Caving in New Zealand

Caving in New Zealand

Caving in New Zealand is an established hobby as well as being a part commercial tourism.

Recreational caving is practised by several hundred members of caving associations all over New Zealand, who take advantage of the widespread limestone karst cave systems present in the country, especially in the Waitomo District of the North Island and in the Nelson-Tasman region of the South Island. There are also several hundred thousands of visitors to various tourist caves in New Zealand per year, [http://www.teara.govt.nz/TheBush/BushAndMountainRecreation/Caving/2/en Caving tourism] (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Accessed 2008-06-16.)] though a majority of these trips would not properly be called caving.

History

Overview

New Zealand caving as an exploratory sport is thought to have started with a group of Auckland-area people who started to explore the lava caves in the volcanic cones of the area in the 1940s (though commercialised trips through caves at Waitomo Caves had actually already existed for several decades). The group quickly progressed to exploring caves in the Waikato and King Country areas, and the New Zealand Speleological Society was founded in 1949 by Henry Lambert, with the first rough facilities at Waitomo being established in 1955. [http://www.teara.govt.nz/TheBush/BushAndMountainRecreation/Caving/3/en Caving in New Zealand] (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand)]

In 1957, the discovery of Harwood's Hole in the South Island was to fully establish New Zealand as a country with extremely promising cave systems, and the cave with its 183 metre deep vertical entry shaft, and its passages extending for many hundreds of meters into the depths, was for a long time the deepest and most famous non-commercial cave in New Zealand. The area around Nelson also contains most of New Zealand's deepest caves (most discovered in the following decades), including Bulmer Cavern, a 50 km long cave system.

New Zealand's cavers are mostly organised in the New Zealand Speleological Society (NZSS), with 9 affiliated caving clubs with a total of 300 members all over the country. [ [http://caves.org.nz/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/NZSS/History History] (from the New Zealand Speleological Society website. Retrieved 2007-10-08)]

Accidents and rescues

There have been a number of notable caving accidents since the 1940s, and at least four deaths (as of 2007). [http://www.teara.govt.nz/TheBush/BushAndMountainRecreation/Caving/4/en Caving equipment and culture] (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand)] In 1958, Peter Lambert was killed by falling rocks while being winched out of Harwoods hole, and in 1995, Dave Weaver drowned while cave diving in Pearse Resurgence near Nelson.

In 1998, one of the most active cavers of the country, Kieran McKay, broke his jaw in Bulmer Cavern on Mt Owen. While the cavern has few squeezes and crawls, the operation to retrieve him from deep within the cave occupied around 80 cavers (in direct position or as support) from all over the country for several days.

In 2007, Michael Brewer, another experienced caver, was struck by falling rock deep within the Greenlink-Middle Earth cave, in an incident which attracted widespread media attention in the country. Brewer suffered cracked ribs, concussion, and a broken pelvis. It took about 3 days to get him to the surface (a 3 km distance normally taking 5 hours), and while most of the distance was covered with Brewer on a stretcher, and several tight squeezes were widened with explosives, he had to be pushed and pulled through some sections. The effort involved more than 50 cavers and cost around NZ$100,000. [" [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=13&objectid=10460456 Battered cave doctor glad to be alive] " - "New Zealand Herald", Wednesday 29 August 2007]

New Zealand cave rescues are undertaken by SAR teams composed of experienced cavers who have also undergone specialised training courses and exercises.

Commercial caving operations

New Zealand offers a number of adventure tourism activities and one of them is caving. Most of the commercial caving is dine in the Waitomo area but there are also tours offered in Fiordland and on the West Coast. Black water rafting, where the participants float through caves on tyre inner tubes, was an early tourism venture and has become extremely popular.

ee also

*Tourism in New Zealand

References

Further reading

*cite book
last = Lipyeat
first = Moira
authorlink =
coauthors = Les Wright
title = Delving deeper: half a century of cave discovery in New Zealand
publisher = Hazard Press
date = 2003
location =
pages = pp285-286
url =
doi =
id =
isbn = 1877270393

External links

* [http://caves.org.nz/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/NZSS/Welcome New Zealand Speleological Society (NZSS)] (umbrella organisation of the New Zealand caving clubs)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • New Zealand Speleological Society — Contents 1 Mission 2 See also 3 References 4 External links …   Wikipedia

  • List of New Zealand-related topics — New Zealand * History of New Zealand * Politics of New Zealand * Geography of New Zealand * Economy of New Zealand * Demographics of New Zealand * Culture of New Zealand * Māori * New Zealand English * New Zealand cinema * New Zealand literature… …   Wikipedia

  • Mount Owen (New Zealand) — …   Wikipedia

  • George Wood (New Zealand) — George Sydney Wood CNZM is a former Mayor of North Shore City, New Zealand’s fourth largest city. He was the first North Shore Mayor to be elected for a third term since the city was formed in 1989. Andrew Williams replaced him as Mayor in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Mount Owen, New Zealand — There is also a mountain in the West Coast Range of Tasmania named Mount Owen, Tasmania Mount Owen is in the Tasman district of the South Island of New Zealand. It stands at 1875 metres (5625 feet) above sea level and is part of the Marino… …   Wikipedia

  • Caving — or spelunking is the recreational sport of exploring caves. In contrast, speleology is the scientific study of caves and the cave environment. [http://www.teara.govt.nz/TheBush/BushAndMountainRecreation/Caving/3/en Caving in New Zealand] (from Te …   Wikipedia

  • Nelson, New Zealand — Nelson City Whakatū   Unitary authority   A view of Nelson from the Centre of New Zealand …   Wikipedia

  • Charleston, New Zealand — Charleston …   Wikipedia

  • List of caves of New Zealand — The following is a list of some of the more well known caves and caverns in New Zealand.Not all caves have an official name as set by the New Zealand Geographic Board. The national caving association maintains maps of all known surveyed caves and …   Wikipedia

  • Caving organizations — There are a number of caving organizations throughout the world.Australia*Australian Speleological Federation (ASF) is a national organisation formed in 1956. It is an environmental organisation promoting the protection of Australia s unique cave …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”