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<title>2009: Expedition report</title>
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<h2>Expo 2009<br />
Cambridge University Club<br />
18<sup>th</sup> July - 15<sup>th</sup> August 2009</h2>
<p>In the summer of 2009, twenty-two brave, hard and (mainly) good-looking
<a href="../../folk/index.htm">cavers</a> from CUCC (plus some guests from other clubs) returned to the
Totes Gebirge mountains in Austria to continue exploring the cave
systems of the Loser Plateau. The expedition lasted for four weeks.</p>
<h3>Background</h3>
<p>Over the past three decades, CUCC has explored many different caves
on the
Loser plateau. Bit by bit, connections have been found between these
caves (and also potholes explored by other groups, such as ARGE). This
has resulted in the formidably-named
Schwarzmooskogelh&ouml;hlensystem, a 55km long and 1km deep goliath.</p>
<p>For the past ten years, the focus of CUCC's expeditions has turned
to the exploration of
<a href="../../1623/204/204.html">Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle</a>. This
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has slowly been extended over the years and is now a major cave system
in its own right: 16km long and well over 600m deep. It lies to the
north of a cave in the Schwarzmooskogelh&ouml;hlensystem known as <a
href="../../1623/161/top.htm">Kaninchenh&ouml;hle</a>. In 2006 <a
href="../../1623/258/258.html">Tunnockschacht</a> was discovered,
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and recent expeditions have also been dedicated to its
exploration. Tunnockschacht lies to the north of Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle.</p>
<p>There were hundreds of promising unexplored leads in
Kaninchenh&ouml;hle (KH),
Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle (204) and Tunnockschacht (258), and this was reason
enough to continue exploring. In addition, there is now a very
realistic prospect of finding connections between the three caves,
thereby extending the Schwarzmooskogelh&ouml;hlensystem.</p>
<h3>Aims of the Expedition</h3>
<p>For more details see the <a href="mission.html">mission statement.</a></p>
<p>Some rather hard exploration in 2007 established that the
closest point between KH and 204 was at the bottom of a particularly
miserable rift known as Razordance. So it was decided that a more
pleasant way of seeking the connection would be to look from the KH
side, in the Far North, where happily there were also many large
undescended pitches to look at.</p>
<p>In addition to returning to KH, plans were afoot to continue
exploring leads in 204 and in 258. At the end of the 2008 expedition a
new horizontal level was found, named Pussy Prance (in "honour" of
Razordance). Meanwhile, Tunnockschacht was still "going like a train",
and its southern extremities were tantalisingly close to the north of
204, so this was also an exploration goal for 2009.</p>
<p>This year's expedition also had a non-caving goal (not just
drinking G&ouml;sser). Recently members of CUCC have started to
develop a piece of software called <a href="../../handbook/computing/troggle-ish.html">Troggle</a>, which aims to facilitate
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keeping track of logbook entries, typing up surveys, caves etc, and save time in a lot of the
work that goes on behind the scenes when expo is over. This year was
the first time Troggle would be tested "in th field" (well, spud hut).</p>
<h3>The Expedition</h3>
<p>And so it was that on the 18th July 2009, various cars from Cambridge,
Sheffield, Bristol, Southampton, Norway and France converged on the
campsite at the Gasthof Staud'n'wirt, Bad Aussee. In keeping with expo
tradition not all the vehicles quite made it unscathed, Julian and
Becka experiencing a rather exciting "bonnet-on-the-windscreen" moment
on the autobahn.</p>
<p>The first few days were spent carrying equipment and supplies from
the top of the Toll Road to the bivy near the 204 entrance, and
setting up the bivy (tarps, water collection, mouse-proof food storage
etc). Then the caving began.</p>
<h4>Discoveries in Kaninchenh&ouml;hle</h4>
<p>Initialy, things progressed rather slowly in KH. The first few
trips were spent cairning a route from the bivy to G entrance and then
bit-by-bit navigating our way to the <a
href="../../1623/161/farnth.htm">far north</a>, replacing some of
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the very old fixed ropes and frighteningly rusty maillons as we
went. Finally we were ready to start looking down some of the big
undescended pitches in the area.</p>
<p>The pitch near Satan's Sitting Room, dubbed 'Satan's Sitter' was
the first to be explored, dropping for 50m before ending in an
inpenetrable rift. A similar story was met near Silent Fellow, where a
30m pitch 'Solid Rock' led to a promising looking series of clean washed
drops. Unfortunately, once again a narrow rift was met and the lead
was finished.</p>
<p>As is often the way, things started to look particularly good
towards the end of expo. By now the route all the way to East Anglia
had been rigged. A very promising pitch series, '6 Mile Bottom', was dropped
until the rope ran out. It is still a going lead. Various other big black spaces were also found. Further back in
Repton, an exciting-sounding bit of climbing led to a large, straight
walking sized passage, which, again, is still a going lead as time ran
out.</p>
<p>Altogether, 776m was surveyed in KH and more A-grade leads were
found than were ticked off, so if nothing else, we showed that there
is still plenty more to find at the far end, and that a connection to
204 is still a realistic possibilty one day! KH is now 22.3 km long.</p>
<h4>Discoveries in Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle</h4>
<p>Meanwhile, in 204 the expo Women's Institue (dubbed Team Zeus, for
reasons long since lost to G&ouml;sser) were exploring the pitch
series, Pussy Prance, that was discovered at the end of last year's
expo. At the bottom (a bit over 200m down) they found an exciting new phreatic
horizontal level with various feline-themed names: Puss in Bolts (a
traverse), Cat Flap, Cat Walk, Snow Leopard and er... Painted Lady.</p>
<p>On one particular trip there was a little confusion when a pitch,
Snow Leopard, was dropped for the first time, only to find foot
prints, a pencil and a hanger at the bottom! This turned out to be the
bottom of <a href="../../1623/204/nopain.htm">Brian's Phat
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Shaft</a>. In fact, this was a very useful discovery as it offers an
alternative, much easier route into the level than the route via Merry
Fucking Christmas.</p>
<p>In total 553m of cave was surveyed in 204. Survex shows that the
new level is perched vertically above
Razordance and not too far from <a
href="../../1623/234/234.html">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a>. There are vertical leads in Hauchh&ouml;hle, and
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plenty of vertical leads in this new level of 204, so cleary there is
some exciting caving to be done here in the future. 204 is now 16.5km long.</p>
<h4>Discoveries in Tunnockschacht</h4>
<p>In previous years, most of the horizontal leads in Tunnockschacht had
been ticked off. Attention had turned to dropping some of the
frighteningly airy pitches, in the hope of finding a lower horizontal
level which might offer hope of a connection with the <a href="../../1623/204/subsoil.html#earthenware">Wares</a> in 204.</p>
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<p>Frustratingly, the pitches all seemed to 'crap out'. However, this
year, another 100m deep monster, 'Usual Suspects', was dropped and a new
phreatic level found at the bottom, with many ongoing leads. It turned
out, however, that this pitch has a tendency to take a little water
when it rains, as Becka, Julian and Steve found during initial
exploration of the horizontal phreas. As an almighty thunderstorm
raged on the surface (basecamp claimed to find hailstones the size of
golf balls) they were sat at the bottom of the Usual Suspects for
several hours cowering in a 'tent' made of survival bags. The
thunderstorm passed, but their call out time also came and went and so
the well oiled CUCC rescue machine swung into action once
more. Eventually the water levels dropped and everybody returned to the
surface unscathed - see Julian's logbook write up for a far better
account than the one here!</p>
<p>Plenty more was found higher up in Tunnockschacht. Stone Money was
extended further and the explorers were convinced that it should by
now have reached the surface. Several new caves were found by Frank
and Martin J in an effort to connect Stone Monkey to the surface, but
as yet Tunnockschacht only has the one entrance (although to be fair
it does function quite nicely). Altogether 1462m of cave was surveyed
in Tunnockschacht; it is now over 6km long and 290m deep.</p>
<h3>Some Post-Expedition Remarks</h3>
<p>Expo 2009 is now over, but writing cave descriptions, typing up
logbooks and drawing up surveys continues. We found just under 3km
this year. The overriding feeling is that there is plenty more cave still to be found in all three
of the major caves we looked at, which bodes well for future expos. In
addition Troggle looks like it will soon come into its own on expo and
streamline all the basecamp computer-shenanigans.</p>
<p>Thanks go to all the expedition members and in particular everybody
who helped get stuff organised both before and after expo. Thanks also
to our <a href="sponsors.html">sponsors</a> for their help this year.</p>
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