expoweb/years/1995/excsrp.htm

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<title>1995: C.U.C.C. preliminary report</title>
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<h1>Expo 1995 - summary for CUCC use.</h1>
<h3>Wookey</h3>
<p>CUCC's 1995 expedition proved to be much more exciting than could be
reasonably expected.
<p>Those of you who have been following the saga of Kaninchenh&ouml;hle (or
even taking part in it), will have noted a certain grim determination
creeping into things, replacing the dynamic enthusiasm of the first few
years. Despite the fact that the people change, the monotony of the same
miserable hole in the ground for 8 years was beginning to get to expo.
However, the events of 1995 have put an exciting new spin on things,
prompting a return of that sense of excitment and anticipation.
<p>Things got off to a slow start after initial difficulties with the
(France) entrance being under 10ft of snow. A shovel was bought and a few
exploratory holes dug, but to no avail. They had to wait until it melted
enough to show where to go. Equally the top camp water hole proved hard to
find.
<p>The other thing that caused difficulty was the trailer that had been
borrowed (as someone has nicked expo's trailer). This proved to be a bit
rusty and generally not caver-proof, with 3 blowouts on the way there, the
last resulting in axle collapse on the P&ouml;tschen pass. This meant the
trip took 38 hours, and made the trailer towers (Nick Proctor &amp; Anthony
Day - Ex-pres, for those who don't know) very miserable!
<p>Being unable to get into France, people started down 'Main Entrance', as
it has become known. They wandered off to the host of question marks in the
new section beyond Vestabule, and below Gnome II, accessed by the miserably
muddy &amp; catchy 'Stomping' passage. Here various holes were pushed, mostly
in rather grotty rift. Classic austrian cave with hading rift &amp; tight
pitchheads. Four new bits of cave 'Limo's revenge', 'Splattery', 'Oral
series', and 'Doubting Thomas' (after Mike TA pronounced that it 'definitely
wouldn't go'). Doubting in fact went down about 110m to the same level as
Knossos, before getting too miserable. All these bits &amp; bobs came to
about 400m.
<p>Once the snow melted enough to sqeeze past, people went prodding around in
France and found some stuff; another route into Twintubs below Algeria ('Daz
Automatic'), a big chamber at end of Mohr im Hemd 'Regurgitation', a choked
pitch at end of Mississipi 'Black Suspender', but nothing went very big, and
a number of things even stopped (eg. bottom of totally huge Sultans of Swing
pitch in Algeria!). The radios also failed to work after Julian Haines had
fettled them quite a lot so he was dead pissed off. In revenge he built a new
drill battery out of an aerial pole which seems to be both practical,
effective &amp; robust. It may even prove to be reliable!
<p>Mike TA welded the trailer back together (typical CUCC response - bring a
welder &amp; angle grinder to Austria, rather than pay an Austrian garage).
In fact the trailer only made it back as far as the Czech Republic before
giving up the ghost, and being given to National Breakdown to bring back - we
may see it sometime this year...
<p>There were relatively few people in Austria this year. Students: Steve
Bellhouse (new CUCC pres), Kate Janossy, Nick, Anthony, Duncan, Paul.
Lags (in order of seniority): JulianH &amp; his mate Hugh, Andy Atkinson,
Wookey, Mike TA, Waddington. Students from London: Scout (Dave Collins), and
Dave Johnson. Finally Penny turned up for a festering trip (no caving gear),
and a pleasant re-orientation from clients &amp; power-dressing, to expo
squalor. However, everyone there did their bit (despite severe inexperience
in a couple of cases), and 750 hours of caving got done.
<p>Me &amp; Andy Atkinson arrived at the end of week 3 and went down RH route
to check out a QM near bungalow, and maybe go on to Siberia, but we got
sidetracked and climbed up between Garden Party &amp; squeeze - found some
more cave higher in the rift. Did some jolly joke rigging and interesting
climbs. Then went on to Bungalow and found that passage here went on over
pitch, then down another pitch (18m), then to the head of an 80m odd rift.
Fucknose where this goes - it's above the Flapjack area, but not really close
enough to be the same pitch..
<p>Meanwhile Nick was being hard and decided to check out Gob rift
continuation (below the end of Yapate). He had rigged the RH route, and took
novice after novice down to Gob, wearing them all out one by one. Things
failed to go well (mike TA jacked at the crap bit - citing 'old man's
privilege', and Duncan was keen but simply too fat to get through). Thus he
finally got to rig it on his last trip, getting down 40m? in big, but rather
wet pitch. Oh well - maybe next time.
<p>Then me, AndyA &amp; JulianH went on the trip to end all trips. First we
checked out 'The Forbidden Land' which is the most appalling bit of cave
ever in the whole world. Tiny (wet, muddy) thrutch (at end of
Missisippi/Rocky Horror - ie. southernmost point of cave) comes out in
bottom of boulder choke. All muddy and shitty and desperately loose. We all
traversed this terribly carefully (about a 15m climb in total) and got into
big space. It turned out to be a huge hading rift running approx NNE/SSW
which is just full of mega-rocks. (one wall solid, one collapsed). We went
about 60m in either direction, but whilst doing this there was a horrible
rumble from the hole we climbed in through and we were sure that the end was
nigh and we were entombed here for the foreseeable future. In fact only a
couple of rocks had rolled down it and we lived, but its probably the
scaredest I have been, and definitely the scaredest JulianH has ever been.
We are <u><b>NOT</b></u> going back, even though it is big stuff that goes
south off the end - towards Stellerweg - there has to be another way in
somewhere...
<p>So we started looking for said way in, going back up along bottom of Rocky
Horror, poking into every available cranny. Soon found a significant pitch
that no-one had been down, and a passage over the top - trivial traverse.
This was small and soon shrank to a nasty squeeze which I pushed ('the
Brownie's Cunt', after the Nun's Cunt, but off Fudge Brownie..). JulianH had
a miserable time getting back out until we moved some of the rocks out of the
bottom, 'cos he is a fat bastard. This came into bigger (3m wide) passage. We
ran down this in various directions. Again I got lucky, and after finding a
choke climbed 5m up a hole, which led into totally huge space (Staud'n'wirt
palace). Wandering along from this was beautiful white-floored passage, and
lots of batshit (!? - a first for KH). This was 7-10m wide and windy!
following the breeze I came into an even bigger passage (hard to see far side
- 'Triassic Park'). At this point I felt I had to go back and get the others,
and we proceeded to walk 250m down this huge stuff before getting cave
overload &amp; going home happy bunnies!
<p>Next trip Steve &amp; Duncan &amp; Kate surveyed another 350m on the end -
still no sign of an obstacle!, and it was awfully close to the edge of the
mountain (far side of Hinter). Then me and Andy came back up the hill,
surveyed the bit we found down RH route near bungalow (semi-detached) and
derigged all RH route (6 tacklesacks + the coax that has been there since
1989).
<p>Next day we decided it was time to find a new entrance so we went in and
followed the batshit &amp; breeze (the other way - downwind). We found three
dead bats and some dead moths and a skull of something else (bird?) so the
surface must be close, but wind went into a big choke and tiny impassable
passage, until andy disappeared down 'obviously choked' bit and found loads
of extra-scrotty passage, almost full of rocks except for top foot or so.
After loads of this (in a significant gale) we got to a place where distant
huge waterfall could be heard.
<p>After a bit of prodding we realised that in fact the noise was the howling
of the wind through a tiny bit of passage at roof level. I would have given
up here (yep, it was that bad...) but Andy was determined that the surface
was moments away and forced himself into this wind-tunnel (stopping the wind
very effectively). This was only 'jolly' small, but had a bulge at the end
which turned it into a total bastard (thus 'Battle of the Bulge'). I took my
belay belt off (our SRT gear was left at the bottom of the rope in Algeria
:-), it was so crap. Beyond the passage size increased and we found a chamber
with loads of moths, mostly shagging. A few metres beyond this we had the
enormous pleasure of running out into the open air on the side of the Hinter.
Huge grins, and major excitement!!!
<p>We had left the survey book at the choke, so we had to remember some
bearings on mountains (to find it again) and then went back and spent some
time discovering two different other ways back (one each) which avoided the
crap stuff after Battle of the Bulge. We also noted, whilst surveying, that
there were two places, one either side of BOTB where there were very
similar-looking chokes of small rocks in big passage, which could conceivably
be the same spot - thus a potential BOTB bypass - necessary for this to be a
useful route in for non-skinny cavers.
<p>We decided to leave our SRT gear and try walking back to France up the
outside. This proved to be pretty fucking exciting. There is a 30m cliff
above the new entrance - 161d, known as Scarface as there has been a big
rockfall recently from the cliff above, which has removed all the bunde in
the area, making it easy to find. This cliff either requires an exciting
climb (Andy's route) or some appalling vertical bunde bashing (my route).
The next day we tried some different down-routes, but these were even worse,
as the bunde makes it impossible to pick your route sensibly from above.
Finally, on the way home, I tried walking down to the Stogerweg &amp; around
the Vord., but that was pretty grim too, as I did miles of bunde bashing
with a huge sack and then had an hour's walk back to the restaurant. However
I reckon that a sensible route does exist from this direction - but it could
take some time to find.
<p>So in summary we have removed all that nasty SRT from the cave (it is
currently a welsh caving trip!) but have made the walk-in rather more
exciting.
<p>After the success of the 'today we will find a new entrance' trip, we set
out on a 'today we will survey a kilometer' trip, but this proved less
sucessful, as Triassic Park stopped after another 250m (800m total). In fact
you can see it continuing about 15m up in the roof, so we have another
Staircase 36 to do 1st trip next year. In the opposite direction at the
T-junction near the end (Trifucation) there is a big 25m+ pitch, a bigger
(70m+) pitch, and a 15m drop to a rocky slope which is about 99% certain to
be the back corner of Knossus!! - looks like nobody ever had a good enough
light to notice this - we could have been here 6 years ago.
<p>All very interesting stuff, and there are 72 new QMs on the 1995 list! So
in the last 9 days of expo another 1500m was surveyed, bringing he year's
total to 2km, and the cave to just over 14km.
<p>I confidently predict that a good selection of old lags is likely to make
an appearance in the light of the above: 'No SRT you say?', 'Miles of
horizontal passage?'. All we have to do is work out where to put the campsite
for 1996.
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<ul>
<li>1995 Expedition info:
<ul>
<li><a href="index.htm">Index</a> (more detail than in this list)</li>
<li><a href="log.htm">Logbook</a></li>
<li><a href="report.htm">Cambridge Underground report</a></li>
<li><a href="bcracc.htm">BCRA Caves and Caving</a> Report</li>
<li>This year's <a href="sponsr.htm">Sponsors</a></li>
</ul></li>
<li><ul>
<li><a href="exponl.htm">From Expo Novice to Expo Leader</a>:
The tale of my Decline<br>
<a href="../../pubs.htm#pubs1995">Published accounts</a></li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="../../index.htm">Back to Expedition intro page</a></li>
<li><A href="../../../index.htm">CUCC Home page</a>
</ul>
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