From 55d8aeb423f4459843dea9a64f4771b6c2672924 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philip Sargent Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2021 18:30:35 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] bad links fixed in ~waldensee caves --- cave_data/1623-114.html | 24 ++++++++++++++++------ documents/bierbook/index.html | 38 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ entrance_data/1623-114.html | 27 +++++++++++++++---------- entrance_data/1623-115.html | 12 ++++++++++- handbook/cockup.htm | 6 +++--- wilden.html | 22 ++++++++++---------- 6 files changed, 97 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-) create mode 100644 documents/bierbook/index.html diff --git a/cave_data/1623-114.html b/cave_data/1623-114.html index e7249b015..b480ef879 100644 --- a/cave_data/1623-114.html +++ b/cave_data/1623-114.html @@ -15,27 +15,39 @@ 5 0 + ? 114 - +cucc-ps01-2018 1623-114 -CUCC 1980 - +CUCC 1980, 2019 +2018-07-18: Rock-filled rift ~1m high and wide goes 260 degrees magnetic into hillside (descending approx. 15 degrees). Hole in floor near ent. is a climbdown, then a 22cm squeeze (Radost did it) to where it continues - tight. No draft. + +Going over the hole in the floor the more obvious route leads after 14m from ent.to a 2m climb down and a drafting flat-out hole leading to a vertical (upwards) solution (?) shaft filled with rocks. [Since the hillside is very steep here, this may be ~20m or more to the surface.] Could be dug, but ideally not from the bottom where Radost was. +Whole cave drafts cold air out slightly - less in 2019 than 2018 possibly due to snow choke elsewhere. No snow visible anywhere near it. + +The roof of the rift is flat and slopes to the south, about 30 degrees from vertical. This is very similar to rifts in Schnellzughohle and Stellerweghohle nearby, but in this cave there are no flow scallops. +Roof is solid rock and floor is blocks and rocks [and relic vadose features]. +
+Explored properly by Radost & Philip in 2019. 2019-07-168 No survey.
none. Chilly draft and scramble so shorts not advised. 1980 logbook identified with previously issued 114 -I have just (May 1990) found an old note book which says this was explored by John, Tony and Andy C, but gives no detail on where or what. There is a strong suspicion that the cave was one of the "promising leads" found on their trip to Wildenseealm. However, the only published account refers the reader to the 1980 log book. This latter is, unfortunately, missing.

This does not appear to be in the Austrians' Kataster +Logbook: 2018-07-14 +
Photos taken from turn-off point [from Stoger Weg]: "a barely discernable trod" to cave. +This "trod" is much more overgrown than it was in 1982. +
+I have just (May 1990) found an old note book which says this was explored by John, Tony and Andy C, but gives no detail on where or what. There is a strong suspicion that the cave was one of the "promising leads" found on their trip to Wildenseealm. However, the only published account refers the reader to the 1980 log book. This latter is, unfortunately, missing.

This does not appear to be in the Austrians' Kataster 25 5 20 -wilden/114.htm -wilden/114.htm + +1623/114.htm diff --git a/documents/bierbook/index.html b/documents/bierbook/index.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d06dd7c3e --- /dev/null +++ b/documents/bierbook/index.html @@ -0,0 +1,38 @@ +

+
+Last made using MikTeX2.9 on Win7.
+Build profile should be tex -> pdf (because pstricks package is no longer used).
+
+
+To build 'manually,' execute
+
+
+pdflatex.exe -synctex=1 -interaction=nonstopmode -shell-escape bierbook.tex
+
+pdflatex.exe -synctex=1 -interaction=nonstopmode -shell-escape seshbook.tex
+
+
+Due to the way LaTeX works out table column witdths, these commands may need to be run several times until a stable output is produced.
+
+The design of these files is intended to confine all changes year to year to the names.txt and dates.txt files, thanks to LaTeX's capability to read an external file and iterate through line by line performing the same action for each name.
+
+
+packages needed (LaTeX) are:
+geometry
+fancyhdr
+tikz
+booktabs
+tongtable
+multirow
+tocloft
+yfonts
+anyfontsize
+ifthen
+
diff --git a/entrance_data/1623-114.html b/entrance_data/1623-114.html index 30cbf2a75..9608039af 100644 --- a/entrance_data/1623-114.html +++ b/entrance_data/1623-114.html @@ -9,14 +9,19 @@ False 1623-114 - - - +Verlorenhohle +Horizontal crawling hole up side of grassy gully nead head of gully. Obvious. +Other photos in the 2019 photo album show the GPS device location on large rock near entrance. +Philip Sargent, Radost -This cave has not been documented, but is probably somewhere near 115 or 41. - +~60m above 115p +Direct from Stogerweg, not from 115 - + + Looking out fromm entrance + Looking at entrance from across gully, as you approach coming from Stoger Web + Standing just by entrance, looking back across head of gully + - - +T +R -L -Near Wildenseealm (not a hope) +S +Easy to see once you are within 30m or so. - +N 47.66743 E 013.80945 alt. 1547m (WGS84 Garmin Venture Cx) diff --git a/entrance_data/1623-115.html b/entrance_data/1623-115.html index 7f0d325a8..4ec372482 100644 --- a/entrance_data/1623-115.html +++ b/entrance_data/1623-115.html @@ -14,7 +14,17 @@ -Follow Stögerweg beyond Windloch to a steep descent. Just below this, by a large tree on the right of the path (permanent survey station P3), descend steeply to the right on a barely discernible trod.

This involves at least one freeclimb which is awkward with lots of kit. Make lots of noise if you are first, especially on the first trip, since snakes seem to like it here. Eventually a large horizontal railway-tunnel-like entrance appears. If you fall off a cliff, you've gone a little too far downhill. + +2018 Description: logbook 2018-07-18
+go along Stoger Weg past Windloch (32) and further past the next cave (marked 88 in faded red paint) in LHS of path. Go [10m] further from there along Stoger Weg and leave path descending limestone karren down to right. Proceed back along foot of karren slope and push aside 3-4 branches of bunde to reach a "path". +
+Follow along this 'trod' until you can descend steeply to the left (a few more branches of bunde) to steep "rockery" scramble bank. Make your way with care down this and you should be able to see a truncated pine tree [4m high] on the other side of a small gully. (When seen from the other side, this pine tree has branches in the shape of a figure "4".) Descend and traverse round to the right and climb up to this pine tree across the gully. +
+Now follow "path" down and to the right across 2 areas of soil/grass/loose stones to eventually reach a big pine tree with a bend in the trunk at ground level and a small cairn on the bend in the trunk. Continue down right through bunde with a little climb until you can see a large dead twisted tree root across a gully. Descend and get to this via via lush grass and flowers on steep slope and loose soil. +
+At the twisted dead tree root there is an obvious route leading to the right. At this point you are only 13m from p115x but you can't see it as it faces S. and you are approaching from the N. 10m on you pass a large anthill and then 3m further and you're there. +
+1983 description: Follow Stögerweg beyond Windloch to a steep descent. Just below this, by a large tree [now believed to have vanished in 2018] on the right of the path (permanent survey station P3), descend steeply to the right on a barely discernible trod.

This involves at least one freeclimb which is awkward with lots of kit. Make lots of noise if you are first, especially on the first trip, since snakes seem to like it here. Eventually a large horizontal railway-tunnel-like entrance appears. If you fall off a cliff, you've gone a little too far downhill.