expoweb/years/1995/bcracc.htm
2022-08-20 09:11:34 +01:00

136 lines
7.1 KiB
HTML

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf8" />
<title>1995: BCRA Caves &amp; Caving report</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../css/main2.css" />
</head>
<body>
<font size=-1>BCRA Caves &amp; Caving 73, Autumn 1996, pp n-n [ISSN 0142-1832]</font>
<center><h1>EXPO 1994 - 1995 REPORT</h1>
<h3>by Anthony Day and Steve Bellhouse</h3>
<h2>1995</h2>
</center>
(continued from same article as <a href="../1994/bcracc.htm">1994 report</a>)
<p>The expedition committee in 1995 was a little inexperienced, with the
leader having been to Austria only once, and the treasurer and equipments
officer both being new to expedition caving. Despite this, the organisation
went quite smoothly, with only a few minor glitches, such as the leader
opening the Sports Council interview with the phrase: "We were going to wear
suits, but there's been a bit of an error." Not recommended in future.
<p>So when July came around Expo was ready to go. It was around this time
that Anthony Day and Nick Procter first laid eyes on the nice trailer which
Wookey had found for us. The wheels were the size of tuppenny bits, and
were attatched to the body by rust, the spare was flat, and one of the
indicator bulbs had blown. They changed the bulb and, satisfied that the
thing was now legal, attempted to tow it a thousand miles.
<p>Two blowouts and hassles with National Breakdown meant it took 48hrs to
get to Austria. However, on Tuesday 4th July we established Base Camp, and
the laborious carries up to Top Camp began. Once established on the plateau,
a team set off to rig into France and push some of the many good leads
discovered in 94. However, they arrived in the area of France entrance to
find a large, featureless snow field, due to unseasonal snow-fall in May.
Much digging ensued over the next couple of days, accompanied by even more
muttering and grumbling, but the entrance did not appear.
<p>Eventually it was decided that we would have to forego the easy leads in
France and try some of the scrotty small question marks in
Kaninchenh&ouml;hle main entrance, which, over several trips yielded some
worthwhile finds. The "Doubting Thomas" series descended 100m down tight
rifts from Dreaming of Limo chamber. Also found was the "Oral" series,
encompassing, amongst others, "throat" and "tonsils" pitches. It remains a
mystery why cavers developed such an interest in head-and-neck anatomy while
spending a month in the field.
<p>Meanwhile some snow had melted and some cunning navigation and frantic
digging had revealed France entrance. The first rigging trip was aborted as
a novice caver got strung up, but the second trip was successful, and cavers
swarmed into "Algeria" to grab the best leads. A new pitch into "Twin Tubs"
was named "Daz Automatic", a chamber at the end of "Mohr im Hemd" was named
"Regurgitation", and a hole in the floor in Hob Nob passage dropped into a
promising 3m wide passage, which unfortunately choked after 100m.
<p>A major disappointment was that once again our radios failed to work,
especially after the effort of erecting the huge Base Camp aerial and
carting the necessary gear up to Top Camp. However, our resident sparky,
Julian Haines, redeemed himself by sawing up one of the aerial poles and
creating a cave-proof drill battery which was both effective and practical.
Armed with this, we finally bottomed "Sultans of Swing", the large pitch
which we got off halfway down for most of the '94 finds. The pitch turns
awkwardly back under Algeria, then drops 40m in two pitches, sumping at 320m
depth.
<p>Wookey and Andy Atkinson arrived for the latter part of the expedition,
and soon afterwards went on the trip to end all trips. All lethargy about
repeated KH trips was soon to disappear after the finds of the last week of
the expedition. Going down France, they first checked out "The Forbidden
Land", a truly appalling bit of cave at the end of Mississippi. This was
the southern most part of Kaninchenh&ouml;hle and therefore worth a look. A
tiny, muddy, wet thrutch came out at the bottom of an utterly desperate
bolder-choke. Traversing this carefully, they found themselves in a huge
rift running in the NNE/SSW direction. One wall was collapsed and the floor
was strewn with huge boulders. At this point they heard a horrible rumbling
noise from the hole they had just crawled through, and hurried back.
Fortunately only a couple of rocks had fallen and they weren't trapped, but
all present declared this the scaredest they had ever been and vowed never
to return.
<p>However, the stuff they had found had been huge, and was also in the
direction of Stellerweg. They decided there must be another way in, and
went looking...
<p> ... and they soon found a trivial traverse over an
undescended pitch, which led to a nasty squeeze. Pushing the 3m passage
they found in both directions, Wookey found a 5m draughty choke climb which
led into a totally huge space now named "Staudinwirt Palace" after our base
camp Gasthof. From this led a windy, 10m wide passage containing bat
droppings. Another entrance nearby perhaps? Following the breeze led to an
even wider passage, "Triassic Park". Around 20m wide in places, this was
all becoming a bit too much, so they surveyed out and returned gloating to
Top Camp, making the less experienced members feel a little stupid that all
this cave had been found down a lead that should really have been explored
the year before but which hadn't even been included on the survey.
<p>The next trip another 350m were surveyed and the passage was still left
going strong. The survey data put us close to the side of the hill. If a
new entrance could be found, we could effectively leave our SRT gear at home
for the next expedition! Faced with this exciting prospect, a team went
into France to try to find 161d from the inside. They went downwind,
following the bat droppings, and went through a couple of ridiculous
squeezes with gale force winds blowing through them (one named "Battle of
the Bulge"). They found a skull, and some moths, and moments later they
found daylight. 161d was promptly named Scarface due to a recent rockfall
from the cliff above.
<p>The easiest way to walk back to Top Camp from Scarface has yet to be
discovered. All routes so far have involved difficult climbing on the
limestone terrain, soan advance party is likely to head out early to Austria
this year to search for a more feasible route.
<p>To give an idea of the scope of the newest finds, in the last 9 days of
the expedition we found and surveyed 1500m of cave, and there are 72 new
question marks on the 1996 list. Kaninchenh&ouml;hle is now over 14km long
in total.
<hr />
<!-- LINKS -->
<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="excsrp.htm">Preliminary report</a> (exCS newsletter)</li>
<li><a href="report.htm">Cambridge Underground report</a></li>
<li>This year's <a href="sponsr.htm">Sponsors</a></li>
<li><a href="exponl.htm">From Expo Novice to Expo Leader</a>:
The tale of my Decline</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>