Well, George, I think Jill has her first article for the next Caver edition. Be 
sure you send her a good pic of the beastie. 
Louise

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2012 13:04:54 -0600
Subject: RE: [Texascavers] Bracken spiders halt SA road construction

Correction. It is not the “Bracken” Bat Cave spider. It is the “Braken” Bat 
Cave spider. It is a common and understandable mistake. Here is the full story, 
written for the first time, on the odd cave name. The media could care less, 
but I suspect that many cavers will find it interesting, if not amusing, and 
especially if they were caving in Texas 30+ years ago. In January 1977 Greg 
Passmore published “Spelean Studies Project Report No. 1”, a collection of maps 
subtitled “Bexar County Cave Maps, A Second Look.” Greg caught a lot of flak 
for this publication, some justified and some not. One complaint was that it 
included maps of a couple of caves not in Bexar County. Greg obviously knew 
that Bracken Bat Cave was not in Bexar County, but he included it as a nearby 
cave and one of interest to cavers in Bexar County; the point of his 
publication was to provide maps to young cavers in San Antonio looking for cave 
information. Another complaint was that there was a perfectly good map of 
Bracken Bat Cave, but Greg chose to use a sketch map by the late Randy M. 
Waters. Greg replied to this complaint by saying he used what maps he had and 
he wasn’t able receive a copy of the actual survey-based map. There was also 
ridicule that Bracken was misspelled “Braken” by Randy.  Here is the truth 
behind the sketch map. Randy had rendered his own sketch of the cave, but I, 
never having seen a map of the cave other than Randy’s sketch (I’d only been 
caving for a year), made my own sketch of Randy’s sketch. Randy’s map spelled 
the cave name correctly, but I misspelled it on my sketch of his sketch. Greg 
ended up publishing my sketch with the misspelled name. Anyone who knows my 
handwriting and has a copy of the publication can it is my script misspelling 
the cave’s name. However, apparently James Reddell didn’t recognize it. He 
wrote a review of the report for the Texas Caver and mis-credited Randy for the 
map, so everyone believed it was his. Randy thought the situation was hilarious 
and enjoyed playing the bad boy in it, so while we told a few people the sketch 
map and mistake were mine, for the most part we let people think it was Randy’s 
typo as he wanted. Randy and I talked about naming a cave the misspelled 
“Braken Bat Cave” as a joke. About three year later, Randy told me about a 
small cave he found and I explored and surveyed it with Eric Short. I described 
it to Randy as a little nothing hole, and the fact that it was not a bat cave 
added the humor so we christened it “Braken Bat Cave” thinking it would 
disappear unnoticed into Texas caving history. Except that I made a biological 
collection on that trip, which included a tiny spider. A few years later James 
Reddell told me the spider was described and identified as a new species. In 
1992 it was federally listed as an endangered species. The U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service consulted me on giving the spider a common name. I didn’t care 
for “Braken Bat Cave spider” because of the confusion it would inevitably 
cause, but they went with it. I’ll end with a historical footnote. “Spelean 
Studies Project Report No. 1” turned out to be the only report in that 
publication series. I think I bought my copy for $5, possibly less. About 15 
years later it had become a collectors’ item and sold at a TSA Auction for 
$100. Maybe with all of the publicity involving the spider and highway, it 
could fetch an even higher price today. George *************************** 
George Veni, Ph.D.Executive DirectorNational Cave and Karst Research 
Institute400-1 Cascades AvenueCarlsbad, New Mexico 88220-6215  USAOffice: 
575-887-5517Mobile: 210-863-5919Fax: [email protected] 
From: Louise Power [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2012 07:27
To: Texas Cavers
Subject: [Texascavers] Bracken spiders halt SA road construction Everytime I 
send one of these, I feel like I'm carrying coal to Newcastle: 
http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49315193/#49315193  I want to know what 
the guy in the t-shirt expects TDOT to do with the spiders, move them or just 
stomp on them. Louise                                           

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