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WARRENS PRESERVE HURRICANE CLEANUP
By Buford Pruitt
Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne toppled a lot of trees in the Gainesville,
Florida area, and many trees that were not totally blown over suffered
significant limb loss. Warrens Preserve suffered heavily from the 2004
hurricanes, with medium to large sized trees felled all along the property's
entry road including one particularly large tree that fell directly on top
of the property line gate. Several large trees were also down across the
off-site road that leads to the property. To add to the mess, a half-dozen
or so beetle-killed pines that have been standing dead for several years
around the cave's entrance sinkhole gave up the ghost during the hurricane
winds and augured into the sinkhole immediately in front of the cave gate.
Sean Roberts discovered the situation and called me in early November, and I
then organized a cleanup via the Florida Cavers Yahoo Group. Thirteen people
and five chainsaws showed up early on the morning of Nov. 20 to clear the
road and cave entrance. The participants were Adam Scherer, Jennifer
Loughran, Corey Brasalier, Eric Amsbury, Steve Nesmith, Wendy Shirah, Sarah
and Sequoia Cervone, Jeff Moore, Annette and Danny Brinton, Tom Feeney and
me. Wendy took photographs of the event, which will hopefully be posted soon
on the website. It was warm and muggy all day, like summertime, as it had
rained the day before and even rained a little on us that morning while we
worked, and my clothes were soon soaked. Oh well, welcome to Florida.
In the morning we broke up into several groups, each with 1 or 2 chainsaws
and 3 or 4 people. One person with a chainsaw would cut and 1 or 2 others
would haul the cut debris out of the road. We lined the edges of the dirt
road with debris in order to encourage people to stay on the road when
driving back to the cave entrance.
We started on the off-site trees that blocked our entry to the Warrens
Preserve dirt road, and then worked our way back to the cave entrance. We
were apprehensive that we might have to replace the entry road gate, but the
gate worked fine after being uncovered. Oh, it has a few more dents now, but
somehow I doubt anyone will notice them. Someone did a bang-up job of
constructing that gate in the first place. It took only about 2.5 hours for
us to clear the road of debris. I was really impressed with the way that
everyone worked together so efficiently.
A large tree at the entrance of the dirt road had been pushed over by the
hurricane winds, and in so doing had left a large, deep hole in the road. A
group consisting of Wendy, Jen and Corey used dibble sticks and a shovel to
gouge dirt from the root mat of the fallen tree and placed the dirt back in
the hole. Hopefully, the hole won't hold too much water and get wallowed out
over the coming years. If so, we will need to go back and fill it with clean
sand or gravel.
After lunch we tackled the giant "pick-up sticks" that bristled up out of
the cave entrance. This was no mean feat. These limbless pine poles were
largely debarked, and because of the recent rains were slick and wet, not to
mention heavy. After debating at some length about the best way to remove
them, we settled on chainsawing them into sections in place, then manually
hauling them up and out of the sinkhole with ropes. Danny and Eric did most
of the chainsawing, and the rest of us formed a "bucket line" to haul them
up and away. Some of the logs tended to snag on the iron ladder when they
were being rope-hauled up, so Danny ("Igor") hoisted them on his shoulder
and walked them up the ladder. Clearing the cave entrance took about 3
hours.
After the cleanup Jeff, Annette, Danny and I did a quick tour of the
historic section of the cave to assess the changes that were caused by the
hurricane water inflows. A lot of dirt was excavated and carried to deeper,
unknown portions of the cave. The entrance passage between the cave gate and
the top of the First Drop had been lowered by 1 - 2 feet and additional dirt
has been excavated below the drop to the Crossroads and from the right-hand
passage in the Crossroads. We found a large broken bone, possibly a femur
that had been excavated by the storm waters. As it looked and felt old, we
retrieved it and later passed it on to Sean, who took it to a
palaeontologist where he works at the Florida Museum of Natural History and
learned that it was from a llama. Presumably, that llama died there in the
Pleistocene.
We noted a relatively deep pool (4-6 ft?) of tannin-stained water in the
right-hand passage beyond the Crossroads. Three dead mice floated in the
stagnant pool. We saw another, living mouse in the historic section and 1 or
2 more living mice on the distal side of the Cashew Squeeze. All were cotton
mice (Peromyscus gossypinus). This is the largest number of mice I have ever
seen on a single trip into Warrens cave. We also saw a single bat, asleep.
This makes twice now this year that cavers have assembled to remove logs
from the entrance of Warrens Cave. Since there are more standing dead,
beetle-killed pines around the sinkhole, I imagine we will have to remove
more of them in the not too-distant future. Management is a never-ending
occupation, but that's ok - I enjoy any excuse to go to Warrens or to spend
a day with cavers.
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