2005
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12/31/05 Downstream Druid Dig by Brian Masney
There were 6 people that showed up to work on the downstream dig at Druid yesterday: Aaron Bird, Alan Grubb, Bob Kirk, Brian Masney, Doug McCarty and Dave Riggs. The hole where we were working was pretty wet. This combined with the strong wind that was flowing in there made the dig pretty cold. We took turns laying on our stomaches and digging out the low crawlway. This brought back a lot of memories of digging out the Lick Run entrance to New Years Day Cave. As we were digging, we could hear a stream ahead of us. We couldn't see it but it sounded like it was only a few feet ahead of us. Dave was digging in there and he finally made it through! The size of the cave passage is about 4'x4'. There is a about two hundred feet of cave passage in there. There are two ends that will require some work to get through. Aaron was poking around and he noticed that all of the air is going through a channel in the ceiling. It's possible that we are in a lower level of the cave and hopefully the upper level has some bigger passage. We'll find out what is up there on the next trip to the cave.
Dave Riggs' trip report can be read here
Photos:
12/30/05 Cave Mountain Cave
13 people went caving at Cave Mountain today: Bob Griffith, Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, Llew Williams, John Trotto Ben Banks, Jason Thomas, Dave Riggs, Rocky Parsons. Aaron Bird, Tristan Bird and Doug McCarty. With Aaron making a movie of the whole process, we hiked up the mountain, went to the big room, climbed down to the second level and checked it out as far as we could go in both directions. Then we climbed back up to the main level and went off in search of the Crystal Wall. We emerged just as the sun was going down over the mountain.
For a more complete Trip Report go to Dave Riggs' Caving blog here For photos go
12/18/05 Tucker County Survey Brian Masney, Dave Riggs, Aaron Bird, Llew Williams, Justin Williams, Kevin Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, Alan Grubb and Doug McCarty surveyed in our recently accessed cave while Kevin Frick ridgewalked up Otter Creek. We have now surveyed 5255.67' of passage--we're about to go over the mile mark, and it is still going.
12/11/05 Christmas Party There were twelve people, two dogs and a cat at the Christmas party at Mary Davis and Bob Griffith's house this evening. The folks in attendance were Rich Finley, Jill Pyle, Brian Masney, Carl Werntz, Donna Ford-Werntz, Shannon Wentz, Bob Griffith, Mary Davis, Alan Carpenter, Jenna Carpenter, Joann Carpenter and Doug McCarty. Presents included knot books, thermacare heating pads, a shovel, leather gloves, marking crayons, a geological map, and miscellaneous items. There were two varieties of chili, brownies, chocolate chip cookies, apple pie and a meet and vegetable platter.
12/3/05 Shavers Mountain Survey and Adopt-a-Highway Both events were cancelled because of snow, illness and other factors
11/19/05 Tucker County Survey There were seven
people working on the
11/11/05-11/12/05 New Years Day/Druid Project Friday evening, Brian Masney and Aaron Bird surveyed through the water squeeze and left supplies for the next day. On Saturday, Brian, Aaron, Jason Thomas, Dave Riggs, Rocky Parsons, Alan Grubb (of Cumberland), Alan Peterson and Doug McCarty rendezvoused at Aaron's house. Alan Peterson was one of the people who found Druid Cave way back when. He left after he graduated from WVU and moved to New York. Today was his first time back since then. We hiked down to the cave and split into two teams. Jason, Brian, Rocky and Alan G. were the push team. Aaron, Dave, Alan P. and Doug were the survey team. The surveyors picked up on the far side of the water squeeze and added about 300 feet to the cave. So we now have about 1500 feet of surveyed cave. The push team got 600 feet beyond where we stopped the survey. We are breaking protocol with the push team in advance of the survey team because they are looking for the connection with Druid. We emerged from the cave slimed and wet. The hike out of the canyon in the dark--a 525 foot elevation change and almost a mile in distance--was not fun. It was made worse by the fact that we had soaked wet suits, muddy cave packs and mud caked coveralls in our backpacks. Comments about the trip after we got back to the cars were that it had been "brutal" and that it had been "the cave trip from Hell", but these comments were made with smiles. The truth is that, although a significant amount of the cave is low, wet belly crawling with a few squeezes thrown in, we all had a good time. I should add that the cave also contains at least three or four hundred feet of walking passage. It also contains the biggest cave room in Monongalia County. Another room contains lots of crinoids stems and other fossels stuck on the ceiling. We went back to Aaron's house afterward where Rachel Bosch had bean soup and corn bread waiting for us. It was delicious. To see pictures, follow this link and go to the bottom of the page.
11/5/05-11/6/05 Shavers Mountain Survey There were 7 people at Shavers Mountain this weekend: Barry Horner, Rocky Parsons, Jeff Stutler, Bill Good, Richard Hand, Brian Masney and Doug McCarty. On Saturday they added a few hundred feet to Panther Camp Cave--across the slippery, muddy, unstable hairy traverse and up into some high passage. While the survey was being done, Brian and Rocky rigged a cable ladder and dug mud in Shavers Mountain Cave. Sunday, while Barry and Doug were surveying in Panther Camp--into a 35' high dome room--the rest of the crew dug in digs G1 and G2. Both move a considerable amount of air. Panther Camp Cave is now 537 feet long with one going lead and a dig.
10/24/05 New Depth Record Cavers reached a record 7, 021 feet deep in Krubera (Voronya) Cave in the Arabika Massif, Western Caucasus, Abkhazia.
10/22/05 Tucker County Survey Eight people showed up for Tucker County Survey to survey in our recently accessed cave today--Dave Riggs, Llew Williams, Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, Brian Masney, Doug Moore and Doug McCarty. We split into three survey teams and knocked out about 1000 feet of cave--that brings us to about 1/2 a mile of cave with lots to go. Brian and Josh worked on the leads in the entrance area; Kevin, Justin and Doug Mc worked on the main stream passage; and Doug Moore, Llew and Dave worked what we were hoping would be a major branch. It only went a few hundred feet and led to a possible dig. A lead right at the entrance leads to several hundred feet of cave. We'll be back next month.
10/15/05 Bridge Day by Brian Masney
Trip Participants: Don Ferguson, Rich Finley, Jason Thomas Brian Masney, Bob Kirk,
Dave Bookhammer, Brian Perkins, and other folks from the Huntington, PA grotto (sorry, I didn't write down their full names) On Saturday morning everyone in the group was up about 5:00am. Passages to Adventure started serving a greasy breakfast about quarter after 5. Surprisingly, there was already a long line this early in the morning. We was at the bridge about 6:30am and the bridge was closed to traffic at 7:00am. The first thing that I noticed was the amount of security at the bridge. They had uniformed (and plain clothed) law enforcement personnel everywhere. The plain clothed ones were easy to spot this early in the morning by the vehicles that they were driving. It also appeared that they had some devices at each end of the bridge that were collecting air samples.
Anyways, at this point three people from the team were allowed to go out on the
catwalk and rig the drop. This was done by Don F., Dave B. and Sean ??. We also had two people at the bottom of the drop (sorry, can't remember their
names) that cleared some brush and made sure that our rope was touching the bottom. Every rope was assigned their own safety officer that would double check everyone's gear and make sure that everyone was getting on and off rope properly. To get on rope, you had to clip your upper ascender into the rope and stand on the other side of the catwalk on this big W beam. Someone would pull the rope up (~60 lbs) and you could rig your rack. When you were done, they would slowly give you the rope and you were ready to rappel. The only rub point was the W beam at the very top of the drop (and it didn't rub that much). You had to rappel through the super-structure of the bridge (you couldn't touch it) and then you were hanging out in space. You could see a really good ways down the valley. You were so high up that you didn't have a perspective as to how fast you were rappeling. Every now and then you would hear a loud BOOM! Some of the BASE jumpers wanted a long free fall and they would pack their chute so that it would open really fast. Luckily though none of the BASE jumpers got close to the ropes.
The first time down the rope it probably took me about 20-25 minutes to
complete the rappel. I used 5 of the 6 bars the whole way down. The bars on my rack kept
getting pushed towards the top. I could only pull the bottom two bars down and I
was still moving very slowly. I ended up feeding the rope through my rack the first half of the drop. At the end of the drop I noticed that I had worn some
bigger grooves in my rack. This helped me on my second rappel. Before I did my second rappel I asked our safety officer if he had any suggestions. He told me
if I couldn't move on 5 bars, then drop down to 4 bars. There was no way that I was going to do that, even though I was using the
Freedom Wrap. I decided that I would continue to feed the rope through the rack. Well the second time
down I did it in 12 minutes. That still wasn't good but it was much better than my first rappel. There was one guy on another team that did it in a little over
a minute. There was also some crazy guy on another team that went down Aussie style (I have some pictures of this.) Everyone on our
team that wanted to get in two rappels managed to get them in. Don was also lucky enough to get a third
one in (way to go!)
10/15/05 Bradshaw Run Cave by Doug McCarty I met Llew Williams and Justin Williams at 11:15 in the little parking area on the Dry Branch Road on the Pocahontas/Randolph County line.
We waited until about 11:40 and no one else showed up, so we went on down the road to a pull off area near Bradshaw Run and got suited up. Then
Dave Riggs showed up. He had taken a wrong turn and almost missed us. As usual, I lost my car keys, and my searching for them gave Dave plenty of
time to suit up. Llew finally found the keys on the roof of my car.
10/12/05 Presentation
10/11/05 Lower Druid Dig Brian Masney, Dave Riggs, Aaron Bird and Doug McCarty were digging at the lower Druid dig in Cheat Canyon until midnight last night. Hallfway through the evening they got a sign from Mother Nature that they were digging in the right spot when a bat flew out of the woods, circled around them, then landed and crawled into the blowing hole and disappeared.
10/1/05 Shavers Mountain Survey Doug McCarty, Rocky Parsons and Bill Good dug in Leaf Bottom Sink. They are eight feet down and going. After Doug and Rocky went home, Bill serendipitously found a hole in a good location "that was blasting out air like a fire hose". Sounds good for the future.
9/24/05-9/25/05 Fall VAR Bob Griffith and Mary Davis were the only grotto members who made it to VAR. They reported that there were good presentations and that there was good caving, but that it was a little too loud a little too late.
9/24/05 New Years Day Cave Brian Masney, Dave Riggs and Aaron Bird made some of the nastier sections of cave more caver friendly. They extended the dirt crawlway quite a bit further, dug a bypass through the silt around Nadsoaker #1 and began to open the rock-on-rock squeezes by moving a few rocks.
9/18/05 Panther Camp Cave Doug McCarty, Bill Good, Rocky Parsons, Jeff Stutler and Cheryl Worch surveyed to the bitter end of the obvious leads in Panther Camp Cave, which has two drops, a hairy traverse, tiny calcite crystals, rimstone dams, a few small formations, a slickenslide, a drag fold, a large square room and lots of mud. They will go back at a later date to survey the less obvious leads.
9/17/05 Tucker County Survey Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, Dave Riggs, Brian Masney and
Doug McCarty showed up for Tucker County Survey. Kevin, Justin, Brian and Doug surveyed 943 feet of
passage in our newly accessed cave--all but about 30 feet of it walking
passage. They were in there for six hours. Josh and Dave went on a scouting trip to try to see if the cave had a second entrance. They
traveled fast and far and turned around in going passage (with formations) after three hours. Cheat Canyon Brian Masney and Aaron Bird continued work on the blowing dig in Cheat Canyon this afternoon. They decided to follow the air and dug down, making quite a bit of progress. There is now a "massive amount of air" coming from the dug out hole, which will require some extra effort to widen. There is undoubtedly cave there.
9/11/05 Panther Camp Cave Doug McCarty, Bill Good, Rocky Parsons, Jeff Stutler and Richard Stutler started the exploration and survey of the newly dug open Panther Camp Cave on Shavers Mountain in Randolph County.
9/3/05 Cass Cave Trip Report #1 by Brian Masney
This past Saturday Brian Masney, Cara Doud, Ryan Ellers and David Riggs met upwith 3 folks from the Cleveland Grotto (Jeff Lydic, Alan
Looney, Cynthia Norris) to go into Cass Cave. We left OTR a little late on Saturday morning so we didn't get
to the parking area for the cave until a little after noon. We didn't have too much of a difficult time finding the cave since a few folks from the Cleveland
Grotto have been there before. The hike isn't bad at all except for the large number of briers that you have to walk through (at least on the path that we
took).
When you are close to the main waterfall, you have to negotiate several climbs to reach the top of the attic. You need to rig off of this point so that your
rope is out of the waterfall. Getting on rope at this spot is a little scary
since you have to work your way out across the side of the pit on a downward facing slope. Once
you are far enough out, you start to slide down into the pit until your feet touch
the other wall. You are clipped in the whole time but it is still scary. When you
are about 30' down, you start to see that you are in the top of this huge bore hole sized cave passage. It was amazing how
big this passage is!
Cass Cave Trip Report #2 by Dave Riggs
On Saturday (2005-09-03), I'd planned on driving down and meeting up with a group of about 12 cavers from the
Monongahela Grotto and the Cleveland Grotto for a Carpenter-Swago through-trip. I arrived at about 9am and met Brian
Masney and Doug McCarty at the entrance gate. Doug sponsored my entrance to OTR (my first), and purchased a day pass for $15 (which
worked out to $7.50 per hour!). The original leader of the Carpenter- Swago trip apparently had a change of heart, so the plan was
changed to visit Cass Cave. Rather than two teams of 6 cavers in a vertical cave, the new plan had one team of about 12 cavers in a
vertical cave, so we expected a trip with a lot of waiting. After the Doo-Dah Parade cleared out, we left the OTR campsite at around 11am. 9/1/05-9/5/05 OTR By my count there were 30 Mon Grotto associated people at OTR this year--including Dave Riggs who came in on a day pass for a few minutes before he went caving. We camped in a different spot this year, closer to registration. Hopefully, there were no ill feelings about our having taken someone's "spot", but we were forced to move, which means, someone else had to move, which means someone else had to move, etc. The weather was beautiful, but the evenings were almost too cold. Bob and Mary brought a patio fire-pit sort of thing and we had campfires every night. Some of the caves visited by Mon Grotto folks this weekend were Cass, Poor Farm, Bowden, Bob White and Shavers Mountain
8/26/05-8/27/05 My Cave Trip Report from Llew Williams Justin and I got into the parking lot at the county line at about 11 on Friday. We hiked up to our favorite campsite at the mouth of Black Hole run and set up our camp. After lunch we went to Just Cave. We spent about any hour very carefully rigging the drop and donning our gear. We did a couple of rappels and ascents, poked around in the cave at the bottom and practiced our changeovers. Somehow we lost a carabineer as soon as we showed up but we found a different one at the bottom of the drop so we came out even. About 4 we packed up and headed up to Bradshaw
Run to make sure we could find it on Saturday. We found it and Left Tit Pit with no problem and neither cave was taking more than a trickle of water. We headed back to camp to cook dinner. It had been drizzling intermittently all day. About 7:30 it really started raining. We were chased into the tents at 8. Justin said that it was the earliest he has gone to bed since kindergarten. It rained hard all night.
8/22/05 Four Students Die in Utah Cave Four college students drowned trying to get through a sump in a short cave near Provo, Utah. The cave is not a limestone cave, but a spring cave formed in a conglomerate. Locals called it the "Cave of Death", indicating that going into it was a daredevil sort of thing. The four people who drowned had no caving equipment. After a hundred foot crawl, there is a 15 foot sump that leads into a final room. The students seem to have gotten back to the room and died on the way out. Local authorities are going to seal the cave.
8/5/05-8/7/05 Shavers Mountain Survey Ralph Hubbard, Richard Hand, Rocky Parsons, Barry Horner, Rick Lambert and Doug McCarty were at the Shavers Mountain Survey this weekend. Rick and Barry pushed the low downstream crawl in County Line Cave to its bitter end, but also found what could be borehole up in a dome. It will require a bolt climb to get to it, although we may be able to access it from another lead. Meanwhile, Ralph, Richard, Rocky and Doug went into Shavers Mountain Cave and started a dig. It was Ralph's first vertical cave.
7/31/05 Adopt-a-Highway/Vertical Training David Riggs, John Barth, Llew Williams and Doug McCarty did the Adopt-a-Highway clean-up with the new trash picker uppers. After the clean-up the went up to Bear Heaven to learn and practice changeovers.
7/23/05 Shavers Mountain Survey Wearing wet suits, Rocky Parsons and Doug McCarty rigged a cable ladder and climbed down the 22 foot drop into the nice waterfall room below, as Ralph Hubbard belayed them from the entrance crawl above. They tried to crawl toward the further reaches of the cave in order to evaluate the end of the cave for a dig, but the water was too high to get through.
7/19/05 Bowden Rich Finley, Dave Riggs and another caver went to Bowden this evening. Dave topped the trip off by crawling through the tiny passage that connects the Breakdown Room (by the Shower Room) with the Watercourse. Ouch.
7/16/05 Tucker County Survey Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, David Riggs, Jeff Lydic, Scott Taylor (from Oregon) and Doug McCarty showed up at the Tucker Country Inn. They hiked all over Laurel Mountain and located the two caves we were looking for--Just a Pretty Little Cave and Devil's Den. The cave entrances were photographed and GPSed, and the remote Devil's Den was surveyed. It was 315 feet across the border into Preston County.
7/10/05 NYDC There were two teams that showed up to work today: Aaron Bird, Jason
Thomas and Brian Masney were planning on continuing the downstream survey. Bob Griffith and
Dave Riggs worked on digging out a side lead. Before we went into the cave, I realized that I did not have a pencil or pen. In fact no one had one. Aaron is
in the process of moving and he asked me to bring a survey book (but he didn't mention anything about a pencil. . I brought instruments, protractors, the
book and tape, but no pencil. It is a really long hike back to the truck so we decided this was going to be a dig/scoop trip. Since we weren't surveying, I
decided to not wear my wetsuit (mistake #2).
The "Whack-A-Mole" passage has a huge amount of air flowing through it. Aaron mentioned that it feels like the "Druid Winds". If New Years Day cave doesn't connect to Druid, then we have another big cave on our hands.
Trip Report #2 by David Riggs
Bob Griffith and
I spent about an hour and a half digging through the mud/pebble stream bed off that left fork. We dug directly in
the path of the water because it was both the highest point of the ceiling, and the softest ground to move. We finally were able to push forward
enough that I could squeeze into the "room" visible from the last survey station. Sadly, it was no larger than the kneeling spot
last surveyed, and ends just past it with breakdown on bedrock. In other words, it don't go. I expect the trench won't last past the next
big flood.
7/1/05-7/8/05 NSS Convention Brian Masney, Jason Thomas, Harry Marinakis, Ralph Hubbard, Bill Biggers, Sue Biggers and Doug McCarty represented Mon Grotto at the NSS Convention in Huntsville, Alabama for the week. Rich Finley flew down to do Fantastic Pit with Brian and Jason and then flew back. Other caves that were done were Double Well, Pretty Well, Neversink, Mandy's Pit and Shelta Cave. Harry stayed for a post convention camp and did Cathedral Caverns, Cedar Ridge Crystal Cave, Hang 'Em High Cave and Main Well.
6/25/05 Pinnacle Cave Approached by a landowner on a Sharps Trip, Bob Griffith, Dave Riggs, Llew Williams and Justin Williams went to a cave they believe to be Pinnacle Cave across from Sharps. Now that they have permission to go in, it is pushable with modern techniques
6/25/05 Hellhole As part of Germany Valley Karst Survey this weekend, Kevin and Josh Keplinger and Brian Masney all did their first survey trips in Hellhole.
6/18/05 Bennett Cave Josh Keplinger and Daniel Burge climbed the waterfall in Bennett Cave and found several hundred feet of walking passage, with leads to climb and pits to check out. Tucker County here we come.
6/4/05-6/5/05 Shavers Mountain Survey Project Ralph Hubbard, Rocky Parsons, Barry Horner and Doug McCarty checked out Mint Springs Cave #1 and Mint Springs Cave #2 because both are moving a lot of air. Both are also quite unstable. Part of the ceiling came down in Mint Springs #2. We'll go back to #1 to survey it, but both should be avoided. From there we went to what we call Leafy Bottom Sink and started digging toward the air. Bill Good and Jeff Stutler joined us on Sunday and dug on their new hillside pit. These are both still digs.
5/28/05-5/29/05 Tucker County This weekend Adam Byrd, Garth Dixon, Cara Doud, Dave Olsen, Llew Williams, Justin Williams, Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger, Brian Masney, Dave Riggs, Ben Mirable and Doug McCarty came to Tucker County for a joint Mon Grotto/WVU Student Grotto weekend. On Saturday a small group surveyed 530 feet of passage in one of our newly accessed caves while everyone else went to Big Springs Blowing Cave. Afterwards, Kevin's wife fed everyone with homemade lasagna, rigatoni, Italian bread and real butter. On Sunday, with Cara Doud, Brian Masney, Adam Byrd and Doug McCarty as instructors and riggers, seven cavers had their first vertical caving experience at Acorn Cave and Wilfong's Pit.
5/22/05 MR Cave Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger and Doug McCarty did some preliminary checking of MR Cave before the survey actually starts. MR is still a closed cave. Members of Mon Grotto have permission to survey the cave. It is not open for tourist or sport trips.
5/21/05 Scott Hollow Brian Masney, Rich Finley, Jason Thomas and
5/7/05 Shaver Mountain Project Ralph Hubbard, Bill Good, Jeff Stutler, Rocky Parsons, Barry Horner and Doug McCarty worked in County Line Cave and Frosted Ash Cave, and dug open a blowing hole that is not yet enterable.
4/23/05 Vertical Practice Five crazy people showed up at Coopers Rock on this cold and rainy day--Kevin and Josh Keplinger, Llew and Justin Williams and Doug McCarty. Two ropes were rigged so people could work on their frogging form and learn the correct way to do changeovers with a frog system. At one point during the day Brian Masney showed up--but not for vertical work. He was playing the "lost hiker" for a MARG rescue exercise.
4/16/05 Adopt-a-Highway and Bowden Beginners Trip Today 11 people picked up litter along old US 33 at Bowden. The litter picker uppers were Alan Carpenter, Bob Griffith, Islam Younis, Cheryl Vandegrift, Joe Vandegrift, Kathryn Kerner, Ralph Hubbard, Alexander Hubbard, Kevin Keplinger, Justin Keplinger and Doug McCarty. Afterward, everyone but Alan did the Bowden beginner trip. We all had a good time (I think). After the Bowden trip Bob and Islam walked up Bickle Hollow and poked their heads in the Bear Heaven and Third Entrances as well. Bob reports that the falls and pool by Bear Heaven were lovely. To see a few pictures press here.
4/2/05 Shavers Mountain Survey Barry Horner, Rocky Parsons, Ralph Hubbard, Bob Alderson, Richard Hand and Doug McCarty all spent 2 nights at the CCC Camp on Glady Fork. They were joined the next day by Jeff and Richard Stutler and worked in Frosted Ash and Jumble Sinks. They woke up Sunday morning to howling wind and five to eight inches inches of drifting snow
2/20/05 Bennett Cave Danial Burge, Kevin Keplinger, Josh Keplinger, Justin Keplinger and Doug McCarty became the first people in 27 years given access to Bennett Cave--a cave with maybe 300 feet of walking passage, two waterfalls in one room, lots of wind blowing through it and lots of leads. Bennett Cave should still be considered closed. They went in with special permission.
2/19/05 Breathing Cave Survey and Rescue
2/12/05 NYDC/Druid Project Aaron Bird, Brian Masney, Doug McCarty and Cali the cave dog went down to the sucking dig in Cheat Canyon and dug. There is cave there You can feel it, smell it and even see that it goes. We have one large rock to remove. We believe it will lead to the downstream section of Druid.
2/5/05 NYDC/Druid Project Jason Thomas, Brian Masney, Aaron Bird and Greg Springer surveyed an upper room over the Fossil Room and several side leads in NYDC today. New Years Day now has 1176.8 feet of surveyed passage--making it the third largest cave in Monongalia County after Maiden Run and Lower Beaverhole.
Shavers Mountain Survey And in another part of the world, Ralph Hubbard, Rocky Parsons, Barry Horner, Jeff Stutler and Doug McCarty were at Shavers Mountain this weekend. Most of our effort was directed at the continuing dig at GROSS Grotto Quarry Cave. Ralph got dehydrated Saturday without realizing it was happening, and wound up in the hospital in Winchester, VA thinking he was having a heart attack. He just needed electrolytes. Don't forget the Gatoraid. And stop smoking those coffin nails.
1/26/05 NYDC/Druid Project Surface Survey Today, Aaron Bird, Sara Bird, Tristan Bird and Doug McCarty completed the surface survey from New Years Day Cave to Druid. We also picked up dye traps and put new ones in, just in case--then walked several miles and climbed 1100 feet out of the canyon.
1/24/05 NYDC Survey Aaron Bird, Brian Masney and Jason Thomas extended the New Years Day Survey to 923' this Thursday afternoon. It was wet (a bad thing) and a stiff wind was blowing through the cave (a good thing)--but the wind and water combination makes it a wet suit cave in the further section. They froze when they came out into the near zero weather.
1/16/05 New Years Day/Druid Today, Bob Griffith, Cara Doud, Dave Olsen, Tom Malabad, Tim Bleech, Ben Mirable and Doug McCarty went into the Cheat Canyon to dig for a downstream connector to Druid. We have two promising digs going. One looks like an unpromising groundhog hole, but is moving a huge amount of air. The other it moving less air, but you can definitely see cave passage way back in there. While we dug, Greg Springer and Aaron Bird were doing a land survey from New Years Day to the Main Druid entrance. They rendezvoused with us and rode back up to their starting place in Bob's Four Runner, which took us back up out of the canyon without breaking a sweat.
1/15/05 This morning, Jason Thomas, Cara Doud, Greg Springer and Doug McCarty went into New Years Day to do some surveying and inject dye while Aaron Bird and Brian Masney set some dye traps and dug on a surface dig in the Cheat Canyon. (Our last dye trace came up negative on all traps.) We pushed New Years Day to about 750', at which point it gets too tight. But it still pumps a huge amount of air and takes the entire cave stream. It will require some work--but the air says it goes. New Years Day is formed in the Wymps Gap limestone, a local member of the Greenbrier limestone. It needs to break though a thin layer of shale to get into the Loyalhanna, which will be more likely to lead us to Druid. As soon as we got out of the cave we all rushed (without cleaning up) to a presentation Greg and Aaron were giving on Druid/New Years Day in WVU's White Hall at 6pm. It went quite well and drew a nice crowd. Greg and Aaron presented Jason Thomas with a nice little plaque for finding New Years Day. It was also Jason's 30th birthday.Many of us went to Rich and Jill's house afterwards for a surprise birthday party.
1/2/05 First NYDC Survey Jason Thomas, Brian Masneuy, Aaron Bird and Greg Springer surveyed 425' of passage in New Years Day Cave. Most of it walking passage with lots of side leads. It is still going.
1/1/05 New Years Day Breakthrough Jason Thomas, Rocky Parsons, Brian Masney and Doug McCarty dug into a Cheat Canyon cave Jason serendipitously found in Monongalia County. (Aaron Bird had been with us earlier, but unfortunately had had to leave.) We scooped about 150 feet of passage and forced ourselves to stop. Most of it was walking passage with one place where you had to stoop and several where you had to climb. Most of it was high canyon passage. The passage is heading downstream, so we suspect we may have found an upstream entrance to the unexplored sections of Druid Cave--which is what we have been looking for. Or it may be a completely new cave. But it goes. Jason has named the new cave New Years Day Cave (NYDC)
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