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<center><font size=-1>Cambridge Underground 1985 pp 7-9</font>

<h2>Wolfh&ouml;hle - A Guidebook Description</h2>

<p>by Brian Derby</center>

<p>Wolfh&ouml;hle was discovered by the 1983 expedition and pushed to a depth
of about 200m to the "Undescended 40m pitch" but more of that later. The cave
is situated on the Loser Plateau about 1km away from the col by the end of
the Br&auml;uning Wall. The entrance is in the side of a small depression
along an obvious surface fault-like feature in the bunde-coveed lapiaz.

<p>From the entrance the draught is followed through a small phreatic level.
The passage size is about 1-2m and at least 3 entrances are known to this
level. After about 20m the floor of the passage drops away. This is the first
pitch of about 20m into Wolf Chamber. The skeleton of a large fanged animal
was found here in 1983 and was identified by the expedition biologists
(botanists and molecular biologists!) as obviously a Wolf. The skeleton was
found at the far end of Wolf Chamber, several metres from the pitch. Whether
this indicates another way into the system is unknown. In 1984 we removed the
skeleton for the benefit of the Austrians who identified it as a Brown Bear.
By now it was too late to change the name of the cave but the blind pitch in
Wolf Chamber has been named the Bear Pit. The obvious way on in the chamber
is a continuation of the entrance pitch but the draught does not come from
here so only a cursory inspection was given and it is believed to choke off.
At the far end of this chamber is a short climb up to a hole in the wall.
Crawling through this leads to the Bog Seat Climb, a slimy tube down of about
15m which was laddered. The passage enlarges slightly to stooping height and
a sandy way leads on to the first big pitch.

<p>The Big Leap is a 90m rift rigged in 3 pitches with a nifty deviation near
the bottom. The walls are very dark and drip from a peaty layer which may be
remnants of melt flod debris. The highlight of the pitch is Julian's bolting
technique. Never one to expend needless effort, the first bolt has about 5mm
waving in the air and makes nasty cracking noises now and again. At the
bottom, the rift narrows and is blocked here and there by jammed boulders,
one forcing a squeeze until it was moved by a thuglike pushing party in 1984.
A couple of uneventful short pitches lead on to the first bit of real fun.

<p>Tiddley-Pom Pitch is quite straightforward at first, at least once you've
found John Bower's bolt hidden round the corner on the left. In order to
place this bolt John must either have secret powers of levitation or very
athletic knees. At about this level (10m down) a drip enters. This is in fact
a stream with very fast respnse to thunderstorms. Tiddley-Pom goes down 60m
to a big wet ledge and then 10m to a big dry one of jammed boulders - Cold
Toes Ledge. Here is a good place for a rest of about 16 hours while
Tiddley-Pom demonstrates its drainage abilities. For further details, ask
Planc or Dobbers. The ledge acted as comfort stop for soup on the way out but
we only brought the soup down after our intrepid duo showed how boring it
could be without it.

<p>From Cold Toes Ledge there is a sequence of short pitches from further
jammed boulders as the rift descends. The water sinks down a slit which was
followed down for about 15m before it became too tight (Nobody Knows). The
main way on is traversing over this to a pitch leading down to the
undescended 40m pitch and the limit of the 1983 expedition.

<p>This is now known as Fear and Loathing Pitch. FLP turned out to be a bit
bigger than 40m, in fact it goes down about 150m in several rebelayed
sections. Two high spots for their entertainment value were a particularly
airy traverse near the top and a bastard flake at Acrobat Point which before
it was rigged could only be passed by a move sponsored by Pressure for
Population Control and probably banned by the Catholic Church. The rift never
widened out more than 3-4m before landing on an unpleasant bit of damp floor
- Las Vegas. The way out of Las Vegas is Beezley Street (where the rats have
rickets) a particularly unpleasant mud walled slimy rift. The surveying of
this was done on the run as we slid down between the walls. Traversing this
if possible leads on to the next pitch. Another short traverse follows but
this one is clean washed and sharp. Three short pitches now corkscrew down to
the Drainage Ditch, a wading depth section of passage occasionally blocked by
boulders leading on to another series of pitches twising down. All the water
is in still pools which presumably get filled in spring. We are now almost at
the end. The Drainage Ditch passage continues for a few more metres and
finally reaches a static sump. A hile above leads on to another sump and some
avens before closing in. The cave is surveyed as -438m from the highest
entrance to here.

<p>The bottom is very dark walled and gives a good feeling of depth. It is
here that Wiggy's Premier cap lamp failed and he prussiked out with an
Aquaflash between his teeth with me waiting at rebelays to light him till my
carbide ran out.... Exit from Tiddley-Pom to surface on one and a half torch
lights between two.

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<ul id="links">
<li>Cambridge Underground 1985,
<a href="http://cucc.survex.com/jnl/1985/index.htm">Table of Contents</a></li>
<li>Main Wolfh&ouml;hle <a href="../../1623/145/145.html">Guidebook page</a></li>
<li>1984 Expedition info:
<ul>
<li><a href="log.htm">Logbook</a></li>
<li><a href="stopp.htm">Stop Press report</a>, CU 1984</li>
<li>Main Expo report, Cambridge Underground 1985:
<ul>
<li><a href="report.htm">Austria 1984 Expos&eacute;e</a></li>
<li>An Ascent of the <a href="twand.htm">Trisselwand</a></li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="bcracc.htm">BCRA Caves &amp; Caving Report</a></li>
</ul></li>
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