Yorkshire
Weekend Trip 19-21st March 2010
Hardcore core: Jarv, James, Kate, Nikolas, Thomas MCW
Filthy Dropouts: DanG, Al, Will, Andrew, Jana
Having warmed ourselves up to caving for 2010 with an energetic scurry
around the Mendips, a hypothermic scuttle down Penyghent, and a
pleasant amble through Ease Gill it was time to face up to the
challenge of King Pot. Several members were too lily-livered to face
the challenge and dropped out at the last minute, reducing Team
Hardcore to five members: Jarv, James, Kate, Nikolas, and myself.
Continued M6 shenannigans meant detouring through Stafford and
arriving at the warm and cosy NPC after half-three, the extended
driving time neccesitating some creative use of a bottle by
Nikolas, and almost abandoning Kate in a prickly shrub on the verge
of the motorway.
King pot is my 7th cave and the 3rd to feature an entry in the Book
of Death. We got underground at about 1430 on saturday. The entrance
is a climb down a narrow shaft entering a small chamber. At the end of
the chamber, a moderately awkward squeeze on rope then a rope climb
down took us to the top of the first pitch. The way onwards from there
is not the big, obvious cave but a part-concealed crawl under some
boulders. This leads to a traverse over a pit - fairly easy going with
the in-situ ropes. Beyond this, a squeezy-crawl through a rift leading
to the second pitch. After the second pitch there is a 3m freeclimb to
tight(ish) rift and then an unpleasant but easy wet crawl (initially
flat-out, but soon improving) leading to a more roomy chamber where we
left some food and hot ribena for later before continuing to the
dreaded "T-Shaped Passage".
The T-Shaped passage is described in the book of death as "a strenuous
crawl-traverse above a narrow rift" which is technically accurate but
in the same way as say, stating that hurricanes are irksomely
blustery. The rift beneath you is narrow and deep enough that falling
in to it would get you well and truly stuck, but wide enough that you
are essentially crawling over a void. The bedding plane which you are
crawling along varies in height between "narrow" and "fucking narrow"
and there are several tight bends in the rift which are awkward to get
around. James and Nikolas went in first, me following about 10
minutes behind them. I could tell how far ahead they were by the cries
of "OH FUCK" and "OUUCH" from Nikolas*. And got myself slightly stuck
more than a few times, emitting my own profanities (Jarv - at the back
- called out to ask if I was ok. Kate - immediately behind me -
replied "He's fine, he's just having a wiggle. Apparently I had, head
wedged sideways preventing me looking where I was going, managed to
squeeze to the left of a boulder through a gap normally reserved for
tackle sacks rather than following the rift.) I realised that we were
nearing the end of the passage because I could no longer hear swearing
from Nick (Though apparently James had earlier attempted a vertical
shortcut out of the passage, trapping himself briefly on his
unmentionables before giving up and climbing out properly). The
passage ends rather suddenly with a four metre drop, requiring a very
awkward 90 degree turn to the right at what seems like the tightest
part of the whole passage and a traverse accross the rock face.
Moods somewhat dampened by the knowledge that we'd have to do it all
again on the way out, we continued down Queensway, an attractive
streamway passage with lots of boulder clambering to keep your
pulse-rate up, and then down a cold, wet, elbow-deep crawl leading to
Emma's Pitch. By this time I was quite tired and starting to dread the
way back, so we rested at the pitch head and had some sugar to get our
energy levels back up. Below Emmas pitch is a canyon passage called
Festina Lente which ended at a 2.5m rope climb which in other
circumstances would have been easy but I was severely flagging and
rather fearing the way back so needed to be encouraged up it and given
a leg-up.
Shortly, after a climb up a boulder slope, we entered King Henry Hall
- a massive chamber atop Bloodaxe Pitch where we paused for more rest
and for Jarv to take some photographs. We dropped down Bloodaxe and
the next pitch (Victoria), landing us in a narrow streamway. Just
after Victoria Pitch, the streamway is blocked by a jammed boulder at
about waist level. Neither the Book of Death nor Northern Caves 3
mentions the boulder so I'm just going to name it "Deceptively easy
looking boulder of doom." Getting over the boulder is surprisingly
hard - tiredness, slipperyness of the rocks, and a lack of obvious
footholds conspire against you, but crucially, once over the boulder,
the passage at stream level becomes impassably narrow so you have to
stay up, squeezed between the walls of the passage, until it widens
again enough to drop back down. Nick, James, and I passed the boulder
(with varying degrees of difficulty/assistance. Nick: "Oh maan, how
can I not be able to climb over one small boulder?") but Kate dropped
to early and became firmly wedged in the narrow section, feet in the water but not touching the ground. Jarv and James spent a few minutes trying
variously to lift her out, push her out, take off her SRT kit, but she
was well and truly stuck. After a few more minutes, Jarv somehow
managed to contort himself (Ed - it's actually quite spacious down there under the chockstone - just rather wet!) so that Kate could use him as a foothold.
Once her feet had something to push against, she was freed - though
shaken - and we continued down the streamway to Kakemono Hall - a
large chamber with fantastic wax-dripping/Tim-Burton-wedding-cake
formations.
We rested in Kakemono and Jarv took some more photos. After some
discussion, we decided that it was wise to turn around at this point.
I was knackered and sincerely doubting my chances in the T-shaped
passage, Nick was tired and enraged after his boulder experience, and
Kate was quite shaken by her getting stuck (later, once warm and
happy, it would be refered to as The Incident, and Kate would boast
that she had "nearly died".)
All three of us n00bs needed help getting back over the Deceptive
Boulder of Doom. Thence
pitch-pitch-climb-streamway-pitch-crawl-streamway back to the
T-Shaped. I was terrified and really didnt think I'd get through it.
Jarv very kindly took Kate and my SRT gear, which helped no end. Kate
set off first. Jarv went back to take some photos. I used my alone
time by the traverse at the start of the passage to have a cathartic
little cry before starting on my way. It took me a couple of goes at
the traverse meaning that when Jarv returned I was just a couple of
feet sticking over the top of the rockface, swearing. I got a little
stuck on the initial very tight bit but thereafter surprised myself by
mainly being OK. The key was to take it veeeeeeeery slowly (sorry guys
behind me!), taking advantage of every time I approximated comfortable
and stable to have a rest. Also, on the way out, I'd been so paranoid
about falling into the rift that I'd not taken advantage of the safe
footholds it offered on it's upper reaches - these proved particularly
useful for getting round the corners. Eventually The rift shallowed
and widened and I could drop down and walk out to where Kate had
already been waiting half an hour. I gorged myself on the chocolates
we'd left there and we waited for the others. On Kate's
reccommendation, I had water first, then switched to hot ribena once
waiting had started to make me cold. It was sublime. At the time, it
was the most amazing thing in the world. Oh. My. God.
Anyway. Soon after, Jarv appeared, and we could hear Nick and James
behind but they did not appear. After a while it emerged that James
had got a tackle bag stuck and it took about another 20 mins before we
were all extricated and assembled.
On the way in, the T-shaped passage had felt like it was quite a way
into the cave, but on the way out it became clear how near the
beginning it really had been. There were a couple of mildly hairy
moments - I managed to pick an awkward squeeze instead of an easy
climb at one point, almost trapping myself under a boulder, and the
roped traverse over the pit below First Pitch was definitely trickier
going back than going in - but in seemingly no time at all we were
back at the entrance climb. Kate was already outside and Nick
attempted the climb, smelling the fresh air and grass, but he couldn't
reach the foothold and gave up, lamenting "How come woman can do this
and I cannot?" With a leg-up, I exited, Nick following, passing bags
out, and soon we were all out, alive, admiring the half-midnight
stars. Then back to the minibus, bum-sliding down the frozen
hill-side, and getting a severe telling off by the sheepdog at Braida
Garth farm. Kate, Nick, and I all concluding: Never Again.
We made chilli back at the NPC, where Dave Wilson and others were
still up to hand us the Tea of Recovery. Dinner at 3am (yum yum, if I
do say so myself) followed swiftly by bruised, achey bed for me.
Sunday I had pain everywhere. When Nick awoke he rolled over in his
sleeping bag and said "I am destroyed". Sunday afternoon went to
Ingleton for some pub-and-teashop caving (James and Jarv having a
wander up Ingleborough. The rest of us could barely walk.)
Back in the lab, still nursing bruises, I ahve been thinking about how
psychological the exhaustion I felt must have been. After the T-shaped
passage on the way in and up until I was out again in the night air, I
was thinking that wild horses couldn't drag me back to King, but
looking back, we all got through when exhausted, inexperienced, and
terrified. If I did go back, I'd be much less scared and considering
how much my energy improved as soon as I was out of the passage on the
way back, that should give me the impetus to go further. As Nick said
afterwards "What does not kill you makes you stronger" and
increasingly I am thinking that King Pot should be given the chance to
make me stronger again. Though perhaps not until my ribs are better.
Yours to middle sump (next time)
*For an improved experience of this report, quoted speech from Nick in
this should be mentally read out in Jarvist's
doing-an-impression-of-Nick voice.
Thomas 'Official IC³ chef' Jude McCarthy-Ward
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