Ken and all,

 

Mostly I agree with you, even though I am an "ist". If there is one place
where I disagree, it's that the problem isn't just the "ists." I alluded to
this in my talk. We used to be able to go caving just for the hell of it. No
permits, no paper work, no restrictions. Now we have to get permission to do
damn near everything. The National Cave Protection Act is being used by some
in your (and my) government to protect caves. Trouble is, the caves are
being "protected" from...us.   With the NCPA, we have shot ourselves in the
foot. Maybe both feet. It's almost easier to go caving in some other country
than it is to do it in our own, thanks to the NCPA. Because of certain
individuals in bureaucratic positions, we are being shut out of the very
caves we asked them to help us protect. Does anyone else besides me see
irony, here?

 

I sympathize, Ken. Part of the reason I don't go caving much anymore is
because I'm old and decrepit. But part of it is because of the restrictive
rules and regulations imposed by certain people in our government agencies. 

 

There is a caveat, here. Some (perhaps many) of the folks working for the
agencies are very good people who are sympathetic to the view of cavers. But
it only takes one well placed bureaucrat to muck up the works. The NCPA has,
indeed, bitten us in the ass!

 

Don't blame it all on the "ists." Some (perhaps most) of the blame needs to
placed where it belongs - on the "crats."

 

Harvey DuChene  

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ken
Harrington
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 5:43 PM
To: SWR Cavers
Subject: [SWR] SWR 50th Anniversery Gathering

 

What a wonderful gathering of the great cave explorers of New Mexico this
past weekend.  These were the people who went where no one had gone before
and probed the darkness to see what no one had seen before.  They
experimented with new designs for vertical gear to make things lighter and
better for reaching those deep recesses of the mountains. There will never
be another gathering like this.  

But it also was also significant in that it marked the end of the era of
recreational caving.  Never again will anyone be allowed to go "recreational
caving" in Fort Stanton because it would be a "fun" thing to do.  Nothing
has brought this clearer to me than the BLM bunkhouse; where the walls are
covered with the accomplishments of the "ists" who have taken over Fort
Stanton Cave and caving in general.  Mr. Fleming told me a while ago that
"he no longer goes caving as caving isn't fun any more".  At the time I
didn't understand him, but now I do.  If all caving is being done to further
research of the "ists", then caving is a dying activity.  Young people are
not going to join us and go caving just to collect soil samples or watch a
chosen few get to do all the exploration of new places.  Preservation of the
caves is a waste of time if there is not going to be any one in the future
to appreciate the caves for what there are, and the natural grandness of
them.

The 50th was a wonderful event and congratulations to all who made it a
success.  I had a great time but left with a heavy heart as I realized that
caving as I knew it is a dead art form. 

 
Ken

Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass - It's about dancing in the
rain.
<http://gfx2.hotmail.com/mail/w4/pr01/ltr/emoticons/smile_regular.gif> 



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