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JENNINGS CAVE CLEAN UP
1993 Vol. 30, Number 2-3, Summer-Fall
Twenty-five cavers from around the state spent November 13 and
14 cleaning the garbage and rubbish out of Jennings Cave in Marion
County, Florida in hopes that the bat colony, driven out by pollution
and vandals during the 1970s, might return. Using shovels,
buckets, pry bars and a 5-gallon drum on a lifting rig, the group
filled a 20 cubic yard dumpster with everything from tractor parts
to love letters. At the peak of activity, the scene resembled photographs
of Jim Whites crew hauling guano out of Carlsbad Caverns!
Among the more prominent items removed were: a bed frame with mattress
and box spring, a use your Visa Card here sign, assorted
sex toys, a camp stove with fuel cans, a tent, a bedpan, wall-to-wall
carpet, gallons of leaking oil jugs, and nine No Trespassing
signs.
Following the cleanup, the caves pit entrance is now about
8 feet deeper than before and it is possible to walk into the main
room instead of crawling. Thanks to everyone who participated for
the great job . . . and special thanks to our corporate sponsors
- Waste Management, Incorporated for their dumpster and hauling
services; the Marion County Commission for waiving landfill charges;
Cox Cable of Ocala for providing and installing a steel cable/highwire
for our hauling system and for donating ice, food, and drinks for
the cleanup crew. This is the second time Cox Cable has supported
our cleanup efforts, showing their commitment to the environment
in Marion County.
An extra-special thanks to John and Deb Singley, whose restaurant
Chuckies in the Forest, donated catered lunches,
a dining tent and latrine facilities. John also served as the Project
Coordinator for the entire activity. Jennings Cave (also known as
Confederate Cave) was occupied by a large maternity colony of the
southeastern brown bat (Myotis austroriparius) until the early 1970s.
Vandals apparently killed many and drove off the colony during the
1970s. Their return was pretty much prevented throughout the
1980s as locals began to use the cave as a garbage dump. Since
1992, the cave has come under the protection of the Florida Game
and Fresh Water Fish Commission and, through cooperative agreements,
the FSS. The cave is now listed on Floridas Conservation and
Recreational Land acquisition list. Hopefully, it will be acquired
by the State and, once again, be a home to bats.
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