Tag Archives: Caving

Nullarbor Caving

60

Nullarbor

Caving

15 – 27 May 2016

 

Road trip across Australia.

Hay Plains. Cotton bales, rounded up in yellow plastic, stretched away off in lines to the flat horizon.

Emus, black shouldered kite.

The Mallee. Multi-stemmed mini eucalypts in woodland forests, small stature and scale invited exploration. Twin tyre tracks twisting off into red dirt from the highway tried to beckon us from the main journey ahead.

Morning light on the stubble fields between lakes of mist.

Foothills of the Flinders Ranges. Port Pirie heavy industry smoked beside Spencer Gulf. Then Iron Knob, a massive hole in a huge hill and mountains of black and brown and orange ore.

Vast country. Miles float by.

Flat plains. Saltbush.

A big shared adventure.

Stars.

At Ceduna we jogged out along the whole length of the jetty into the bay in a frenzy of movement borne of 2 days couped up in the vehicles.

Next day the Great Australian Bight.

Then The Nullarbor. Just flat. Saltbush. 360 degrees.

Another isolated roadhouse. Fresh food, diesel.

Finally into the scrub. Limestoney, two wheeled tyre tracks.

Red kangaroos flew across the landscape. A camel in the distance.

Dirt road, complex navigation, dry dust. The weather forecast seemed ok.

Cave. Underground. A big day. Stunning white lake. Coffee and cream section and into a breathtaking area of salt formations.

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A perfect camp. Still, stars, fire. Sunset, moonlight, sunrise.

Out to the main road. Homestead. Water and access onto the property. The remote outback lifestyle had been in their family for generations.img_0072

Another perfect camp in open scrub.

img_0047Abseiled down through a blowhole into the cave system. Crawled over rubble, down a tube past fossil walls, up past a rock pile then into the main chamber. Immaculate gypsum formations.

Sunset.

 

 

Sunrise. We settled into a daily rhythm of breaking and setting camp, travelling slowly, caving, cooking and eating. Spending time together. Safe. In our own little adventure world. Far from social media, pressures of home and work. Time to think. And be in the landscape. And to share.

Dust masks were necessary to enter the next cave in this arid environment. Formations were everywhere. Amazing diversity. Crystalline hair – fragile as perfect snowflakes – grew in cracks and covered the ceiling in the furthest reaches of the cave where the air never moves. We trod carefully and made our way slowly to limit disturbance of the air.img_0058

Then north where stunted trees gave way to low saltbush on the flat Plain to an old abandoned homestead. Wind picked up and blasted so we sheltered in the cavers hut and pitched our tents behind the vehicles and trailers. We then had shade, water and a break from the wind in this extreme flat land.

Underground more ropework. Very complex navigation, Boxwork and eggshells and fossils and crystal hair. We followed the tunnel for kilometers. Above ground a group of camels passed close by.img_0112

For two weeks we sung out together, laughed continuously, assisted each other, slept under the stars, were genuinely affected by nature’s beauty and fragility, watched camels, lizards and dingoes. Our companion the constant dust. Seven days without a proper wash. Everyone had a job and every job was important.

Our biggest cave chamber inspired awe, felt tiny in the immense double chamber.

In the last cave we snorkeled in immaculate clear cold water with a sense of vertigo looking down into the depths and enticing darkness the preserve of cave divers.img_0150

Fire, dust storm, showers overnight.

We made it out next morning back onto the main road towards home.

 

Big trips take us out of our day to day environment and give us time in beautiful natural world landscapes. Into exercise, self reliance, real teamwork. The best expeditions give us opportunities to make real contributions to our group, to synergise. To have leadership responsibilities and develop our skills in collaboration and communication. To have time out. To reflect on the big picture of our lives.img_0117

The Good the Bad and the Ugly

18

The Good the Bad and the Ugly

1 – 2 June 2015

Wee Jasper again – days 8 and 9 working underground

Caving

Caves are very sensitive environments. Formations and underground landscapes take aeons to evolve, are almost living in their growth and dynamic change. Geological time-frame.

Many of the Wee Jasper caves have been abused badly. Early farmers used them as rubbish tips. Early cave explorers left their signatures written with candle soot. Many speleothems are broken off – taken home to gardens and mantle shelves? Now uncontrolled and uninformed people scratch their names with rocks in the walls and wipe mud and touch the delicately dripping forms with oily fingers.

These are adventure caves. Open to the public to investigate.

There are still sections though, harder to get to or out of reach, that indicate the original beauty and majesty here. And down the road is Carey’s Cave – preserved and protected. And lots more the public don’t get to see, and probably caverns and hollow mountains nearby that people don’t even know about.

Caving Connections

17

Caving Connections

26 – 27/5/15

Wee Jasper again

Caving

Two more days guiding abseiling and intro caving. Perfect autumn weather. The Wee Jasper valley is beautiful. Deep green, blue hills, early morning mist. In the evening Canberra’s light reflects over the mountains in a faint glow as we exit the cave with pupils fully adjusted to the dark.

On the second day we negotiated access to the 30m abseil into the Daylight Hole entry to Dip Cave. Another school had taken first shift led by a teacher who I had taught at college as a student and then mentored through outdoor guide training. On exiting another bus drove in with a group from Victoria. It turned out I had trained the teacher in abseil guiding about 25 years previously. Driving back to pack up at the shearers quarters we passed the bus from my old college. They were heading up to abseil at Devils Punchbowl. You guessed it, guided by a fellow who I had taught at college. Time made one final circulation on itself over that morning as I chatted with the teacher from the school I was working with. He was just starting out with a deep interest in gaining qualifications in outdoor education. I felt humbled to be in this valley with others who shared the desire to take on responsibility for giving young people opportunities to experience the place and the excitement of roping and the underground world.

The sun shone a golden warmth as we synched together through the valley.

Campbell High School

Wodonga Secondary School

Lake Ginninderra College

Gold Creek School

The Outdoor Education Teacher Underground

16

The Outdoor Education Teacher Underground

18 – 20/5/15

Wee Jasper

Caving

 

Five years ago the national outdoor education conference highlighted a video featuring interviews with young uni students as they trained in teaching and outdoor education. They described how they viewed their chosen vocation, their approach to adventure and their dreams for their future careers. They were a very special group, talented and energised young people with stars in their eyes and great hopes in their hearts. They had a diversity of philosophies and outlooks on life.

Driving to the campsite at the beginning of three days of caving with 20 year 9 and 10 students she chattered on about her class and the trips she had run. Her first 15 months of real teaching she had worked extremely hard to re-establish an outdoor education program from almost nothing. She already had in place a program well regarded by the Principal and parents, respected and appreciated by the students. One of the uni students in the video had recounted how his most abiding goal was to work in a program that he had set up and that was successful. In a very short time she had already achieved this. Managing guides and staff, ensuring safety, providing quality education in a very challenging field that takes time and care and dedication.

On the first afternoon we guided abseiling together at Devils Punchbowl, a collapsed cave crater with a perfect rising cliff that offers abseil setups from beginner to advanced level. She set the big one and supported and extended students through. Later she played frisbee games with them all prior to dusk then supervised cooking with an eagle eye to safety and the fire and then conducted a debrief and made the plan for tomorrow and oversaw bedtime settle down. Herself quiet, calm, focused. She helped negotiate and juggle the plan with very much more experienced and older staff. The students were quiet in their tents by 10.00 pm – first night of a camp with high school kids – this was very impressive.

Next morning was cloudy with impending showers. A group tarp went up while the first of three caving groups left. Punchbowl cave, 30 m abseil in, multiple chambers, complex navigation, scrambles, slides, risks and hazards carefully judged and managed. Riding the tricky edge of letting boisterous teenagers have some freedom and rein while keeping them in a safe activity context. Students having the sort of fun, smiling, happy, deeply achieving, self reliance enhancing time of their lives that would last in them for decades. “Remember the advanced outdoor ed caving trip we did in year 10?” they might say to each other at their forty year school reunion. “Oh yeah, sure do.” Like I’d said at my own reunion on the previous weekend about my most special experience of school.

She belayed the students up the caving ladder to exit the cave. I had worried they would struggle to cope but found they all cruised this difficult physical and psychological challenge having trained extensively at school beforehand. Well prepared. It was raining. A bit miserable. The tarp was fine tuned. A fire lit in a break in the weather lifted the mood. Later in the glowing warmth the chatter was high spirited. Sense of accomplishment and having handled the difficult cave they had heard so much about. Young for the challenge, it was an ambitious plan but they were well prepped. Cooking on trangias again. Showers pass through. Some tents had leaked in the downpour. She manages the loan of extra dry sleeping bags and mats she’d packed in the trailer for such an eventuality. Sit around the fire. Boys take a football off into the darkness nearby- she follows and brings them back. Late evening the 22 students head off to bed and sleep. Stars glitter above in a break in the clouds.

Regular people, including many other teachers, will rarely understand her work. 24 hours a day duty of care. Activities during the day after early morning camp group action which she facilitates. Food, camp, fires. Emotional upsets. First aid incidents. Group dynamics. Debriefing and enhancing transference of learning and personal development from camp back to school and home. Life skills. Role modelling. Being an example to young impressionable people searching for their own identities. Sharing herself around the fire and walking to the cave. Why does she do it?

Overnight in the distance a glider screeches 4 times. She tells me in the morning that she’d slept like a log but had awoken in her tent and sat bolt upright at the screeching.

Day 3 the same. Switched on, tuned in, vigilant 360 degrees. In time she will learn to do it while conserving energy. And the students will be skilfully, subtlely developed to live out their own sense of personal safety consciousness and maturity and responsibility so it all becomes a little easier. There’ll be setbacks too when things don’t go quite to plan. She’d battled back at school to bring some students whose behaviour there is marginal but as she predicted on camp they were terrific.IMG_5040

Dip Series Cave. Four parallel chambers, 2 tricky abseils, navigation underground. She’s the last out. Lunch, packup tents and gear, load the bus. She runs a tight ship, on top of all the details.

Is it that she just loves The Bush to bits, the ocean, the mountains, the caves and wants to share it as widely as one person can? Does she want others to know and feel the joy that she has derived from the activities? Is it that she wants to make a contribution to the world and sees this as a way of doing it to the best of her ability while enjoying life herself? I suspect it’s all of these but didn’t have a quiet moment to ask. Let’s just hope that whatever it is that she keeps doing this work so that the thousand and more other eager students can benefit from her leading and guiding and teaching. And countless more parents will wish that they too had opportunities like their kids with her. What a lucky school they are.