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<title>1978: Nick Thorne's report for Descent 40</title>
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<font size=-1>CTS 79.2025: Descent 40 (Jan/Feb 1979) pp 10-11</font>
<p>This article first appeared in <i>Descent</i>(40) for Jan/Feb 1979,
pp10-11 and is reproduced in the password protected part of the website with the
permission of the author and Wild Places Publishing.
<h2>Eislufthole still going for CUCC at 1148 ft</h2>
<p align=right><b>By Nick Thorne</b>
<p>After last year's quietly successful Cambridge UCC expedition (see
<a href="../1977/descnt.htm"><i>Descent 38</i></a>), enthusiasm to return to
the karst regions of Western Austria soared. The main incentive was to carry
on prospecting on the almost virgin lapiaz of the plateau above
<span lang="de">Altaussee,</span> and to continue pushing our unfinished find
of last year, 106 - <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> (good name,
eh?).
<p>By way of introduction, <span lang="de">Altaussee</span> is a small
village about 50 miles east of <span lang="de">Salzburg,</span> and it was
there that we set up our camp. The Loser Plateau where we carried out most of
our work is then reached by a steep (in more ways than one) toll road,
follwed by an hour's brisk walk from the top. Furtunately for us, one of the
few local cavers, <span lang="de">Karl Gaisberger,</span> who seems to be
able to arrange anything, managed to secure free passes for us on the toll
road. Cheers Karl; how about a sedan chair for the walk at the top next year
?
<p>So in July and August of this year, we were back on the Loser with a
fairly hefty team. Expedition members divided logically into three groups:
Team <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle:</span> Andy Waddington, Simon Farrow,
Nick Thorne, Doug Florence and Julian Griffiths - the crack ropes team, ready
for anything. Team Ladders: John Bowers, Ben van Millingen, Mike Shearme and
Nicola Davies - all spending their first year in Austria. Team Geriatric: Rod
and Jont Leach, Vic Brown, Dave Fox, plus "hangers on". These acted as the
emergency reserve powerhouse, to be called into service should things get out
of hand for the rest of us. (Something like Aladdin's lamp I suppose, but
this lot looked more like a clapped out carbide).
<p>And so to caving. Team Ladders didn't take long to find a promising,
draughting entrance. All well and good so far, but the entrance initially was
only big enough for a midget and it was only after a couple of days of
boulder hauling that they got underground. The cave, 107, they called
<span lang="de">Gemseh&ouml;hle.</span> Since I didn't get a trip down it,
and know Berger all about it, I won't go into too much detail.
<p>Apparently they descended a series of pitches in a large rift, down to
about 560ft, when the tackle started to run out, with the cave continuing.
They chose to get out of this dilemma by rubbing the magic carbide lamp.
Wham! Team Geriatric hauled their weary bodies out of their canoes (canoes?)
and went down <span lang="de">Gemseh&ouml;hle</span> with a brand new reel of
Marlow. Once underground, the Geriatrics were immediately transformed into an
efficient well-oiled machine. Within a couple of trips,
<span lang="de">Gemseh&ouml;hle</span> had been pushed to a choke at minus
918ft.
<p>Meanwhile, back at the ranch, what of Team
<span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> ? Mixed fortunes really. A slow rig
in down to last year's terminus (ie. the Tap Room - see survey) was due to
greater amounts of snow and ice than last year. ("Are you sure this is the
right cave?") At one point a huge ice boulder was suspended at a pitch
take-off, and it refused to give way to a well-directed wellie. Farrow and
Florence then carted a great crowbar into the cave to shift the thing, only
to find that the boulder had fallen down in the meantime. Ah, well !
<p>Once we had rigged down to The Tap Room, but before pushing far into new
ground, we had an interesting policy change - to overnight trips. The lapiaz
in which the cave entrance is sited is impossible to negotiate in darkness,
and therefore trips during the daytime are limited to a maximum of eight
hours underground. Longer trips could be attained by going underground in the
late afternoon, spending a minimum time underground of about ten hours, and
then emerging into the morning light.
<p>Good idea, we thought, and indeed the first of these trips did add 394ft
to the depth of <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle,</span> including the
magnificent 197ft abseil into The Hall of the Greene King. Subsequent
overnight trips pushed on down some more pitches, and a very muddy 'Fiesta
Run' to give a total depth of 1,148ft, the cave still continuing. This bottom
part of the cave is a very tall vadose stream canyon. The passage is very
tight at stream level and traversing was necessary.
<p>It was whilst driving back from the last of these overnight trips, at
about 7 o'clock in the morning, when we had a slight mishap. The driver of
the car carrying three of Team <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> back
down the toll road, fell asleep at the wheel. With that Great Karst Area in
the Sky Looming ever nearer, the car missed a telegraph pole and a tree by
inches, went through a fence cum crash barrier, and gracefully launched
itself over the void.
<p>Well, it could have been a drop of a couple of hundred feet had it
happened further up the road, but as it was, any spectators stupid enough to
be awake at that ungodly hour would have seen a fine piece of 'S' registered,
British engineering fall, roll, and tumble down a near vertical 30ft bank, to
land wheels down in the river at the bottom. (all film rights reserved.)
<p>The driver had a broken sternum, cuts to face and hands, and concussion.
The front seat passenger had a bad gash in the head, and was suspected of
having a lightly fractured neck, and as the passenger in the back (I'm almost
ashamed to say it!) I escaped uninjured. The car was a write-off. Both
injured parties are now out of hospital, and well on the way to recovery.
(Rats, I wanted his watch!)
<p>One consequence of the crash was to leave Team
<span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> a little short of manpower. Efforts
were shifted from surveying and photographing to derigging. As the expedition
neared its close, we even started fondling insurance policies as we
contemplated having to abandon some tackle down the cave. With most of the
cave still to derig, things looked bleak. Then we remembered the magic
carbide lamp . . . Wham! In came Team Geriatric, fresh from
<span lang="de">Gemseh&ouml;hle,</span> and in one magnificent combined
effort, we cleared the cave with one day to spare.
<p>On the return journey we were waved through Belgian customs by the
cleaning lady, and just reached an English telly five minutes before Sid's
Pippikin film started.
<p>In conclusion then, the expedition was a great success, even if the
exploration of <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> was halted a little
early. As for <span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> itself, it is now one
of Austria's most significant caves. From our end point this year, we could
lob stones down a considerable distance below, with the stream canyon
continuing. No sump appears imminent as there is no fresh mud on the walls.
(The mud of the Fiesta Run is probably associated with a shaft overhead, and
is quite old stuff.)
<p>To get 1300ft out of the place should be a mere formality, and after that,
there's still 1640ft of depth potential left. Now we must try and muster a
really crack team for next year. And crack team it must be, as
<span lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> is no longer the easy series of
shafts it was, but a long and serious undertaking.
<p><i>References: Cambridge Underground
<a href="../../../years/1976/report.htm">1977</a>, <a href="../../../years/1977/report.htm">1978</a>
and <a href="../../../years/1978/report.htm">1979</a> [to be published] containing surveys of all
underground discoveries made by CUCC inrecent years, plus surface survey
giving accurate entrance locations and altitudes.</i> <font size=-1>[This is
a slight exagerration, WebEd.]</font>
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