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> Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Why We Don't Share Cave Locations :
> From: Fritz Holt <[email protected]>
> X-Mailer: iPhone Mail (14B100)
> In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
> Date: Sun, 5 Feb 2017 11:18:06 -0600
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> To: [email protected]
> 
> Jerry,
> A great and comprehensive article. Well written and informative with great 
> pictures. 
> Thank you from lovers of caves, bats and all things related. Proud to call 
> you a Texas friend. 
> BAT LIVES MATTER!
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On Feb 5, 2017, at 12:35 AM, Jerry via Texascavers 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Chuck Sutherland
>> 
>> A Tennessee naturalist's photography, maps, and projects.
>> 2016/11/20
>> 
>> Why We Don't Share Cave Locations
>> 
>> People often ask myself and other cavers to give them cave locations and 
>> cave information. I always reply, "I don't give out cave locations". Not 
>> knowing the history of reasons why I do this, I am often asked why. This is 
>> my response.
>> 
>> We love to hang out with, and take new people caving. Some see us as stingy 
>> stodgy keepers of secrets (and some cavers are), but I see myself as a gate 
>> keeper. I am not all powerful, and I am fallible, but my knowledge extends 
>> far beyond what an inexperienced caver (or spelunker as they often call 
>> themselves) does.
>> 
>> That is important because the conservation ethic we practice on the surface 
>> doesn't always work underground. Also the way we understand our environment 
>> to keep ourselves safe doesn't work the same way underground. These two key 
>> issues are the main reason why I won't give out cave locations.
>> 
>> First, let's address the conservation issue. If you consider the combined 
>> historical, archaeological, paleontological, biological, and mineralogical 
>> resources of a cave to be finite (which they are), then they can be used up.
>> 
>> We consume cave resources by destroying them. And history has shown us over 
>> and over again that is what happens when the general public is aware of a 
>> cave. Pictured below is a civil war ladder that was burned in a campfire 
>> inside a cave no doubt by fools burning their own cultural history. That 
>> ladder had been there from at least Civil War era, perhaps longer.
>> 
>> https://www.flickr.com/photos/chucksutherland/6138611367
>> 
> 
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