Mines #44 - Too Orangey For Crows

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sYnc_below

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This one has been on the To-Do list for ages, so long in fact that someone else beat us too it, c'est la vie!, you win some, lose some...

The truth is we were elsewhere frying bigger fish and were beaten by worthy opponents I know only thru the Interweb. Sloppy Seconds is never ideal but it had to be done as it was still a neat trip to make. The 4Gas had a spazz before we had broken a sweat and had to be shut down as it was blatantly lying about the 02 content and making a hell of a racket. This was far from ideal as there was a bunch of noxious primordial ooze right down there amongst that "Just for me and my dog" orange gloop and I wouldn't be surprised if it was enough to get the h2s sensor squawking.

The trip involved walking through just over a mile of heavily flooded galleries and crosscuts, gingerly picking our way through a couple of truly unstable & massive roof collapses before we got to the payoff. Water was on average four feet deep with submerged roof collapses, random lumps of twisted, underwater, narrow gauge rail to negotiate and hidden sumps in the mine floor. Two of us had hilarious over wader moments, one resulting in blood loss and my waders sprang a leak within seconds of leaving the dry part of the mine. Other random weirdness was an anemic looking lizard 150ft from the surface amongst corn growing underground and being able to send SMS messages from the base of the shaft.


“Venimus, Vidimus, Vicimus”

Next...!!!

Usual rules apply...No names, no locations, just pictures of somewhere orange. Please don't ask for locations as refusal often offends :)


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Like to say a BIG thanks to Hal for organising an awesome insight in the deepest, darkest depths.

Wearing waders for the first time was a experience in it's self, to be honest I felt like a gimp....as the water got deeper
the more the Neoprene sucked in around my body, as times it wasn't that comfortable in places...
Though I found it easier to walk in the deeper sections of water as it was more stable even with the debris all on the floor.
Hal kept telling me to put my camera away in case I fell over, but I managed to stay upright.

On with the pic's

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The objective

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The air shaft

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One of many roof collapses

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A major collapse

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The way out

Thanks for looking.
Barney​
 
All I can say with my civil engineering knowledge of underground spaces and the many and fun dangers they hold is.................

You guys are completly mental! :mrgreen:

Fantastic pictures, I don't know how you do it, that stuff looks like some kind of toxic sludge.
 

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