Creepy - Ted the Caver (part 3)
Episode Date: April 24, 2017Ted found a cave...***Presented by the Audio Drama Production Podcast***Sound Design by Zachary Fortais-Gomm***Title music by Alex Aldea***Intro/Outro Narration by Joe Stofko Hosted on Acast. See acas...t.com/privacy for more information. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is creepy.
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and disturbing creepypastas and urban legends in the world.
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On caving.
Before I continue with the next journal entry, I thought it might be helpful to the reader
to explain a little bit about caving and about the atmosphere in the cave.
As I reread and think about my description of the cave,
I notice that much of the language I use in my caving journal and the descriptions,
or lack thereof,
assume that the reader has knowledge of caving and what it's like inside a cave.
In other words,
I write my journals for me
I will take this time to give a more detailed description of the cave
I will tell you about what it was like what we worked on in the cave
and I will summarize our feelings up to this point
the cave was discovered
several decades ago in construction in the area on earth's entrance
from that time to the present it's been visited by mostly locals in the area
and avid cavers in the region
beer cans can be found intermittently in the cave
mostly in the upper half.
When the cave was first entered,
it was probably beautiful.
Dust, graffiti, vandals, pigeons,
and regular use
have diminished its appeal.
There are still places in the cave
where small formations remain undisturbed
as a reminder of what the rest of the cave used to look like.
To end of the cave,
we must have a good length of rope
in order to repel down into the rock.
A nearby tree serves as a good anchor point.
Once a rope is tied to the tree, about 20 feet away from a small cliff,
it can be tossed over the edge of the cliff to a small ledge 15 feet below.
Cavers can then descend the short distance to the entrance.
Once inside the cave artificial light must be used.
My light source of choice is a battery-operated helmet-mounted light known as a tag light.
Safe Caving calls for at least two sources of backup lighting.
For my backup lighting, I have a mini-mague light mounted to my helmet.
and another helmet-moted light to my pack, which I always carry with me.
I also have glow sticks that I carry with me.
These are not considered to be good sources of backup light by some,
but they are good to use for taking launch breaks,
and they could be used to get out of a cave if the other sources fail.
After a short climb over large rocks, the caver comes to a large pit.
The same rope is used to reach the bottom of the pit.
The drop is only 50 feet or so, but it is not free-hanging.
In other words, you can't slide straight down the rope, which is preferable.
You have to sneak your way around sharp rocks as you descend.
The scent is made more difficult for the same reason.
The pit varies in diameter from about 10 feet to 3 or 4 in a few places.
The walls are lined with a sharp white rock called popcorn.
Let me correct that.
It used to be white.
Now it's covered with dust and dirt that was kicked down from above by years of caving.
The popcorn makes it painful to brush against the sides of the pit.
My choice of clothing is Levi's T-shirt gloves and knee pads.
I usually leave the cave with a few scrapes, but at least I'm comfortable while I climb around inside.
The temperature is stable year-round.
It feels cool in the summer and warm in the winter.
We've gone in on freezing days, and 10 feet into the cave it's warm enough that coats are not needed.
It's a good temperature to work in, as we learned.
For this size drop, I usually use a few.
figure a descending device. For the climb up, I attach myself to the rope using a petzel ascender,
but I climb up on my own without using the device. It's merely as a safety attachment in case I
slip. Other cavers have their own methods of getting down and up. At the bottom of the drop,
the caver gets to do some crawling for a while. There's a small room about six by six feet,
at the bottom that gives the caver a spot to leave its harness and descending ascending gear.
Since there's no more steep drops, the harness is not needed and it will only get in the way.
Once a caver gets down to the six-by-six room, he can take a break under a ledge while the rest of the party comes down.
Then he must drop to his knees to negotiate a 10-foot-long passage that's only a few feet high.
This is where the knee pads come in handy.
The floor is covered with soft dirt and wringled with bits of broken rock from above.
The thin layer of dirt does nothing to soften the blow to the hands and knees as a caver works down the crawl space.
As a reward, at the end of the crawl, he gets a drop to his belly and scoot under a tight squeeze.
Not really tight.
Just something low enough to make the caver scoot along the dirt.
Once the caver gets to the other side of this squeeze, there are a few feet of crawl space.
Then the cave opens up enough to stand.
For most of the rest of the cave, the caver can stand, or at least stoop.
The cave splits off into several passages at this point.
Two rows wind around rocks and crevices and come to abrupt ends.
The other leads to a small pool of water.
Each route is fun to explore.
They all lead on for 100 feet or so in a gradual downward slope.
Most of the time the caver can walk up right in the passages.
Other times, he'll have to climb over large boulders
or occasionally crawl on hands and knees.
Water is a common occurrence in caves.
I've been told that one of the local residents
was one of the first people in the cave
and that his cousin dove in pools using scuba gear.
He said the cave continued down for a couple hundred feet underwater.
What they were hoping for, and what happens frequently,
is that the passage comes up somewhere else,
with virgin cave passages to explore.
Unfortunately, I don't possess the knowledge to give more detail about the type of rocks in the cave.
When we were drilling, we would have some parts that were easier to drill than others,
and there were different colors in the rock, refer to the photos taken in the cave.
But that is the best I can do to describe the makeup of the cave.
At the point the cave splits into four routes.
The two passages at dead end are to the immediate left of the caver.
Straight ahead and to the right of the passages that lead to pools of water.
The entrance to the passage on the right is the largest of the four.
The arched opening rises nearly 10 feet in the air, ending a mere foot below the cave ceiling.
As a caver enters the passage, the ceiling gradually lowers until it's about six feet high.
It continues at the same height for the 40 feet the passage travels in a continuous direction.
This section of cave resembles a hard rock mine.
It's arch nearly perfect, and the floor flat and easy to walk on.
It's easy to picture rust-covered mine cars on rail lines and dust-covered miners with blistered hands gripping dull picks.
The pseudo-mine comes to an end and the cavers want scams forced to drop onto hands and knees and get reacquainted with the floor of the cave.
This time the crawl lasts about 20 feet.
The floor is sloping gently downward for the first half of the crawl.
Then it gets fairly steep and slippery.
able-bodied climbers can still climb carefully down the slippery slope.
When I go with B, I always carry the end of the rope that we used to get down to this point.
I usually need to tie another short length of rope to the first rope to make sure he can use it to reach the bottom.
The crawl lasts a few feet beyond the bottom of the slide.
Over the next 10, 12 feet, the caver slowly begins to regain the standing position.
After walking a few feet and climbing down a short drop-off,
the caper arrives at a small level area, which has a passage leading down a standing down
immediately to the left.
To pass a gen 75 feet later in one of the small bodies of water.
To the right is a rock wall.
Straight ahead is an indentation in the wall which goes back about three feet.
On the wall at the rear of the indent is a small hole about the size of a softball.
To get near the hole, the caver ducks under an overhang and kneels upon the rock
that rise above the floor by a few inches.
By the time the caver reaches this point, he's either warm or sweating.
and the first thing he notices, it's a cool breeze blowing out of the hole.
It was my recognition of this hole as a potential doorway to unexplored portion of the cave
that ultimately led to this telling of my experience.
As has been my tradition for all the years I've been caving,
the party reaches a point in the cave, usually at the deepest part of the cave,
that all lights are extinguished.
Complete blackness fills the eyes.
For a moment, the individual caver strains the eye mask.
muscles, focusing in and out with the expectation of catching a crumb of light somewhere
in the false night.
After several futile moments, the caver turns his head at a sound, perhaps another caver,
only to have the other senses return and then heighten.
The sound smells and feelings that have been overlooked to this point come racing at the
caver in perfect.
Pain of their own behind sitting on the cave floor, the smell of dust, sweat, guano, and
The sound of modern materials shifting on age-old rock as cavers attempt to find comfort and solid foundation.
At the back of every caver's mind at this time is, what if?
What if a person had to climb out of the cave with no light?
Would he make it?
Would he find all the turns and bends which got him to this place?
If not, would a rescue party find him in time?
The depth of darkness recognized that this time is something that is rarely experienced outside a cave.
Many first-time caveers erroneously declared that they have to hold their hand within two inches or three inches in their face before they can see it.
The truth is, the human eye is incapable of seeing in an absence of light.
If they did not hear something coming towards them, they would feel it before they saw it.
Complete and total dark.
This exercise is a great way to remind people to take a backup light.
As we proceeded to work in the cave, we developed a system pretty early, and little changed in succeeding trips.
The first time in the cave, B, took first shift at chipping away at the opening.
After about a half hour, you needed a break, so I took over.
He told me what worked best, and I continued doing the same.
We would try new things from time to time, to use new muscles, but usually stuck to the same method.
We would use the masonry bit and press on the drill as hard as we could and drill out a hole in the rock.
Safety glasses and dusk mass were warm while working.
Then we would insert a bullpin and hammer into the rock and break out small chunks of the cave.
Then we would drill another hole and repeat the process.
Occasionally, the drill would hit a soft spot in the rock and that step would be shortened.
We would work until we became too tired to continue.
Then, B and I would trade.
While one of us was working, the other would remain in the darkness and either eat or drink,
or just laid on in the cave floor, padded by rope bags.
After just a few rotations, we were tired enough to catch a nap while taking a break.
The only light we used was a helmet light on the head of the worker.
Since it was pointing toward the hole, the resting person was left mostly in the dark.
This was a welcome benefit since the resting person was usually, while resting.
The rest break was also a chance to cool down a bit,
which didn't take long in the cooler temperature of the cave.
Fortunately, the temperature of the cave allowed us to work pretty hard and not overheat much.
I remember that I frequently looked at the hole and thought,
Hey, it's big enough. I think I can squeeze through, only to be disappointed in my attempt.
However, even after the first attempt and failure, I knew I would keep working on the hole until I got through.
This despite the fact that I know it was going to take many more hours of hard work.
It actually became an obsession with me.
I tried to get out to the cave and work as often as I could.
I hoped that the passage led to a larger undiscovered cave that we would be the first ones to enter.
I guess the explorer and me wanted to find new frontier there in the cave.
Since B is such an avid caver, he was motivated by the same desire to find a new unexplored cave.
What we did find was not at all what I expected.
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