One Breath, Big Science: Martin Stepanek & Dr. Richard Vann on Freediving and Deep Physiology Podcast Por  arte de portada

One Breath, Big Science: Martin Stepanek & Dr. Richard Vann on Freediving and Deep Physiology

One Breath, Big Science: Martin Stepanek & Dr. Richard Vann on Freediving and Deep Physiology

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In this episode of Pod Diver Radio, we connect the dots between cutting-edge dive physiology and world-class freediving performance. First, Joe and Rescue Diver Rachel sit down with Dr. Richard Vann of Divers Alert Network (DAN) and Duke University. Dr. Vann breaks down the science of hyperbaric and hypobaric physiology—how gases, pressure, and decompression stress really affect the human body. While much of his work comes from technical and commercial diving, the concepts of CO₂ retention, inert gas loading, deep stops, and thermal stress are directly relevant to serious freedivers pushing depth and duration. Then we switch to pure breath-hold. Junior diver Ariel reviews the freediving documentary Cayman 2005: Diver Down, and Joe talks with 7-time world record freediver Martin Stepanek. Martin shares: How he progressed from monofin pool sprinting to dives beyond 100m / 330 ft on one breath What it actually feels like to do an 8-minute static apnea The training philosophy behind Performance Freediving International (PFI) How yoga-inspired breathing, relaxation, and pranayama integrate into modern freedive training Early warning signs of hypoxia and blackout (tunnel vision, color loss) and why safety protocols and a trained buddy are non-negotiable Why freediving is not about being a freak or "half-dolphin," but about trainable technique and progressive adaptation If you're a freediver who loves both data and depth—equal parts physiology nerd and line-diving addict—this episode will feed your brain and your next training cycle.
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