zondag 26 juli 2009

materiaalkuis


Na een weekje door modderige gallerijen ploeteren, en pozo's de mierda afdalen was het dringend noodzakelijk materiaal te kuisen ...
have a look :
http://gallery.me.com/dirk.hermans#100216

btw. Sistema de Alto del Tejuelo is ondertussen groter dan 90 km... en potentieël voor de 100 km. komt meer en meer in zicht :-)

Cantabrië juli 2009: randanimatie

Fotos van de bovengrondse explo's en van een trouwfeestje...
Enjoy!


Grotkunst nog eens in de prijzen!












David heeft voor een tweede keer een prijs mogen gaan ontvangen voor zijn montage over mijn grotkunstjes!! Deze keer maakten we een montage van foto's van de 3 tentoonstellingen gericht op het amerikaanse en internationale publiek met als titel ART CAVE voor het International Congress of Speleology in Kerville . Hopelijk dus binnenkort in 3D op spekul of anders in Everberg gekoppeld aan een huisinstuifje. Hier, ter illustratie nog eens opnieuw wat 2D-versies van de foto's.

maandag 20 juli 2009

Week 1: New Mexico

OK, week 1 in de USA is achter de rug. Carlsbad Caverns en omgeving, bekeken op een wetenschappelijke manier. Dus geen al te lastige speleo, wel zwaar voor mijn 2 hersencellen die aan 100 per uur moesten werken om er toch een beetje van te begrijpen. Gestationneerd in de Washington Ranch, voldoende ver van alles wat maar op beschaving lijkt. Waarmee ik internet bedoel uiteraard :-) En bij aangename dagtemperaturen van boven de 110 graden Fahrenheit (you do the math). Een lekker weertje bij een acht uur durende geologische wandeling, die ons van beneden een koraalrif (met naar olie ruikende steen) bracht tot helemaal boven de "normale" kalksteen. In dat Capitan Reef zaten behoorlijk wat interessante fossielen trouwens.
Belg zijnde kan ik ook nog wat commentaar geven over het eten... typisch Amerikaans. Pancakes, wafels, hamburgervlees, kaassaus. Die laatste afgewisseld met spekplakjes en roerei. Dit was dus het ontbijt. Met als redding (sinaas)appels en een grote bak gevuld met OJ. Lunch en diner waren van hetzelfde caliber...

Enfin, de pre-ICS2009-trip was voor mij dus “scientific rambles through southeast New Mexico”. Een manier om wat nieuw speleo-volk te leren kennen en om dito cultuur op te snuiven. In een streek die me, achteraf bekeken, nog meer interesseert dan tevoren. Iedere dag een andere trip. De ene keer over microbiologie, de andere keer over geomorphologie. Met wat schone concreties uiteraard, al was de doorsnee deelnemer meer geinteresseerd in een blok gips dan een bos excentrieken.

Nu zit ik dus in Kerrville. Benieuwd naar wat komen zal. Talrijke presentaties, vendors allerhande, workshops over fotografie en speleokunst, speleolympics, foto(montage)wedstrijden, ...

zaterdag 18 juli 2009

NCRC Cave Rescue Seminar


Dag Spekulozen,

hieronder in het Engels een verslag van de speleo secours training die ik hier vorige maand in Indiana gevolgd heb. Het was een super week waarin ik heel veel geleerd heb en een hoop super fijne mensen heb leren kennen! Ben nu benieuwd om op een dag de Belgische speleo secours training ook eens te volgen en de tien verschillen te zoeken!

Will en ik vertrekken morgenvroeg voor een week naar Texas voor de internationale conventie, gevold door een week speleo in New Mexico. Misschien later daar ook een verslagje van voor de blog ...

Heel veel groetjes uit SF!
Joke & Will

--------------------------------------------------

Bedford, Indiana June 13-20, 2009


Getting there

Thursday afternoon, June 11th: took the plane to Indianapolis, IN via a stopover in Phoenix, AR. Loved the landscape there! Arrived in Indianapolis around 1.30 am at night and was picked up by a nice caver who drove me all the way to Stalker Elementary School in Bedford, helped me to find a place to put my tent and then even helped put the tent up. By 4.30 am I was ready to go to bed.

Woke up around 10 am and spent the day talking to people, washing ropes and other caving gear in a 10 % bleach solution (yikes!). In the afternoon, I spied on the instructors refreshing their patient packaging skills and later that evening we were allowed to play around on the ropes that had been hung in the Gym of the school and practice our vertical skills.

Seven long days of learning

Saturday morning everyone was welcomed to the seminar by John Punches and Anmar Mirza after which we split up by level. The level 1's were escorted by DJ to the classroom that would be ours for the week and - after some more introductions - we had our first lesson in the more technical aspects of ropes and cave rescue equipment.

After lunch Roy gave us a theoretical introduction into the cave environment followed by a treatise on medical considerations and medical assessment by our MD Steve Mossberg.

The evening was spent by the instructors checking our gear and us doing our Entrance Skills Checkoffs - demonstrating our knowledge of knots and SRT skills. I spent the evening chatting to a bunch of people and having lots of interesting discussions - something that would go on for the remainder of the week.

On Sunday morning we were split up into Squads of 4 or 5 people. I ended up in Squad 2 with Todd, Susan and Andrew and quickly ended up trusting them when we learnt how to package a patient and I got to be the patient! We packaged each other alternately in a SKED and a Ferno and then did some above ground patient movement with the whole group. We escaped the heath outside by having some more classroom time and had patient packaging checkoffs in the evening.

After learning how to pack and transport a patient in a horizontal cave the previous day, on Monday we learned hauling and lowering systems - for the main line as well as for the belay line - that will be used for vertical litter transportation.

In the afternoon, we had a good time practicing what we learned on the rocks and the evening was reserved for checkoffs again followed by more interesting discussions and practicing pickoffs-according-to-NCRC-standards in the Gym.

Tuesday morning started with lectures on hazardous atmospheres, water problems and communications and then in the afternoon we were let loose into a cave - the first one ever for a few of the students! We practiced underground horizontal litter movement packaging a few chosen ones in Ferno or SKED and then dragging them through more or less challenging passages. My team was given a really hard time trying to maneuver me in a Ferno through an extremely narrow passage. I was very glad that people made sure my nose did not scrape the ceiling!

That evening I discovered the Alamo, originally named "Little Alamo" - but later abbreviated to Alamo - after the Spanish Mission turned into a military fort in San Antonio, Texas that held out against the Mexicans long enough to ensure Texas' independence. The NCRC Alamo now is usually located at one of the Texans' - Monty's in our case - RV vehicle and it is the place where people hang out in the evening, drinking beverages, having conversations or playing games and they're usually the last ones to quiet down for the day!

The morning of the next day was spent in the classroom with lectures on the Incident Command System, how to search a cave and psychological considerations of a cave rescue.

In the afternoon, we got to go into a cave again and the six level 1 squads merged into two bigger groups. Both groups dragged a Ferno into the cave to practice hauling and lowering of a packaged patient. Within each groups the different squads alternately had to package and provide a patient, rig and operate the main line or rig and operate the belay line for hauling as well as for lowering.

That evening, Squad 2 (minus Andrew who deserted us and went on a boat tour in a tourist cave with some other guys) did some more rigging and installing the bridals on the litter checkoffs after which the night was concluded at the Alamo.

Friday morning we had to take a test on what we had learnt that week in the classroom lectures. Luckily the test wasn't too hard cause I don't think that anyone had found time to actually open their course book!

In the afternoon, we were supposed to go into a cave again for some mock rescue scenario practices. Unfortunately, a tornado warning was out so it was decided that we would hold our mock Mock Rescue in the Gym - hastily renamed Gym Cave. Level 1 and 2 together went through 8 or so mock rescues in the school thereby getting to know each other a bit better.

After dinner, John Punches and Anmar Mirza went over the rules for the real Mock Rescue the next day and that night everybody went to bed rather early for a change to get some decent sleep in preparation for a potentially long day the next day.


The next day then, all 3 levels were being mixed up and divided into three big groups. I ended up in team 2, which was the team that got the initial accident report and went to the scene first. The level 3 's took the posts in the Incident Command and gave the rest of the level 1 and 2 's their tasks above ground or dispatching them into the cave.

Together with Level 2-er Ethan and co-level 1-er Jim, I was drafted into Comm Team 1. Our task: take enough comm wire and phones into the cave, get as close to the patient as possible and keep Incident Command in the loop of what's going on underground.

The accident had been reported around 8 am that morning and by 10.30 am the Initial Response Team and Comm Team 1 were on their way into the cave looking for patient Jess who was reported to have a broken leg. We would have to get Jess' team mates out of the cave as well; Jonathan who got lost and Mark who got slightly hypothermic. Luckily, neither of her team mates needed to be carried out!

We installed two spools of wire before we ran out of it about 50 m before the Mountain Room - a big chamber where a narrow passage would have to be rigged to get Jess out of the lower river passages - and had to sit tight until one of the other task forces brought us more wire. When another spool of wire arrived we made it all the way down into the river passage below the Mountain Room.

At that point, a call was made for all available hands to go and assist the Evac Team with the evacuation of the patient and I was sent out deeper into the cave and helped with the evacuation until Jess made it to the Mountain Room. After that (and a funnily bruised little finger), I resumed my task with the Comm Team taking the comm wire out of the cave again and taking everything that was left behind out of the cave. We were accompanied by a couple of bats during the process. We finally made it out of the cave by 7 pm, a while after Jess had gotten out.

After that, we went back to the school, had a well-deserved dinner, washed the gear that we had used that day and the day was concluded with a party at the Alamo that lasted until the morning. At 4 am that morning we were treated to a sudden thunder storm and refreshing rain shower, but that wouldn't deter the partygoers.

Unwinding

On Saturday then, the last day of the seminar, we had a review of the Mock Rescue. Instructors seemed pretty pleased with how things had gone and our Comm Team got some nice comments on the rigging, marking and hiding of the comm wire.

Level 1 also got an award for Real Men and Real Women, a steel carabiner that had been pulled apart in a stress test. Jeff got the carabiner without gate because "Real men don't need gates" and I got the gate because "Real women don't need carabiners" ... ;-)

After that, people started taking off to their respective homesteads. I got to say a lot of goodbyes since I stayed until the evening and my plane wouldn't take off until really really early the next morning. I spent a lazy afternoon packing at ease, drying out all my stuff that had gotten wet during the rain storm, sat around with some other people at Monty's RV, found out it was actually my birthday that day and concluded a great week with piza in Bloomington, IN after which Roy drove me to the airport where I barely managed to wake up at 3.30 am to catch my flight to Charlotte (with air hostesses that should get a part in a movie) and then on home ...

A summary of the week

Over 10 days: 104 hours of instruction, 38 hours of sleep, 18 hours at airports and on air planes, 13 hours of fun and relaxation at the Alamo, 9 hours of waiting for sleep to come thanks to the black tea that we were served for dinner and a most excellent week with new friends in Level 1. I wouldn't trade it for anything!