Probably so. This has been accomplished in several ways, including rock berms 
that act as a filter without impeding water flow. This method so far has shown 
to be effective and not too costly. You have to consider that there is not a 
lot of money for projects like these, so cost effectiveness comes in as a big 
factor. During heavy rain events though, water will overcome any diversion 
system and deposit unwanted material into the cave. This is where periodic 
conservation and clean up trips become necessary. This is a good way to help 
preserve the cave and get to do some great caving at the same time. 

--- On Fri, 9/28/12, C Tiderman <cti...@ymail.com> wrote:


From: C Tiderman <cti...@ymail.com>
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Beck Ranch Cave Update
To: "George D. Nincehelser" <george.nincehel...@gmail.com>, "Andy Gluesenkamp" 
<andrew_gluesenk...@yahoo.com>
Cc: "wesley s" <mudmal...@hotmail.com>, "texascavers@texascavers.com" 
<texascavers@texascavers.com>
List-Post: texascavers@texascavers.com
Date: Friday, September 28, 2012, 11:48 AM




Hi,

i am trying to intrude on a local situation, but I was wondering if there is a 
way to install a debris diverter that would be set at an angle to the cave 
entrance to trap and channel material off to the side where it can be removed 
after a heavy rain?
 
Carol






From: George D. Nincehelser <george.nincehel...@gmail.com>
To: Andy Gluesenkamp <andrew_gluesenk...@yahoo.com> 
Cc: wesley s <mudmal...@hotmail.com>; "texascavers@texascavers.com" 
<texascavers@texascavers.com> 
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2012 8:59 PM
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Beck Ranch Cave Update


Washing out of park trails for a start.

I'm not talking about damage to a gate.  Any gate I've seen would just plug up 
with debris, restricting water flow and bat access.

Are you actually familiar with the situation?  Have you been there when it is 
raining heavily and flooding?  Have you been on any of the clean-up trips?


If someone has a solution, I'd be happy to hear it.  As a local resident, 
member of the MUD, and member of the TCC I'd be happy to champion one.  


If there is one.  I know just putting up the typical bat-friendly gate over the 
opening isn't going to work.  


George




On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 7:40 PM, Andy Gluesenkamp 
<andrew_gluesenk...@yahoo.com> wrote:



What damage?  Isn't there a perimeter fence?   What is going past the fence 
that would damage a gate?  Are you saying that debris/trash ( now going in the 
ungated entrance) would be a greater problem if it didn't?    

Sent from my iPhone



On Sep 27, 2012, at 7:34 PM, "George D. Nincehelser" 
<george.nincehel...@gmail.com> wrote:




Unfortuntely that's not a practical solution.  Not unless the MUD is willing to 
clean out the entrance and repair the flood damage after every big storm.

As a resident, I can tell you that's just not going to happen.  As an engineer 
I can tell you there is no easy fix.


George





On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 7:29 PM, Andy Gluesenkamp 
<andrew_gluesenk...@yahoo.com> wrote:



Any gate must be maintained.  Any cave in a dense residential area is an 
attractive nuisance.    Gate the cave and keep the trash (literal and 
figurative) out.    

Sent from my iPhone



On Sep 27, 2012, at 7:24 PM, "George D. Nincehelser" 
<george.nincehel...@gmail.com> wrote:




My house is less than a block away from the entrance, and I've thought about 
this problem for years.


Lots of water and debris flow through the entrance, and it is sometimes 
completely submerged during heavy rains.  It's a major drain for the area.


What kind of bat-friendly grate would you recommend that wouldn't keep plugging 
up with debris and cause flooding as well as blocking bat access?


George





On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 3:23 PM, wesley s <mudmal...@hotmail.com> wrote:



Wow Mike,
 
Sure sounds like a decent bat friendly gate install would have saved you a 
great deal of public and caver goodwill and protected the cave a hell of a lot 
better. I hope other cave managers are taking note of the difficulties you are 
having and learning from them. 
 
Wes~
 




From: mikewaus...@austin.rr.com
To: Texascavers@texascavers.com
List-Post: texascavers@texascavers.com
Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2012 12:24:59 -0500

Subject: [Texascavers] Beck Ranch Cave Update





Beck Ranch Cave Update
 
 
In 1999, the Texas Cave Conservancy entered into a cave management agreement 
with the Brushy Creek Municipal Utility District.  This  is one of the few 
caves under TCC management that does not have a cave gate.  The cave entrance 
was not gated in order for the bats to be able to enter and exit the cave.   A 
high quality nine- foot tall iron fence was build  to attempt to control 
access.  Local teenagers were using it for a party cave. The fence allowed us 
to greatly reduce the party traffic so we could protect the cave. 
 
            Today, locals continue to trespass and go into the cave.  Texas 
cavers are going in without permission as well.  Both the locals and the cavers 
have been confronted by law enforcement and issued citations for trespassing.  
In addition, the TCC has not been able to prevent the authorized caver groups 
from creating problems such as changing cloths in the parking lot of a public 
park.  Cavers in their underwear, and less, have made it difficult to keep cave 
open.
 
            As a result, all authorized trips will be for cave management 
activities such as cave clean up, the bi-annual monitoring, fire ant control 
and inspection, etc. These trips will be set up by the Texas Cave Conservancy.  
We will host an annual cave clean up and restoration visit.  The next clean up 
day will be Saturday -February 23, 2013. If you are interested in assisting us 
in conducting the cave management activities, send us your name in an e-mail to 
tcc-ca...@austin.rr.com    We will place you on the list and contact you prior 
to our work project.
 
            Further, the TCC would like to make it very clear to Texas cavers 
that steps have been taken to alert law enforcement when unauthorized 
visitation is taking place.  The TCC now has to notify the cave owner prior to 
each authorized visit.  A Neighborhood Watch system is in place to observe the 
cave.  A house near the cave can easily observe people entering the cave and 
call for law enforcement.   In addition, electronic monitoring should greatly 
increase the number of trespassers arrested.  We have been notified that all 
unauthorized visitors that are detected will be arrested and charged with 
trespassing. This will include cavers.
 
We want to thank all of the cavers that worked with us to protect the cave. 
Your work has made a difference.  The TCC has done everything possible, short 
of these new actions, to prevent problems.  I will be at the Texas Caver’s 
Reunion in October if you would like to ask questions.  Once again, Thank You 
for working with the Texas Cave Conservancy.
 
 
Mike Walsh   President-Texas Cave Conservancy 
 
512-249-2283
 
mikewaus...@austin.rr.com
 




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