Stephens Gap - A caving journey
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Stephens Gap - A caving journey
Finally got out there today. Aside from the heat and humidity, it was a perfect day for dropping a pit. Pictures do the place no justice. It is one of the most beautiful places I've ever been. And of course I brought the wrong gear. I desperately needed a wide lens, but all I had was my 50mm. I misjudged the room I'd have to work with.
The skylight we are traversing. It's hard to get a bad shot with that kind of sight. The actual hole we rappelled through was on the wall closest to the camera, which can't be seen. It was an opening about 2'x4', and drops straight down onto the pedestal ~120' below. If you miss the pedestal, the floor of the room is another ~40' or so. So it's a pretty large hole in the earth.
My friend going back up first. We both came down too fast for his girlfriend to get any decent shots in such low light.
My turn!
Other random shots
I'm not religious, and not at all spiritual, but I have to say times like today are the closest I ever get to feeling spirituality. Seeing some of the greatest sights nature has to offer, and getting lost in deep thought about the scale of time and geological processes that created some of these features. It's just incredible.
The skylight we are traversing. It's hard to get a bad shot with that kind of sight. The actual hole we rappelled through was on the wall closest to the camera, which can't be seen. It was an opening about 2'x4', and drops straight down onto the pedestal ~120' below. If you miss the pedestal, the floor of the room is another ~40' or so. So it's a pretty large hole in the earth.
My friend going back up first. We both came down too fast for his girlfriend to get any decent shots in such low light.
My turn!
Other random shots
I'm not religious, and not at all spiritual, but I have to say times like today are the closest I ever get to feeling spirituality. Seeing some of the greatest sights nature has to offer, and getting lost in deep thought about the scale of time and geological processes that created some of these features. It's just incredible.
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Thank you.
No idea. Barely any cavers use that term. Only pretentious people who go into caves wearing their best clothes, and are scared to get dirty. We used a large tree about 30 feet up the hill from the opening. We wrapped the end around the tree about 4 times for friction, then tied a figure 8 loop at the end with a backup knot, and clipped the rope back into itself. Almost no pressure on the knot. Then made sure the rope wasn't rubbing on any sharp rocks and set up a rope pad at the edge to keep it from cutting.
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What do you mean pre-setup rigging? No, it's not not a pay to play place. Anyone is free to go at any hour of any day. It's best go go after recent rain, so the waterfalls are at full force. You for sure want to go with someone who has been before. There are tricks to getting set up safely, and finding it. There is also a second pit on the trail on the way to the main attraction, off to the left, it is about 80' if I recall correctly. Not much to see really though. Can't help with GPS location, but I'm sure a google search for Stephens Gap would come up with some coordinated.
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A few more.
One of the falls that flow down into the big opening.
Another guy that was there with a few people. We let him use my rope, and didn't notice until after he was already half down that he was not wearing a helmet, and he was planking on rope. I was scared he was going to invert and lose control. Not an ideal form for rappelling on a rack. You can also see the keyhole in the roof that we actually rappel through.
One of the falls that flow down into the big opening.
Another guy that was there with a few people. We let him use my rope, and didn't notice until after he was already half down that he was not wearing a helmet, and he was planking on rope. I was scared he was going to invert and lose control. Not an ideal form for rappelling on a rack. You can also see the keyhole in the roof that we actually rappel through.
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