Sometimes a plan completely works out and that’s exactly
what happened during our week long dive expedition to Claveria last month, 22-29
May. The most grueling and least enjoyable part of the trip of course is the 13
hour drive, but even that was mostly smooth, light on traffic, and completely incident
free. As far as the diving; we were able to get in all of the 9 dives we had
planned for and like every time I dive I saw new things each time we went out.
We had tried to make the same thing happen a month earlier
during Easter Week but that trip fought us tooth and nail from beginning to end.
During that April trip, even though we had left at midnight to beat the traffic
we still had lots of cars to contend with, even throughout the wee hours of the
morning and all due to Easter traffic. The lesson learned is that it doesn’t
matter what time you do it, trying to travel during Holy Week is a bad idea in
the Philippines. Avoid it if you can.
The other problem during that trip, THE problem in fact, was
the weather. From the day we arrived in Claveria the hard rains and wind gusts
of a major front blowing in from east to west across the top of Luzon continued
to batter away at us until it finally chased us off, shortening our stay to
only three days. In fact, the locals told us that they could not remember ever
having such intense rain during Easter, so bad was it that it washed out at
least one bridge on the coastal section of the National Highway between us and
home, forcing us to drive the long way around Luzon back to Angeles City by way
of Aparri, down the Cagayan River valley to Tuguegarao and over the mountains
back to our home province of Pampanga.
Don inside the cave |
By any measure that trip was a bit of a bust, but not
completely so, because we were lucky enough to discover a massive underwater
cavern. We asked lots of the fisher folk and boatmen about the huge cave but no
one knew anything about it. We had a hard time believing that we are likely the
first humans ever to see the inside of it, because of its location right on the
coast and because it is in such relatively shallow water, but it seems that we are indeed the first. One thing was certain; one
time in the cave was not nearly enough. It was a foregone conclusion therefore that
we needed to get another trip up there in May before the annual monsoons
arrive, usually starting in June.
Keeping a careful eye on the weather we made plans to make
the long drive north, but once again it seemed that the rains had returned and
threatened to end the trip even before it began. But, Don, always the optimist,
shrugged it off, saying we’ll never know if it can be done unless we give it a
go. So that’s what we did—we made our break, the weather be damned. Lo and
behold, the weather broke on our way north, and to our great fortune, it stayed
fair right up until the day of our return.
We showed up at the Claveria Lagoon right around 10 am for
our first day of diving. We didn’t try to get a dive in on our travel day even
though we probably could have, wanting first a full night of sleep for maximum
alertness. We fully expected the same boat driver we had employed in April to
take us out once again. He and his assistant had done a wonderful job so we
looked forward to using them again. Based on his texts right up until the
evening before, as far as we knew, everything was good to go; but we should
have suspected otherwise when the guy, who had been so reliable and hard
working just three weeks earlier, began to respond to our texts peculiarly. The
weather was obviously fine, yet several times he referred to possible problems
with it. It was all pretense because sure enough, he never showed up. After
years of living here we shrugged off our disappointment and irritation, after
all, that sort of thing has happened to us many times. I call it “the old last
second no show.” Seeing it happen so often I’m thinking it’s a quirk of the
culture. It doesn’t pay to get mad about it, just press on with a new plan.
My wife at The Claveria Lagoon |
Our boat drivers, Dario and Willie |
In short order we were on our way. Our method is always the
same—Don completely gears up so that all he has to do is drop over the side into
the water while I lug my tank and BCD down to the boat so that the boys can
drop it into the water to me at the dive site where I strap into it on the
surface. I do it that way because fully geared it’s physically impossible for me
to try to clamber into the little bangka boat or to safely fall out of it
without damaging myself.
Before the dive Don asked me for my inputs on the dive plan.
I told him my primary goal for this trip was to try to find the cave that we
had come upon the month before so that this time I could capture it in photos
and video. I was unable to take any pics
or vids then because of an apparent leak in my underwater cam package. We knew
where the cave was approximately and we were fairly certain we would find it
again but I thought it might take a couple of dives to do it.
No idea what this thing is, but its in the cave |
First he found the 50 foot high crack in the rock wall of the largest islet exactly one mile east of the lagoon. You can actually see the islet from the lagoon in fact.
We then dropped to the seafloor and from the bottom of the long
vertical crack we followed the rock face to the left around the base of the little island through what feels like a narrow winding canyon. Ten minutes later we
arrived at “the arch,” a very cool feature that we first discovered last June.
We passed through the arch into the circular depression at
the end of the meandering canyon. A wall blocks the way forward so we ascended its rock face toward
the surface some 35 feet up. With less than 10 feet of water above us we passed
over the top of the wall and immediately descended into deeper water again and
into a very large depression, more like a small underwater valley, bounded by a
steep rock wall on the seaward side. A cascade of rocks and boulders marks the little valley's coastal side.
We slowly continued eastward up the coast, exploring and
observing the sea-life and geology as we moved forward. To my left, no more than 30 yards
from where we passed under the arch, I spotted an intriguing rift brimming with
colorful fish and ascended it while Don continued to explore down in the depths
of the valley like area.
Near the top of the rift I looked back until I caught Don’s
eye, at which time I pointed at myself and then up in the direction that the
rift was taking me. He gave an okay and once I saw that he was following I
continued up the rift until it topped out and spilled down into a semi-circular hollow. When I saw it I knew exactly where I was, I had
found the cave!
"The amphitheater" at the base of the entrance |
In the video, the layers of what I think must be igneous
stone are easy to make out. I would love to know what caused these unique
formations of layered rock, perhaps it was repeated volcanic eruptions of lava. The wanting to know makes me wish I was a geologist/marine biologist.
I am fairly certain that it is this geological feature of layering that led to the formation of the large cavern. I’m thinking that 10,000 years ago, during the last Ice Age, that area was above water level and the cave was probably formed as the action of wind and wave hollowed out the large space, eroding away softer material between harder layers of what is likely lava rock.
I am fairly certain that it is this geological feature of layering that led to the formation of the large cavern. I’m thinking that 10,000 years ago, during the last Ice Age, that area was above water level and the cave was probably formed as the action of wind and wave hollowed out the large space, eroding away softer material between harder layers of what is likely lava rock.
Excited to see the cave once again I hurried toward it and then
carefully moved inside with cam on video. The last time we entered it we had
quickly silted up the interior with our movements across the cave floor so this
time I endeavored to keep my buoyancy about a foot about the floor and then
moved around by using my free hand to gingerly pull myself from point to point.
After a minute I began to wonder where Don had gone off to.
I waited at the entrance of the cave looking down past the amphitheater-like
depression certain that he’d pop up from below at any second, and finally he
did. I was puzzled though that he merely paused without approaching, as if he
expected me to come back to him. I knew then that he didn’t yet realize that
I’d rediscovered the cave. I waved for him to come forward but still he
hesitated. I then turned and pointed at the cave entrance and that’s when he
started over. ‘Dang, so hard headed!’ I
thought chuckling.
Funny thing about that cave is that every dive after that
first time that I located it again, we no longer had to try to find it, it just
seemed to find us. It wasn’t so much me as it was Don. No matter where we
dropped out of the boat he seemed to navigate us right to the danged thing. We dived
that area seven times and all seven times we found ourselves back at the cave.
Looking out from cave entrance |
The last time he did it I didn't even bother to go inside.
Don made his final pilgrimage into its depths while I stayed outside to observe
it from various points around it. Doing that, my favorite observation spot was
from on top of the prominent pyramid shaped rock that sits directly out from
the cave entrance. From there I could see the shoreline above the surface as
well as all the depressions, valleys and ravines in the immediate underwater
area.
All together I probably took more than a half hour of video
inside and around the cave. I put together a compilation that runs about 11
minutes. I finally got it posted to my YouTube account but it fought me all the
way, taking four complete download attempts before it finally took. I tried
everything to make it work, exported it twice as per YouTube’s instructions,
and even downloaded Google Chrome so that I could use its “incognito window”
which is supposed to help in better downloading. I sure hope it doesn’t give me
such a hard time the next time I try it.
So I’ll talk about the video:
It starts with a view at the bottom of the semi-circular
amphitheater area that marks the cave entrance when approaching it from below.
I remark about this odd geological formation when I posted about it after
discovering it last April. See it here. The layers are fairly uniform and form
a set of steps going all the way up to the gaping mouth of the cave. I have
never seen anything like it.
Upon reaching the top of “the staircase” the mouth of the
cave becomes immediately obvious. In the video it appears green but in real
life it is black, as black as black can be. Take my word for it, the first time
you discover a cave entrance underwater it is scary as hell, but also just as
exhilarating. As you approach it and attempt to peer into the inky blackness your
spine tingles and the skin on your arms gets goose bumps. I’m sure it’s why
many divers go looking for caves, just for “that feeling.”
"The staircase" |
Don and I would find ourselves lying still in various parts
of the cave just to experience the sight of these FISH. My God, SO MANY! And a
strange phenomenon regarding these gigantic schools of fish, none of the
individuals being longer than 4 inches, is their peculiar lack of any concern
about our presence. We could move through them and they would not skittishly flit
away from us, as you would expect, so much as they would just immediately backfill
the space as we passed through them.
Oodles of fish |
Another visually interesting occurrence is the way our air
bubbles collect in the hollows of the ceiling. We noticed that there were still
quite a few “puddles” of air left up there from our last visit a month before. The
bizarre visual effect you can see in the video is the sight of upside-down
puddles of what looks like water clinging to the ceiling. These puddles of
trapped air, because of their bright silvery color and roiling nature, also
resemble pools of liquid mercury. I
couldn’t help myself, I just had to play with these strange air puddles and
capture it on video.
Throughout the various times I shot footage from inside the
cave I continuously tried to capture how large the inside of it actually is,
because it is huge, probably the size of a small house. Several times I pan
from side to side in attempt to depict the scale of the interior. Unfortunately,
the camera just does not do it justice. At just past six minutes into the video
I pass the camera over to Don and he films me messing around at the entrance. I
stand at 5’8’’, so using me for reference it appears that the ceiling near the
entrance is about 10’ high. The opening looks to be more than 30 feet across.
So this cave is very large indeed. I like to think that 10,000 years ago, when
the seas were much shallower, that this cave was used by ancient man to shelter
in. It could have happened!
3 comments:
Caves always give me the willies. Every time I'm in one, all I can think of is the area between me and the entrance collapsing and me spending my remaining days sitting there in pitch blackness. In the case of Scuba gear, it would be my remaining minutes instead of days which makes it seem a bit better but not much.
Awesome place...and cave!...is coming out fresh water that can indicate a conection with the shore line?...will be a nice diving spot for cave divers if the cave goes further!!
No, didn't notice any evidence of any fresh water in the cave. I agree it would have made for an even more exciting dive if the cave had been more extensive.
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