The following was posted this morning on Facebook. Since it involves active exploration in a cave with some history, I thought it might be of interest here.
Charlie Roberson:Yesterday, Jonathan Bernot and I made a successful dive to the end of the line (and then some) at Cathedral Sink. Our primary objective was to make repairs to the existing line. We had no idea what the condition of the line was between 10,500' and the end of the line at 17,119' but knew from experience in the system that we would likely encounter large sections of buried line.
For the most part the line was in good condition but we did go through several shallow areas where the line was buried in large dunes. This slowed our progress as we had to either patch the line or pull it out of the mud. Around 14,000' the existing line was broken in an area that looked like a large Henkel restriction with a rocky floor. Jon tied in and and the passage quickly opened up into a low wide room. We followed the right wall and the passage tapered back down to where we could easily see both walls. The 20' visibility was considerably better than the first half of the system, which was down to 5-10' after the recent rains. There was not a scrap of line to be seen in this remarkably clean floored passage and I got the sense that we were off on a side passage. As the passage opened back up and Jon's 700' reel ended, I spotted the broken end of the existing line tied off on the left wall. I did a double take on the arrow that appeared to be pointing into the cave but quickly realized it was on the broken end of line that had been swept in that direction.
We were back in business. The line from there to the end of the line was in good condition but still a ways off, which was fully realized on the way out. We reached the end of the line and tied in. Jon dumped a 400' reel and the I tied in. I dumped about 200' before we ended up in a series of dead end slot canyons. As I checked the last one Jon dropped down and spotted small but going passage. This was not likely the way on so we decided to tie off and back up to see if we missed something.
At this point we had a bottom time of 188 minutes and knew that our return trip would take at least 120 minutes. Having decided to keep our bottom time around 300 minutes, we decided to leave further exploration for another day. We made good time on the way out and had a 309 min bottom time at an average depth of 133 ffw. I had a 680 min total dive time with about three hours in the habitat.
Many thanks to Robert Schulte who ran the surface; Ted McCoy and Ken Sallot for dropping two xk1s at 8,000' on Saturday; and Alan Pelstring, Jack Leeth, Derek Ferguson, Howard Smith, Kristi Bernot, Meredith Tanguay, Steve Cox, Blake Wilson, and Casey McKinlay for support.
Special thanks to D3 Diving, Suex, and DUI for your continued support.