Excuse me for sounding like a sour puss....but it is a quarry.....AND WHY
isn¹t anyone¹s ³soul hurting² for the caves that have been and are being
destroyed by urban sprawl in Central Texas? In my humble opinion; building
houses, Walmarts, hotels, strip centers AND patronizing those business is a
much greater sin against nature......and yet I know cavers and other
environmentalist types who love to live out in those brushy hills...and buy
all their cheap plastic stuff at Walmart....and love to go for a Saturday
drive in the ³country² on freeways that trench a horrid scar across our
beautiful karst.... many of us add our little piece of this damage everyday
through our daily actions.

It ³hurts my soul² that I live this way...and have little choice in the
matter.

To complain about a house in a quarry, that some call a cave, seems to me a
bit inauthentic...and it covers a pain that we all feel when we consider the
damage being done all around us. If this type of thing offends us, we should
be called to action. We should be lobbying for ³urban growth² boundaries for
out cities to protect the remaining hill country, before it ALL becomes
covered with parking lots and fry pits and Walmarts and Big Box retailers.
We should being saying enough to the everyday excessive use of automobiles
AND insist that development be SMART. We should support initatives that
create walkable, more dense cities that have and support mass transit. I
could go on.....but will not. But I do hope that we can all see the ³cancer²
that we are creating....if ones desire is to save caves; one might start by
looking at the real problem....and that is how we use our fragile land
everyday.


And excuse me if I sound brash...I woke up with some kind of stomach crud
this morning...jb



On 2/20/09 5:10 PM, "Louise Power" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Why would anybody want to ruin a perfectly good cave with a house? What family
> of 5 needs 17000 sq ft? What happened to all the cave formations? Where does
> their waste go? Does it pollute the ground water? It looks cool, but degrades
> the whole area!
>  
> I was appalled.
>  
> When I was in what was then called Yugoslavia, there were people in the Karst
> Mountains living in caves out of necessity, not necessarily because it was
> cool. They also penned up their livestock right there in the entrance. (Where
> is Glade room freshener when you need it?)
> 
>  Louise
> 
> Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2009 10:31:07 -0800
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [Texascavers] Kinda hurts my soul
> 
> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=330306913609&ssPageName=ADM
> E:B:EF:US:1123 
> <http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&amp;item=330306913609&amp;ssPag
> eName=ADME:B:EF:US:1123>
>  
> Just in case someone wants a cave home in missouri. I'm sure it had low energy
> bills.
> 
>  
> Matt Turner 
> 
> 
> "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without
> accepting it." - Aristotle
> 
> 
> "Empty pockets never held anyone back.Only empty heads and empty hearts can do
> that."- Norman Vincent Peale
> 
> 


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