NING BING RANGE, WA – 27 June – 13 July 2023
Surveying caves in the old days was pretty hard, using a compass, fabric tape measure, graph paper and clinometer. The introduction of a DistoX (laser) was a game changer, and the quality of the maps was second to none. Now we’ve got Topo Droid and I discovered on this trip that it takes mapping to the next level. No more calling out the distance, bearing and inclination to the person drawing the map, the DistoX “speaks” to the App!
Mind you, there were some hick-ups and frustrations for the first couple of days, but by the end of our 2 weeks, Bob, Jim and I were like a well-oiled machine, zipping through tunnels and squeezes in no time at all with Garry off taking awesome photos. And the caving was pretty good too!
In the main we were a group of four, Bob (Fearless Leader), Jim (Dora the Explorer), Garry (The Tick Magnet) and me (Mum).
Sorry my photos are crap. Big thanks to Jim, Garry, Les and Bob, all of whom shared their photos with me. If I’d known I was going to go into such great caves that were so highly decorated, I would have taken my iPhone with me every day (a pain to keep it charged though).
Day 1 – Tuesday 27th June – as it had rained just after breakfast, we hung around the campsites until we were sure the rain had dissipated. Then we set off on foot to locate some “missing” caves, ie, they’d been tagged but the GPS location was iffy at best, KNI50 and KNI90.
With KNI50, we didn’t find it, but we did find a promising hole, Garry went down one dodgy entrance but came out a better one, so Bob gave Jim and me the job of surveying this hitherto unknown cave the next day.
Day 2 – Wednesday 28th June – Jim and I headed off to the untagged cave (Bob and Garry took the hire car back to town). We’d surveyed for a few hours and went back to the entrance. Jim had glued the tag in place, and was down below me. I was just sitting there and Holey Dooley, there was the tag for KNI50, so had to scrape the glue off the rock to remove the now redundant and incorrect tag. We’ve named the cave Holey Dooley because there were also lots of holes in the walls.
We were over surveying (Drawing on graph paper, not using Topo Droid) by lunch time so we went back to camp for a swim.
Day 3 – Thursday 29th June – with a cloudy day forecast we decided to walk over to KNI159 which I had helped survey the previous year with David W-C. Apparently we hadn’t finished it so the aim of today was to finish the survey off.
Apparently, last year, they found a big muddy chamber, which we eventually arrived at after crawling-belly sliding through 30m of dusty sand. After surveying a well decorated chamber, we didn’t have the time to survey the muddy chamber (which looked like it had other tunnels leading off from it), so we called it quits with the intention of returning the next day to finish it off. Total surveying for the day 266m – with much frustration on Garry’s part.
Day 4 – Friday 30th June – we left at 7am and drove down to the area where we could walk back to KNI159 to finish off surveying the muddy chamber. I didn’t want to crawl through the sandy/dusty tunnel again, so I sat in a big open chamber (daylight) to wait for the guys to finish. I estimated they’d be gone for 2 hours. However, the 2 hour guestimate turned into 4 hours as Dora the Explorer kept finding new leads and new chambers. If I’d known I’d be sitting there for 4 hours I would have taken my Kindle to read. We were out just after lunch time, and when I went off on a “toilet break”, I found a small cave near the major entrance which is now known as KNI159a and named Kiddies Cave.
Day 5 – Saturday 1st July – We woke up to rain which didn’t stop until 8.30 so we had a lazy morning, then off to KNI90 to survey again, with Jim and I using pencil/graph paper and Bob using the Topo Droid. We found another entrance which we exited and could see quite a way over the valley. We finished at 3pm with still lots more to go.
It rained from just after dinner to midnight (46mm in all), this was going to clip our wings a bit as we wouldn’t be able to drive on the dirt roads for quite a few days.
Day 5 – Sunday 2nd July – We sat around most of the morning waiting for the wet vegetation and the rocks to dry out after the rain and then headed off around 10.45am to continue the KNI90 survey with Jim doing the pencil/graph paper and Bob again sketching on the Topo Droid. We finished up at 4pm with still another passage to do (will we ever finish surveying this cave)?
Day 6 – Monday 3rd July – Left camp at 7.30am to survey KNI50 (Nice Cave) a mere 15 minute walk from camp. I was on the DistoX with Jim picking out the points from which we’d survey and Bob on Topo Droid. We surveyed to an entrance on the other side of the block of karst, popped out into daylight and walked back around to the other entrance.We went back into the cave after lunch and did more surveying – by now we’re getting pretty efficient with the surveying and knocking off the passages very quickly. Once we’d surveyed enough for the day and exited and when we were walking back down to the flood plain, I fell and twisted my ankle, so I hobbled back to camp whilst the others explored more of the karst. The others had a nice time finding new holes!
Day 7 – Tuesday 4th July – I stayed in camp all day whilst the others went off surveying. In the afternoon WA residents John C, Donna, Steve and Les pulled into camp, they’d made the drive out through the mud (lots of wild stories there), to join us for a few days caving.
Day 8 – Wednesday 5th July – We set off this morning with a very civilised departure of 8.30am. We walked across the creek to the flood plain and then looked around for a “research cave” for an experiment in 2024 which will be undertaken by some grad students. Once we found a suitable cave, we took a lot of soil samples in and around the cave (very strict protocol for collecting samples). These samples will be sent over to Italy.
Day 9 – Thursday 6th July – Bob had a rest day but the rest of us walked over to KNI80 (Cathedral Cave) so we could show off this magnificent cave to those who hadn’t seen it before. There was a snake in the cave, possibly looking for small frogs to eat, we found about four frogs. Garry did a lot of photography in this cave as it’s one of the best ones yet found in the area. This has to be one of the best caves, and this time I got to explore more of it than last time (the snake was off-putting though).
Day 10 – Friday 7th July – today we went to an area north of KNI159 – we had to drive there, the road was a bit “iffy” in places but we managed, driving slower than normal.
We did a lot of exploring, looking for grikes that were promising.
After our exploration of the bowl, we had lunch in the shade, then walked around to KNI159 to finish off surveying around some of the boulders at the entrance – good to know that KNI159 is now “finished” thank God.
Day 11 – Saturday 8th July – A short walk today to KNI046 to survey this cave which was found ages ago but never surveyed. True to form Dora the Explorer found an extension out to a skyshot (daylight hole) which headed towards KNI049! Garry was on Topo Droid on this day and by 1pm (which is when we called it quits), had surveyed 163m of passage – some of it very highly decorated. We were going to have to return the next day to finish the survey, took longer than the last few days today.
Day 12 – Sunday 9th July – Back to KNI046 to do more surveying (so close to camp, a mere 140m!), we completed it and then commenced surveying KNI049 that Jim had found the day before – very hot in the cave and some of the drops were a bit risky so we decided to postpone until 2024 with climbing gear.
Les (Santa) turned up mid afternoon bearing gifts, fruit, vegetables, red wine and the most delicious barramundi steaks that I’ve ever had. We all then took a walk down to the Butterfly Gorge – hardly any there this year.
Day 13 – Monday 10th July – Our group of 5 (now with Les), headed back to 8 Mile Bore and we walked over to a creek which had many large tufa dams in it.
It had been a full-on day, exploring a very large area, not finding all that much, but it was an opportunity to write off this area as “nothing to see there”.
Day 14 – Tuesday 11th July – We headed north today to the Spook the Owl Cave area this had been found last year but not surveyed and we were going to check out the area as Bob wasn’t in the group that found Spook the Owl.
Following the karst up from KNI169, Les found a pink tape (dated 2022), which led us to Spook the Owl Cave. This is definitely an abseil to get into it, but following the karst back down to the valley, Garry found another entrance which he explored and found that it went down to the bottom of the Spook the Owl entrance, we left the surveying of it for next year so that Brian E can abseil into it (and maybe scramble up Garry’s passageway to exit).
We then made our way to Marvellous Cave (KNI163) which we found last year, I wasn’t part of the survey party then, but today we’d attempt to finish it. Jim, Bob and I did the surveying (with Topo Droid now behaving), and it was very quick and efficient. There was also much more to this cave than I expected, we eventually called it quits at 2.30pm, finishing up in an amazing big chamber very highly decorated – mind blowing actually!
Day 15 – Wednesday 12th July – Garry was having a “rest day” today as his back was playing up, the rest of us ventured to an area never before explored. We were basing the exploration on a “fly over” that Les did with a friend in a gyrocopter in 2022. Les had spotted some likely caves and GPS’d them. Bob didn’t have a Lidar image of the area, and as, in the past, holes weren’t always that visible from a distance, he wasn’t confident that we’d find anything. And it was an area that others had looked at from afar and came to the conclusion “nothing to see here”. So, with no great expectations, we drove as far as we could over the flood plain and then started walking.
We found and surveyed KNI170, now known as Vindication Cave because Les’ insistence that there was had now been vindicated!
This block of karst was then named the FOMO block (Fun Opportunities with Many Openings – and also since Garry was back at camp with FOMO)! We left the surveying for 2024 confirming that many caves are here to be found in the future. The best part of today was that we were going into caves that no other human had ever entered, pretty mind blowing – very hard to find in Australia a place where no man or woman had ever been before.
Day 16 – Thursday 13 July – Les very kindly drove Garry and me back to Kununurra today so that we could catch tomorrow’s flight back to Sydney.
This would have to have been one of the highlights in my caving life, to be in such a remote area and find pockets of caves as yet unexplored is truly amazing. I will miss out next year, but hope that I’ll be able to go in 2025, even if I can’t cave, I can live vicariously through everyone else’s adventures and maybe be the “Camp Cook!”. And yes, I’m a convert, Topo Droid is definitely next level surveying and the way of the future.