Spelunking in Las Vegas
LowellPorter writes "There's an article here about some reporters who check out the sewers in Vegas after a known criminal escapes a police dragnet through them. They expect to find lots of people living in there, but only end up interviewing a couple of bums."
Read the article, they actually do find mutant goldfish and cockroaches and mutant crayfish and a troll.
MAG-lites are wonderfully durable, but their bulbs and batteries are still prone to damage in an abusive environment like a cave. I know: on my one caving trip in college, my primary mag-lite gave out halfway through. Fortunately I had a AA backup. Better yet would be an LED flashlight: they're incredibly tough.
Secondly, a kukri? Please. I own one, and it's mostly useless except as a heavy-duty machete. And it might get you arrested. And was he carrying it stuck through his belt without a sheath?
Important stuff for caving:
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
If you want to try caving take a look at these sites:
http://www.caves.org (NSS, US)
http://www.orbonline.net/~tcg (Toronto)
http://www.caving.uk.com
Mother Earth's caves are FAR more interesting than what man makes.
It's a documentary about people living in the Amtrak subways in New York, and is both fascinating and moving.
For those of you young whippersnappers who have never heard of a grue, download and play Zork or any of the old, great Infocom games... from the "good old days" of computing, when anything over 16 kilobytes was a tremendous amount of free memory...
Actually, it's not the word that's the problem--it's the attitude of the people that choose to use that word.
Caving is a very dangerous activity--more so than most because it's a very short trip to disaster. Rescue is difficult--no helicopers here folks. An inexerienced person can be just fine one minute and the next--when his flashlight batteries go dead--he's toast. Oh, yeah, those cell phones don't work well underground, either.
"Adventure Sports" are attracting a lot of people these days that should just stay home in front of the TV. Caving is one of the more dangerous of these and it's not to be taken lightly. In addition to the danger there's the aspect of how fragile the cave ecosystem is and how easy it is to do real lasting damage.
However, local caving groups are very receptive of new members. The National Speleological Society can hook you up with a local group if you really want to learn about caves and how to safely explore them.