mirror of
https://expo.survex.com/repositories/expoweb/.git/
synced 2024-11-25 00:32:01 +00:00
Elaine's camping story + format fix
This commit is contained in:
parent
c023a66a96
commit
9c0723414b
@ -1493,5 +1493,60 @@ the top proved particularly difficult to de-rig, resulting in a slip and swing a
|
||||
<p>We met Elliott and Michael near the entrance pitch and left them to de-rig this as we headed out. Rob left
|
||||
before Martin and I, dissappearing down the hill rather quickly. We were a bit slower, weighted down with
|
||||
lots of gear. And after today all of Balcony was finally derigged and the derig was completed for this year.</p>
|
||||
<hr />
|
||||
<div class="tripdate" id="t2016-07-18z">2016-07-18</div>
|
||||
<div class="trippeople"><u>Elaine</u>, Katey, Fleur, Peachey</div>
|
||||
<div class="triptitle">Tunnocks - Camping in Tunnocksschacht - CHECC Grand Prize entry</div>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
It was decided that this year, the CUCC expo would establish an underground camp in Kraken Chamber,
|
||||
Tunnocksschacht, as pushing trips to the lower leads were getting to be around 18 hours, which was bordering on
|
||||
the unsafe in terms of fatigue in combination with navigating the nylon highway required to get in and out.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Having arrived late at expo, I was to be on the last pushing trip of the season, after which we'd start to
|
||||
derig. The plan had been to spend two nights underground, but heavy rain and flooding pitches meant we postponed
|
||||
our start and would only spend one night down there. This would be by far the deepest I had ever been - my
|
||||
previous record was a mere -280m, while the campsite here was at -600m, with the pushing front a further -300m
|
||||
below that. I am also not a huge fan of massive pitches, so after spending the morning trying to think of ways I
|
||||
could get out of the trip entirely, I made somewhat slow progress down the cave as I tried not to cry or have a
|
||||
panic attack. Very much type 2 fun at this point. I really felt like I had reached the edge of my comfort zone
|
||||
at -500m, but of course there were many more metres to go... at least I had avoided getting strung up on the
|
||||
knot passes. Some noodles upon reaching the campsite briefly restored spirits before we descended further into
|
||||
the bowels of the earth.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
I became significantly happier upon reaching Song of the Earth, a massive steeply ramping railway tunnel of a
|
||||
borehole discovered only a week or two previously. This was mainly because I was not dangling precariously on a
|
||||
small bit of string. At this point we split into two teams: Katey and myself were to go on down and look at what
|
||||
we thought was the deepest part of the cave so far, while Peachey wanted to do a bit of bolt climbing, so Fleur
|
||||
agreed to belay him. Katie and I slithered for what seemed like miles across the muddy boulders and eventually
|
||||
reached the previous limit of exploration, just on the far side of a sandy dig called "Don't Stop Me Now". We'd
|
||||
been informed by the previous team that this had carried "a howling gale" - the gentle breeze wasn't quite what
|
||||
we expected, but it was blowing nonetheless - maybe the lower water levels had something to do with it. We
|
||||
whipped out the survey book and instruments and off we set, getting in two really great legs... before turning a
|
||||
corner... to find a climb of around 6m with no footholds and carrying a small stream. Katey volunteered to have
|
||||
a look up there and reported back that it was very muddy and slippery. We decided that we would really need to
|
||||
bolt this to make it safe - a small slip at this depth could have very serious consequences, but sadly, we'd not
|
||||
been expecting to need bolting kit and the expedition was running out of rope anyway, so we shot a final survey
|
||||
leg before reluctantly turning around.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
We went to find Fleur and Peachey, who were on the far side of what Fleur described as "proper fucking horrible
|
||||
bouldery death". There was a mysteriously fresh dead bat. Got a bit chilly waiting around, then headed back up
|
||||
to camp for dinner and the newly invented camp cocktail, custard tea, before a nip of Kraken rum restored
|
||||
feeling to my toes and I jumped into the welcoming embrace of the world's largest sleeping bag.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
The next morning we broke camp, but decided to leave a lot of kit there as there were still some very plausible
|
||||
leads for next year. I headed out first with a couple of tackle bags, including the giant sleeping bag (it had
|
||||
done a sterling job of keeping me alive in the 0C cave...) while the others derigged a lot of the rope with the
|
||||
PAELLA technique (Pulling An Extremely Long Length Alltogether, I think) ready for removal by hauling teams the
|
||||
next day. Katey and Peachey stayed back to do even more derigging while Fleur caught me up, then we headed back
|
||||
to the Top Camp bivi for some curry, which was the best meal of my life up to that point.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
This trip (with many words of encouragement from Fleur in particular) showed me that I am actually capable of a
|
||||
lot more than I think I am, and though I'm a long way from being as fluid and quick as the others on ropes, I
|
||||
think I've moved past some mental barriers there. Right now I don't feel like I want to rush straight back to
|
||||
the camp, but give it time - I'm sure that by next summer I'll be ready to break my Bottom Inspector record once
|
||||
again.
|
||||
|
||||
<hr />
|
||||
</body>
|
||||
</html>
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user