[Texascavers] [Fwd: Bob Mitchell on Sotano de Huitzmolotitla 1958]

2010-04-03 Thread Nancy Weaver
Hi rene - a couple of fun stories from oldtimers . . .   I seem to 
recall that you arent on cavetex.


cheery spring, Nance

The following article about the Jumar and the man who invented them 
appeared in the Fall 1970 issue of the Southwest Texas State 
University Grotto Newsletter.


   THE JUMAR FACTORY by Brian Peterson

This summer while traveling in Switzerland, Keith Heuss 
and myself decided that we would try to locate the factory in which 
Jumar ascenders are manufactured.  After examining our Jumars, we 
finally found a label still intact and managed to pick out the name 
of a town, Reichenbach, Switzerland.  After about two hours of 
looking over a map, we located a tiny dot symbolic of the town. 
Quickly we jumped in the Volkswagon camper and proceeded to look for 
it.
Could this small town be the home of a great factory? 
The name of the town did correspond to the name on the Jumar, but 
there were only about thirty chalets.  We stopped at a store and I 
got out with a Jumar.  Speaking no German, I proceeded to wave my 
arms, roll my eyeballs, and shove the Jumar in the proprietors face. 
He quickly got the idea and sent me on my way down the road. 
However, he did provide us with a map.
Obviously, he was somewhat less than proficient in the 
arts of geography because by using his map we got completely 
confused.  We decided that we would ask the help of other locals. 
After talking to several housewives; many of whom thought we were 
trying to sell them the Jumar, we arrived at still another chalet.  I 
knocked at the door and a man came out.  When I showed him the
Jumar and asked if he knew what it was, he replied, "Yes, I make 
them."  Quietly picking myself off the ground, I began to explain why 
we had come.  The man, Julius Marte, was very receptive and asked us 
inside.  He speaks only a few words of English so he called a friend 
to translate.  When the friend arrived we went down to the factory 
which is in Mr. Marte's basement.  Jumar parts were everywhere! Wow! 
Fantastic!
Mr. Marte opened a drawer approximately three feet long, 
two feet wide, and one and one-half foot deep.  It was completely 
filled with right-hand Jumar jaws.  He said that he originally
designed these ascenders for use in climbing down to eagle nests to 
band baby eagles.  This was back in 1958.  Mountain climbers quickly 
saw the value of these devices and then later cavers started using 
them.  The recent change in the alloy of the cams was necessary due 
to the grit and mud encountered in caves.
We rigged a rope in his yard and showed him various 
methods of prussiking with his devices.  He then showed us the method 
which is enclosed with the Jumars.  He saw the value of our methods 
but joked with us by saying, "I can understand why you don't know how 
to use them, I have never translated the instructions to English." 
We all laughed.  We also demonstrated various rappell devices and Mr. 
Marte was quite interested.  He requested that we collect and send 
him pictures of different climbing methods using his ascenders and 
any recommendations or improvements that we may have.





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[Texascavers] [Fwd: Bob Mitchell on Sotano de Huitzmolotitla 1958]

2010-03-26 Thread Logan McNatt
I am forwarding this message from Bill Elliott with an attached article 
written by Robert Mitchell.  Converting from pdf. to doc resulted in the 
omission of accents and probably a few typos I didn't catch.  But the 
article will give you a hint of who Dr. Mitchell was.  At 105 m, the 
entrance drop of Huitzmolotitla is currently tied with 12 other pits as 
the 173rd deepest pit known in Mexico, according to Mark Minton's list 
of deep pits of Mexico (July 2009) on the AMCS webpage.  But in 1960, it 
was one of the deepest.


Logan


Original Message
5:45 pm Friday March 26, 2010

Bill Elliott wrote

Here is an amazing story that Bob Mitchell wrote for the 10^th 
Anniversary Issue of the Association for Mexican Cave Studies in 1973.  
James Reddell reminded me about this account, which is the scariest, 
funniest story of an early exploration of a major pit cave in Mexico.  I 
looked down this pit in 1969, and it is awesome.




I scanned the article and it is attached as a pdf.  I hope you enjoy 
reading it and talking about it at the Bob Mitchell celebration 
tomorrow.  I am so sorry I cannot be there in body, but I will be 
thinking about you all.




Several friends, including Masharau Kawakatsu, Oscar Francke, James 
Reddell, and Tom Poulson, have sent me papers, photos, and stories about 
Bob. Please feel free to email me material for the coming memorial pages 
on Mitchell at the Biospeleology website:/ 
http://www.utexas.edu/tmm/sponsored_sites/biospeleology/ /


/ /

Thanks,

Bill



William R. Elliott, PhD

Cave Biologist/Resource Scientist

Missouri Department of Conservation

Cave Lab, Runge Conservation Nature Center

P.O. Box 180

Jefferson City, MO 65102-0180

/bill.elli...@mdc.mo.gov/

573-522-4115 ext 3194

/ /





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