Caving Photos
His work
(Reprinted from TAG-Net)
Bruce...
By: Paul Aughey (Atlanta, Georgia)
It is with great sadness that I must report the death of Bruce Brewer
in Climax Cave, located in South Georgia, on July 12, 2003. Bruce
was leading a group of novices in the cave on the standard "beginner
loop". Some of the people on the trip had been in the cave
before, though they were all new to caving and some had never been
caving before. Bruce has lead this exact trip several dozen times,
and checking my cave log I have been on this exact trip with Bruce
five times, though we both did the trip many more times than that.
We both have been in the cave in excess of 100 times.
The "loop" for novices usually consists of a six-hour
trip, belaying down the Dry Chimney, through the North Climax crawls
to the Junction Room, and then through the Turnage Room by one of
three ways to New Formation Room and Razor Hall. Then, we would
take the group another way back out to Turnage Room and out of the
cave. The connection of Turnage Room to Razor Hall is a 20-30 partition
that can be crawled around on a thin ledge over the water or if
the water is down under the partition. The water in Razor Hall/New
Formation room is the Floridian Aquifer and varies depending on
how dry or wet it's been over the past few weeks and months. "The
Razor", is a large stalactite that hangs down into the middle
of the pond is used to gage the depth of the water. I have seen
the Razor out of the water by four feet or under water by two feet.
When the Razor is out of the water by four feet there is about three
feet of air space under the partition. According to a girl on the
trip, Bruce was very excited that the water levels were the highest
he had ever seen. This means that water levels were at least touching
the Razor, and that there would be no visible airspace under the
partition, though air pockets were possible. The girl I talked to
who was on the trip mentioned that she had not seen any airspace.
It is quite fun to "sump" from one room to the next by
using the air bells in this and other areas of Climax, so much so
that we call it "sumping". The water is deep and these
pools are anywhere from mid-section to out-right swimming, though
the distance isn't far. On this trip, according to the novice on
the trip, Bruce went to "check out" the lead while they
waited as he had in other areas of the cave earlier in the trip.
He swam under the partition, intending to find an air bell or be
able to swim across. He did not return. While I can't say whether
he "got lost", missed an air bell, banged his head, the
swim was too long, or what without speculating why he died, the
fact is that Bruce had gone through this section of cave dozens
of times. The water levels are aquifer controlled and take weeks
to rise or fall. He mentioned that water levels are exceptionally
high. In such a situation I would think that the passage would be
impassible. Apparently, it was. The novices waited a long while
for Bruce to return. When they switched off their lights to wait
for him, they noticed a glow from under the partition. They could
not see his body, but locked hands and went into the 68F water to
"feel for him" with their feet but the water was too deep.
With no other options, they left the cave working together to find
the way out. Bruce had pointed out to them significant features
on the way in, so while it was slow going, they found the way out
through numerous mazy passages on their own and called a rescue.
The police got a hold of Will Summer (Bainbridge, GA) who led a
dive team to the sump and extract the body from the pond. Apparently
Bruce's body was out of the sump by very late 7/12/2003. Later,
with little sleep, Will and a few other cavers and firemen returned
around 13:00 7/13/2003 with a sked, gauze, rope, and other material
to package the body and start hauling it out of the cave. Climax
Cave, while a fun tourist trip, is not an easy place for a body
recovery. The entrance is a massive sink with a hike down a slick
slope to a series of chimneys. The climbs/rappel is 15-25 feet depending
on the chimney, walking north through about fifteen hundred feet
of passage, a seven hundred foot belly and hands-and-knees crawl
(some areas quite tight and angled on sand and rock), lots of walking
and scrambling, and considerable maze passage. This "first
team" got the body all the way into the start of the crawls
by around 20:30 on 7/13/2003. It was an amazing haul by about eight
people. This is where Tim White, Brent Aulenbach, and I encountered
them.
The first rescue crew was very tired having been in the cave hauling
for many hours. We gave them all our food and water. All but David
and Will headed out from their team. Tim White had come down from
Atlanta with me and six others. I had contacted cavers in Gainesville
and Tampa, while other Atlanta cavers (and other places) were coordinated
through Tim White, Sue Aughey and Nancy Aulenbach, and others. Tom
Stodd (Tallahassee, FL) lead the first digging crew (second team),
and Matt Kalch (Niceville, FL) lead the third (also digging) team
into the cave. Tim White's group (that I was on) was the forth team
in the cave and we had many others on the way. The first team with
Will headed out while David, Will, Brent, and I hauled the body
to the beginning of the tight crawls. Will and David then headed
out to rest while Brent and I started digging and hammering. Eventually
Bil Davis, Tom Stodd, and John (Rocco) Stembel joined our group
in the end of the crawls hammering on the areas known as Stand And
Fall (a tight 1' wide by 2' high and 10' long rock on rock passage)
and Second Dig (a 1' high by 1' wide by 5' long sand tube). After
and hour or two of hammering and digging by us and many other cavers,
Tim White arrived again and said to leave the rock removal to the
air chisel. This device built by Brian Williams and run with the
help of Sullivan and Caren Beck was the perfect tool to "shave"
the walls of the cave to allow for the passage of the sked. It took
four 80cu tanks and a lot of hammering and rock removal to enlarge
Stand and Fall enough for a sked to fit. Rocco, Tom, Bil, Brent,
and I rigged pulleys with webbing and biners and haul straps to
handle the sked. It took about one hour to get through the 10' section
of Stand and Fall, quite often we were moving a millimeter at a
time. The air chisel crew lead the way out before the sked to remove
sharp bends and continue to enlarge the way. The digging crews (20-30
people at least) had done an amazing job and lowered the sand levels
by up to three feet in some areas. On the way out, Tom Stodd and
I were amazed that "the Key Hole", a 1' by 1' by 3' long
rock constriction had been completely removed and was now 2' wide
and 4' high. By 03:30 on 7/14/2003 we had gotten the sked out of
the sand crawls and another team took over to take the sked the
rest of the way out of the cave. It was all over except for the
final removal of people and gear from the cave. I exited the cave
around 05:30 on 7/13/2003 with the last of the cavers.
While Bruce's death hurts very much - he was a very good long-time
friend of mine and a very humorous and fun person to cave and hang-out
with - I am very happy with the enormous response by police, fire
squad (they worked very hard!), and the many cavers who had driven
from as far as Alabama and Tampa to stay up all night and work very
hard. Thank you to the people who brought food and water into the
cave, who manned phone stations, and who were on standby all night
in case we needed you. Thank you, thank you very much, I needed
you.
-Paul
Brooksville Ridge Pictures By Bruce Brewer
