35
Dave's Dave's a big boys six foot two. He's not he's not

00:53:38
heavy. He's not fat. Let's say that. He is He works out like

00:53:44
he's a big lad. I will be very interested to see how Dave goes

00:53:48
getting through that hole. The biggest thing that we've noticed

00:53:52
with it, it's it's been made more difficult going in and out

00:53:56
of there by carrying cylinders. Me being a little gremlin the

00:54:00
way that I am. I've just been going straight through so I've

00:54:03
kept my rig on I've kept my cylinders on and I've like

00:54:06
hassled through I've had a mate who's a bit tall and he still is

00:54:10
very lean. He's tried to squeeze through with these cylinders on

00:54:15
feet first and he's the one that we ended up holding his head out

00:54:18
of the water there's a puddle of water that he nearly got himself

00:54:20
stuck in. So taking cylinders off makes that whole process a

00:54:26
lot easier and safer. And that's the big thing that we're

00:54:28
encouraging people to do now anytime they go and do it don't

00:54:32
do what I do on the videos take the cylinders off wriggle

00:54:38
through and then as a team pass the cylinders through it's just

00:54:42
I know that particular restriction well enough and I'm

00:54:45
small enough that I can just rego through with the cylinder

00:54:48
still on but pretty much every one that goes through now we get

00:54:51
them to take them off.

00:54:53
Matt Waters: Yeah, and this whole process you know when once

00:54:56
you found it did you apart from the obvious LH And that would be

00:55:00
going on? Did you decide to keep it a bit of a secret? Or were

00:55:03
you kind of jump out the hole? Again? I guess? Well, we've

00:55:06
Josh Richards: got, we had to be careful. I'm a very open, open

00:55:09
kind of person, like I want to, when I find anything I want to

00:55:13
share anything I'm excited about, I desperately want to

00:55:16
share it. We had to be really careful, primarily because the

00:55:21
site was cave rated. But the part that we'd found that it was

00:55:26
level two rated, the section that we'd found was advanced

00:55:30
sidemount like it was, there were areas in there that were

00:55:34
incredibly tight. For much further into the cave, there's a

00:55:39
there's a restriction that we call the dormouse. And there's

00:55:43
literally two of us that have ever been through it. And it's

00:55:46
me and Ryan cash kowski and Ryan's like world renowned cave

00:55:49
Explorer, and Ryan has turned around me and gone make that

00:55:53
thing's a bit tight. Like, yeah, it's a pretty, it is a very ugly

00:55:59
restriction. And there's others through the whole area that

00:56:04
yeah, they they feel unstable, or they feel very complex,

00:56:08
there's some there's some really nasty restrictions through it.

00:56:11
So what we've discovered, definitely an advanced cave,

00:56:15
also complicated by the sort of the cave diving politics in the

00:56:21
this is in the middle of town, it's not just some hole out in

00:56:23
the Nullarbor somewhere that, you know, folks from different

00:56:26
places can get approval to it's literally under the streets of

00:56:29
Mount Gambia. So it was quite a complex kind of political

00:56:35
situation for the cave divers Association, in particular, of

00:56:39
how do we navigate this? How do we negotiate with Matt, Gambia

00:56:43
City Council? How do we navigate with the cafe owner? How do we

00:56:46
navigate with all these different parties, because we've

00:56:49
made this major discovery in a cave that folks had been sort of

00:56:53
realistically ignoring for last 40 years. So I didn't want to

00:56:58
keep it secret. I also had to make sure that I didn't sort of,

00:57:03
in the process upset the wrong people. I'm, I'm a newbie, I'm a

00:57:07
new guy like, and to have a new guy come in and suddenly find

00:57:11
this big new cave was definitely going to upset a few folks. So I

00:57:17
had to tread really carefully there for quite a long time. So

00:57:20
even though we made these sort of major discoveries back, sort

00:57:23
of, you know, early 2021, mid 2021. It's only just recently it

00:57:29
was only at the cave divers Association AGM November 5, that

00:57:34
we actually went public with it. i For folks who came along to Oz

00:57:38
Tech, I gave him a teaser of it, I gave him quite a substantial

00:57:41
teaser, and any cave diver that has dived angle breaks, I knew

00:57:45
exactly where we were. But I didn't name it. Because I'd sort

00:57:49
of I'd made a promise that we would keep it under wraps so

00:57:52
that we could control the information and the CDA could

00:57:55
put in control measures to make sure that inexperienced divers

00:58:00
didn't go and try and attempt this thing. There were a couple

00:58:02
of folks we were particularly concerned about who very, very

00:58:09
talented, dry cavers, very talented and very experienced in

00:58:13
a lot different areas, but not necessarily experienced cave

00:58:16
divers. And there was a real concern that some of those folks

00:58:20
would have one look at the dry cave section and go, that's

00:58:24
easy, we will knock that out and then get themselves in some

00:58:27
really dangerous trouble later on underwater. And yet, the

00:58:35
information hadn't been shared effectively. Rescue plans

00:58:38
haven't been put in place. There's all these different

00:58:40
things that we needed to put in place to try and protect people.

00:58:43
So yeah, I had to stay cagey about it for quite a long time,

00:58:45
which I hated. But it's lovely. It's wonderful to now be able to

00:58:49
share it with people and encourage people to go there

00:58:52
folks who are qualified to do it, go there and find more stuff

00:58:55
because there's more cave to be found. It's not my cave at all.

00:59:00
It's super exciting that other folks are going in there and

00:59:02
looking themselves.

00:59:05
Matt Waters: Well, it's not your code, but I think it's quite

00:59:06
safe to say that your name stamped.

00:59:10
Josh Richards: Yeah, I think there's going to be some sort of

00:59:12
association and the but again, a bit like the mouse stuff. That's

00:59:15
not my thing. I don't care about my name going down in in history

00:59:20
books or anything like that. I care about us discovering more

00:59:22
cool stuff. So I'm much more excited about the discoveries

00:59:26
that have come that will come from the angle Brexit extension

00:59:30
when other people go in there and find more stuff. I still

00:59:33
really strongly believe that there's more tunnels to be found

00:59:37
and that tunnel will potentially connect up to a cave that's

00:59:40
right in the centre of town like right next to the library, the

00:59:44
cave Gardens, which is about a kilometre away from Engel bricks

00:59:47
on a South East Line. I still strongly suspect that those two

00:59:52
caves are connected. So I would love for someone to come along

00:59:56
and prove that right to go and find the connection between the

00:59:59
two

01:00:00
Matt Waters: Well, I think Stephen Fordyce might listen. If

01:00:04
he's not been there already.

01:00:07
Josh Richards: He tends to go a lot colder. Wow. I shouldn't say

01:00:09
a lot colder. Fordyce was here not that long ago actually we

01:00:13
had a good chat about survey and all those sort of things. And he

01:00:18
has definitely got his work cut out for him in Tasmania. He's

01:00:22
got so much work down there that he needs to do. So I'm sure he'd

01:00:26
love to go and check out the the extension. But I know he's Yeah,

01:00:30
I know. He's pretty focused down in Tassie.

01:00:33
Matt Waters: Yeah, yeah. Hey, how we mentioned previous when

01:00:38
we were talking about the scientific aspects of this find

01:00:42
what's what's, what's the, what's going to come out of that.

01:00:45
Josh Richards: So the big thing, I suppose that came out of all

01:00:48
of this, the initial discovery, talking about me and Maddie

01:00:51
Haysbert going and finding this puddle, blah, blah. That was one

01:00:55
thing, what was really interesting to come out of all

01:00:57
of it was the survey. So I had a bit of time during COVID, to

01:01:03
during 2020 do a bit of research, I couldn't dive these

01:01:06
places. But I could look up as much information as possible, I

01:01:09
ended up getting myself a survey tool, one of them and emos that

01:01:12
allowed me to start surveying some of this stuff. So as soon

01:01:15
as I got back to my Gambia, that became the survey project. So I

01:01:18
started trying to do as much survey as possible. And looking

01:01:21
at angle brex. East was particularly interesting,

01:01:24
because I knew about this series of sumps, I knew that we'd found

01:01:26
at the end of 2019. And looking at it, and using the survey

01:01:31
data, it became really clear that what we'd actually found

01:01:35
was a fissure line. So it was split, because the whole area

01:01:39
has been lifted by volcanic action. There's all this fissure

01:01:41
lines that run across it. And in that particular part of of the

01:01:45
region, all the fissure lines run sort of SES, they run on

01:01:49
about 140 degrees. So we'd looked into it. And this angle

01:01:54
bricks, fissure that we'd found was running once again at 140

01:01:58
degrees. So we were thinking, Okay, we need to push that line

01:02:01
we need to keep following along there. And that's why when I

01:02:04
sort of I went back in initially, I was following the

01:02:07
sumps and kept trying to pursue this 140 degree line. What I

01:02:12
hadn't realised and it took a bit more research and

01:02:15
conversations with people like Ian Lewis. We call him cave,

01:02:20
Santis. He's a cave diving geologist. And he's, yeah, Ian's

01:02:25
incredible, like Louie has been doing stuff for so long. And

01:02:30
understands the shapes of the cave, so chatting to him.

01:02:34
chatting to him was really interesting to sort of discover,

01:02:37
you've got all these lines, but you've also got cross fractures

01:02:40
that connect them. And if you go and look at something like tank

01:02:43
cave, which is what everyone comes to now Gambia to dive, you

01:02:46
know, more than eight kilometres of passage, it's got all these

01:02:49
visual lines that you dive along, but there's also cross

01:02:52
fractures that connect that those tunnels together. And what

01:02:55
I actually found in Ingo bricks, we found the the initial fissure

01:02:59
line, but when I said the Silk Road the wrong way, it went off

01:03:03
to the right hand side, what we'd actually found was across

01:03:05
fracture, and the rooms that we found from there are still on

01:03:10
that 140 degrees, but they're running parallel to the initial

01:03:14
fracture line that we're on. So for me, I suppose out of all of

01:03:17
this, it's come back to the science backgrounds come back to

01:03:20
my physics degree, looking at all this stuff and going, Okay,

01:03:24
what is the cave actually doing? Don't get too bogged down in the

01:03:28
geology, look at the fracture lines, look at the over

01:03:31
overreaching patterns, where should we be checking? And I

01:03:36
suppose trying to apply a bit of a science to cave exploration

01:03:39
rather than, rather than just sort of going at it willy nilly.

01:03:43
I reckon I've got a feeling that there's something that there's a

01:03:46
lot of that that happens amongst the folks who do cave

01:03:49
exploration. And more often than not, they're not wrong. But it

01:03:54
feels a bit woolly. To me, it feels like a black art of being

01:03:57
like, oh, you know, someone's who can sniff out a cave, right?

01:04:01
Or it's like, I worked in, I worked in the mining industry as

01:04:05
a blaster for a while. And there was a lot of that as well. It's

01:04:09
like, oh, you know, it's blastings a black art. I was

01:04:11
like, it's not it's literally physics like we can, we can

01:04:15
physics this out. And I've kind of come at cave diving in much

01:04:20
the same way. It's like, yes, the cave does unusual,

01:04:23
unexpected things. But there are overreaching patterns here that

01:04:26
we can look for. And if we collect data, if we create

01:04:30
survey maps, if we look at overlays, we do all those sort

01:04:33
of things, we can see those overlaying things. My big thing

01:04:36
is about trying to connect caves, you know, this one is

01:04:39
close to this one. And we know that this one goes roughly this

01:04:42
way. So where's the connection? And where should we be looking

01:04:46
for a connection between the two and originally my interest in

01:04:49
survey came from trying to connect pines cave to stinging

01:04:52
nettle there. We know that they're very close to where they

01:04:55
are very, very close to each other. We know that pines cave

01:04:58
gets within about six He metres of the stinging nettle darling.

01:05:02
So I was trying to find a way to connect the two, by surveying

01:05:06
them and finding out which lead we should pursue and all those

01:05:09
sorts of things, we still haven't found the connection

01:05:12
between the two. But that's where the interest started from,

01:05:15
and applying that sort of scientific approach to it, look

01:05:19
at the data, and then be able to figure things out, we've made

01:05:23
discoveries in pines cave, not the ones that we wanted. But

01:05:25
we've made other discoveries in pines cave that people have been

01:05:28
sort of hypothesising, about for 2030 years, our we've managed to

01:05:34
prove it in a dive, we sort of went, Oh, you know, we think the

01:05:38
White Room is connected to the wedge room, let's go and find

01:05:40
out, we survey it. And sure enough, the dots are within half

01:05:43
a metre of each other. So you go down there, find a hole between

01:05:46
the two, and you pass a GoPro through it, and you prove the

01:05:48
connection between the two. So it's about I suppose, collecting

01:05:53
data, analysing that data, making theories out of it. And

01:05:58
then testing those theories, which is at its heart, it's that

01:06:01
science at its core.

01:06:03
Matt Waters: Yeah, yeah. And I mean, it helps having this this

01:06:06
kind of, I would assume a new set of eyes looking at it, you

01:06:11
know, it's,

01:06:11
Josh Richards: it's a really big challenge. Yeah. It's one of the

01:06:14
things that I've chatted to Ryan cash kowski, about quite a bit.

01:06:17
He's sort of said, it's nice. Because I am relatively new.

01:06:21
I've only been out this comparatively to other folks.

01:06:23
I've only been at this for three years or so. Having fresh eyes

01:06:28
fresh perspective makes a big difference. And it's been

01:06:31
wonderful diving with someone like Ryan, who I suppose he

01:06:35
looks at things a particular way. And he, he does things

01:06:39
quite intuitively. And I sort of go, Oh, why do you do that? And

01:06:43
he goes, Well, that's, that's just what you do. And I sort of

01:06:45
go, Oh, that's not what I do. And we don't compete with each

01:06:49
other. We run sort of parallel, and I see things that he

01:06:53
doesn't, and he sees things that I don't. And that's been

01:06:56
wonderful having that sort of that dual view of certain

01:06:59
places. Again, Ryan's one of the Ryan Ryan is the only other

01:07:04
person that has been to the far reaches of the Engel brex

01:07:08
extension so far. And he's seen things. And he's seen leads that

01:07:13
I completely missed. And I've seen other I've followed and

01:07:17
laid line in different areas that he didn't even notice was

01:07:20
there. So if you've got that perspective, and again, more

01:07:24
eyes on it, that's why I'm really excited about other

01:07:26
people diving this cave, because it will mean more eyes, more

01:07:29
perspectives, and more opportunities for people to

01:07:32
discover more so.

01:07:35
Matt Waters: And have you kind of slowed up going in there yet?

01:07:38
Are you still just hanging back in there as often as

01:07:41
Josh Richards: I have slowed right back. It was pretty

01:07:46
intense and selling selling the accommodation was a really big

01:07:49
one for me. So living in that Gambia was a bit much. I had

01:07:55
people staying with me all the time, wanting me to dive with

01:07:58
them. And I kind of fell into that mentoring role that I

01:08:00
talked about where I would go and dive with people to develop

01:08:03
their skills, and not necessarily be doing the diets

01:08:06
that I wanted to be doing. Now that I've moved up to Adelaide,

01:08:10
I'm getting into different work, I've gone back to study, I'm

01:08:13
doing a few different things. And it means those times that I

01:08:16
do go down to mount Gambia, they are much more intense. It's not

01:08:20
a we're going to sort of, you know, do you want to go for a

01:08:22
dive on and really feel like it. I'm going to watch such and such

01:08:25
it's like, no, no, we're here for a week. And this is the hit

01:08:29
list. This is where we're going to go I want to go and check out

01:08:31
this lead. I want to go and do this. I want to do that. Not

01:08:35
everyone is up for the challenge of Engel bricks extension. But

01:08:41
for the folks that I trust that I do want to do that with, we

01:08:45
organise time. So I'm actually heading back down in about three

01:08:50
well, it over two weeks to meet up with Martin Slater who

01:08:53
months, one of the key drivers for mapping and exploring the

01:08:58
extension. Martin and I are going to meet up, we're mainly

01:09:01
focused on some other stuff that we want to check out in tank

01:09:04
cave. But we will also go back to the extension and see if

01:09:09
there's see if there's some things that we've missed. Now

01:09:13
that it's surveyed, and it's been sort of mapped out, I

01:09:15
suppose. We're a little bit hesitant to go back in, but with

01:09:20
a bit of time away from it. It'll be interesting to sort of

01:09:22
go you know what I do really want to go and check out that

01:09:24
little thing that was over on that side. I only looked at it

01:09:27
once. I reckon there might be something there. And even if we

01:09:30
waste an entire dive following a lead that goes nowhere, at least

01:09:34
we can cross that lead off off the list. So yeah, it's made

01:09:38
it's much more robust. Yeah, yeah.

01:09:42
Matt Waters: Okay, and what's the what's the move up to

01:09:45
Adelaide lead into what's what's going on at there?

01:09:47
Josh Richards: Ah, well, well, my my partners up here. So Chloe

01:09:51
Reed, who was again key to discovering angle bricks.

01:09:55
Extension. It's her it's her face that's on the on the ABC

01:10:00
Have a photo

01:10:02
Matt Waters: wasn't I might be wrong, but isn't there a video

01:10:06
or YouTube or Facebook or whatever it was, but there's a

01:10:08
you like laughing your tips off at her trying to come through?

01:10:11
Josh Richards: Oh, yes, yeah. Yeah, yeah. So that's I was

01:10:14
describing that area before I sort of said that we, Matt and I

01:10:18
came off a bit of a beach, squeeze through some dry cave

01:10:21
into a muddy room. So that's footage of Simon Backman. And I

01:10:26
being in that muddy room. And Chloe squeezing through that

01:10:29
area into the mud room. And just off to the left hand side of the

01:10:33
screen is the rabbit hole is that nasty little hole that we

01:10:35
talked about? Yeah, so we shared a bit of footage. It was a bit

01:10:40
of a that was a bit of a taste tester. We folks knew we were up

01:10:45
to something they didn't know where we're up to it. But they

01:10:48
knew we were up to something and showing dry cave people in dry

01:10:52
suits. But dry cave in Mount Gambier. That's very uncommon.

01:10:57
So that video was interesting a for a laugh to sort of take the

01:11:01
piss out of Chloe, which we all love. But also an opportunity to

01:11:06
share an area that people didn't recognise people didn't know.

01:11:10
And see if folks picked up on the fact that we are in, we're

01:11:14
in dry suits in a dry cave somewhere that they didn't

01:11:17
recognise so but no, Chloe's Chloe is an ICU nurse up here in

01:11:22
Adelaide. And we've been doing long distance for far, far, far,

01:11:28
far too long. And with the sale of the habitat, it was like not,

01:11:32
this is the easy thing to do. I have got a lot of things, I've

01:11:37
got books I want to work on. I'm studying cybersecurity at the

01:11:40
moment, I'm doing a whole raft different things. And Mac Gambia

01:11:43
is not the right place for that. And we're also five hours closer

01:11:48
to the Nullarbor. So I'm not planning a trip for another four

01:11:53
or five months, we'll probably look at going out March, April.

01:11:57
But it does cut down the time considerably. And when I've done

01:12:00
Nullarbor trips in the past, rather than leaving from out

01:12:03
Gambia, I leave from Mount mount Lee from the mount, come up to

01:12:06
the Adelaide up here, stay with Chloe for the night, and would

01:12:11
then go on now, I'm already, like I said, five hours closer.

01:12:15
So instead of it being a 24 hour trip, it's now an 18 hour trip.

01:12:18
So it will make your exploration on Nullabor. A lot easier.

01:12:25
Matt Waters: For one for one. And did you say that you're

01:12:28
writing books again?

01:12:29
Josh Richards: I'm trying to Yeah, so I've got there's

01:12:32
probably half a dozen different ideas brewing in the background.

01:12:35
But there's two or three key ones. I've always wanted to

01:12:39
write a book about at about why people think they've been

01:12:43
abducted, why we have like, programmes searching for

01:12:47
extraterrestrial intelligence, the Navy, the US Navy videos

01:12:53
that they put out with like these things buzzing around all

01:12:55
that sort of stuff. Aliens fascinate people. And I suppose

01:13:01
I'm a bit of a scientific storyteller. That's always been

01:13:04
the way that I present myself. And so being able to talk about

01:13:08
the science and the but not be a jerk about it. It's kind of I

01:13:14
don't I don't want to be one of those, those sceptics who are

01:13:18
like, Oh, that's nonsense, and blow everything out of the

01:13:20
water. But I still want to be able to talk about the realities

01:13:24
of like, Hey, this is a little too far out there. This thing's

01:13:27
not realistic because of such and such. But what about this

01:13:30
other crazy stuff over here? Hey, isn't this an amazingly

01:13:34
cool thing over here instead, so I don't want to shut down folks

01:13:39
stories about being abducted by aliens. But there's Yeah. And

01:13:44
without delving into it too deeply. There's an interesting

01:13:47
parallel, Carl Sagan wrote about this quite a bit in one of his

01:13:51
last books, demon haunted world talking about how the number of

01:13:55
demonic possessions that were reported dropped at the same

01:13:58
rate that alien abductions came up. And it actually comes back

01:14:02
to a far more interesting thing talking about sleep paralysis

01:14:05
and night terrors. And people experiencing things like that.

01:14:10
And it feeling like an out of body experience. So being able

01:14:16
to write a book about that would be really, really interesting.

01:14:17
I've had that on the cards for quite a few years. And I'd love

01:14:21
to delve into something that's sort of parallel, I suppose,

01:14:24
talking about our relationship with reality, our relationship

01:14:28
with death, all those sorts of things as well. So yeah, I love

01:14:32
talking about philosophy. And I love trying to make it as funny

01:14:35
as possible, while also getting as many sort of facts in there

01:14:39
as possible.

01:14:42
Matt Waters: Yeah, yeah. It sounds like you've got your work

01:14:45
cut out for you.

01:14:46
Josh Richards: Oh, yeah. That's a long work list.

01:14:51
Matt Waters: Yeah, that's it. I'm just thinking there's a

01:14:53
there's a lady coming on the show in in the new year. Karen

01:14:56
Hoffman and she She effectively take scientific research papers

01:15:03
and make sense of them so that Domestos like myself can

01:15:06
understand that awesome. Yeah, maybe I would go with that as

01:15:11
well, while you're doing the other 6 million.

01:15:12
Josh Richards: Yeah, what realistically, that's, that's

01:15:14
what I was always trying to do with comedy. That was the goal

01:15:17
was to try and take a hard science and things academic

01:15:22
papers that were weren't accessible to people and put

01:15:25
them in terms that folks would relate to and and understand one

01:15:30
of my favourite ones, I talked about the Drake equation, which

01:15:34
is an equation that's used for calculating the probability that

01:15:37
there's other intelligent civilizations that we can

01:15:39
communicate with in the Milky Way. And I basically sort of

01:15:45
spilled the whole thing out and everyone obviously in the

01:15:47
audience has gotten the what is that? I went, it's fine, guys.

01:15:50
This is just like Tinder, and broke it down into like, here's

01:15:53
your search radius, these are the things these are the

01:15:56
attributes that you're looking for. This is the age range. And

01:15:59
realistically, the Drake equation works the same way that

01:16:02
Tinder does. And people could relate to that. So that's always

01:16:06
been the challenge for me is to try and make science I suppose

01:16:09
relatable, these things are really interesting and call. But

01:16:13
people sort of get overwhelmed by the academic language and the

01:16:18
the elitism that we see. I could never be an academic. I couldn't

01:16:22
fit into a university environment like that, for those

01:16:26
same reasons, but the stuff that they're researching and doing is

01:16:29
really, really cool. So why not try and make it more accessible

01:16:32
for people?

01:16:34
Matt Waters: Yeah, good call. I wish you well with that. Thank

01:16:37
you, Josh. It's been absolutely fantastic talking to you, buddy.

01:16:42
And learning about your crazy life so far. And I look forward

01:16:46
to so much more out of your no pressure, but you know, you've

01:16:51
got

01:16:52
Josh Richards: I've set the bar high so far. So thank you so

01:16:57
much for having me on. It's been an absolute pleasure to talk.

01:17:00
Matt Waters: Awesomesauce mate, and, hey, let's speak soon and

01:17:03
have a good Christmas. It's a little bit early, but you know,

01:17:06
it's just a random, I've ordered that. So yeah. Thank you. Good

01:17:12
on you mate. And everyone who's listening, we can throw in

01:17:16
Josh's links in the show notes. So if you want to find out more,

01:17:19
and just head on over there and hit him up. Thanks for

01:17:22
listening. Bye for now.

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