While stationed at Ft. Bliss during the winter and spring of 1956 a civilian 
kid I met somewhere who had outdoor interests said he would show me something 
cool. The clear spring day was perfect for such a venture. We drove a few miles 
east of El Paso and made a left turn off of the highway onto a dirt and caliche 
road. If there was a fence or gate I don't remember it. A short drive took us 
on the north side of a range of low mountains and cliffs. We climbed around for 
probably three or four hours looking in the many shelter caves and crevasses. 
The ancient and colorful rock art was totally fascinating as were the rock 
formations themselves. Of course, there was also graffiti, some of it from the 
previous century. There was not another soul at this wondrous place known as 
Hueco Tanks, but possibly a few ancient spirits. 

Fritz, reliving the early years.


-----Original Message-----
From: Logan McNatt [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2011 8:21 PM
To: Gill Edigar; caverarch; Roger Moore
Cc: Mark Minton; Texascavers
Subject: [Texascavers] Re: cavers on archeo crews

No Michael Boon, Blake Harrison, or other cavers on the TAMU archeology crews 
at Hinds Cave, just students.  I was at A&M in the late 70s and 
knew most of the people who had worked there.

During the 70s and 80s, many cavers worked on archeological digs for Texas 
Parks and Wildlife Department, thanks to Ron Ralph,  Rune Burnett, 
and Orion Knox who worked there.  That's how I got my start in archeology, in 
1972 at Hueco Tanks State Park, making $2.50/hr.  (The next year I 
got a hefty raise, to $2.52/hr).  Cavers worked at Hueco Tanks,  Fort McKavett, 
Fort Lancaster, Mission Rosario (near Goliad), Kreishe Brewery 
(near La Grange), Fanthorp Inn (Grimes County), McKinney Falls, Enchanted Rock, 
Seminole Sink ,etc.  The work was seasonal, often a couple of 
months in the spring and a couple of months in the fall.  Perfect for the 
active caver lifestyle!  As soon as the project ended we took all the 
money we had saved (wages had increased to $3-$5/hr) and headed off on extended 
caving trips, usually to Mexico.

I can't remember all of the cavers who worked on these projects, but some of 
the regulars were  Don Broussard, Maureen Cavanaugh, Steve Zeman,  
Dino Lowrey, Michael McEachern, and me.  Others involved with at least one 
project include Pete Strickland, Ed Alexander, Tom Byrd, and Ted 
Samsell.  Apologies to the many I can't remember or didn't work with.

Logan



Mark Minton wrote:
There is a photo of some people working on an an archaeological dig in 1976, 
and one of them is a "student" named Michael Boon!  Is that Mike 
Boon the caver?  The picture does not show enough to identify the person, but I 
didn't think he was ever a student in Texas.

Preston Forsythe wrote:
I think the picture looks like Blake, rather than Mike Boon. As far as I know 
Boon did not do that type of work. Is that Ron in the background? 
The entire crew could have been from the 33rd St. caver house in Austin. Notice 
Dr. Dirt, an armadillo expert, is mentioned. Thanks for the very 
interesting link. And, thanks to Logan.

Roger Moore wrote:
I don't know Mike Boon, so I can't comment on the question. But 1976 was close 
to the peak year for cavers doing archeological field work to 
make money between Mexico trips, etc. It is in some ways ideal work for a 
young, footloose caver. A field tech is usually off in the middle of 
nowhere, but getting his/her food and lodging paid for. The work is often 
physically hard, so good for staying in shape. And there is crossover 
with many caving skills such as overland navigation, sketching, and basic map- 
or plan-making. Sometimes the work actually takes place in a 
caving area. But, back then, a field session was ALWAY a party when not hard at 
work.


Gill Edigar wrote:
Although Boon may have been around Austin on and off around that time,
I'm over 99% certain he didn't work on any digs. That was a Texas A&M
dig an I don't see anybody there that looks like any of the Austin
cave-related diggers of the day--a few of whom I lived with or near.
Logan ought to have a better idea of who would have made up that crew.
Absolutely nobody recognizable to me in any of the pics. Several of
them have on A&I insignia--caps & T-shirts.--Ediger









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