Report by Vince
Vince, Jon, Jake, Nick, Tav and Mike.
A good turn-out this
evening, although we all had to negotiate the car park full of film crew and
all the paraphernalia that went with them. “The Spanish Princess” apparently,
didn’t sound very gripping. On to more pressing matters…
At the dig, the ‘wall’
was approached on two fronts; Jake, aided by Nick, continued on from Tav’s
efforts last session, Jon continued where he had left off a couple of weeks
ago, now following a trickle of water, there were some feint mumblings about
water dripping into his ear but these were ignored. The rest of us were
occupied with spoil dispersal. Nick was also endeavouring to remove a large
boulder. With all this digging activity the buckets were being filled and
emptied at a steady rate.
Nick’s boulder had been
loosened, Tav fetched the sledgehammer, I used it to beat the boulder into
submission. Jake called out; things were “looking very good”, he could see
space back towards Jon. Meanwhile, Jon had turned the drip into a more
sustained flow of mud and water, then announced that he could see into “black
space”. As Jon kept on digging the resulting slurry was scraped away down onto
the now sticky platform. Eventually, Jon was able to wriggle up through a
narrow, slippery slot, with some assistance, into the space beyond. We all
followed…
A chamber, guesstimated
to be c.12m length, up to 6m width and c.6m high, formed along a line of
weakness and likely to be the continuation of the main passage, the floor area,
strewn with degraded conglomerate. There is a calcite vein, perhaps evidence of
some hydro-thermal activity, and plenty of fractured rock along a fault line.
Water dripping from the roof has precipitated calcite flowstone over large
areas of the chamber floor, some decent mud formations were noticed too. There
is a need for some photographs and surveying to be carried out. A couple of
holes were noted at high level that require checking and there are several
potential leads to pursue. Some rock removal was around the entry point allowed
enlargement of the wriggle. Jake’s dig would have entered the same space a
couple of metres away.
Very satisfied with the
evening’s outcome, we left and made our way out of the cave.