Dangerous bat cave sealed for safety  
 
By Paul Boring 
Oct 27 2007 
The memory of Matthew Hubner lives on in those who knew the 13-year-old Oak  
Harbor boy and in the travelers who are introduced to him for the first time 
on  Pass Island, where a bench perched on a breathtaking vantage point bears 
his  name.  
Hubner was killed in May 2006 when he slipped while trying to access a cave  
northeast of Deception Pass Bridge. He fell 150 feet to the water below and  
attempts to recover his body were in vain.  
Almost a year-and-a-half later, the historically-romanticized cave that  
attracted Hubner and many other hikers to its entrance on the treacherous rock  
face was effectively sealed off Tuesday night.  
A crew of three highly-trained, acrophobia-immune workers from  Sedro-Woolley’
s Buckhorn Construction installed a “bat gate,” aptly-named  grating that 
will allow Townsend’s big-eared bats access to the cave while  dissuading 
spelunking. The rock shelf in front of the entrance will also be  inaccessible 
with 
the addition of what Jack Hartt, Deception Pass State Park  manager, called a “
cow catcher.”  
“There’s no place to comfortably sit or stand up there anymore,” Hartt said. 
 “The crew did a great job. They finished it in two days and it’s done and  
effective.”  
Shortly after the accident, the knee-jerk reaction was to completely seal off 
 the entrance. The plan changed when the Department of Fish and Wildlife and  
other local experts determined that the cave is home to Townsend’s big-eared  
bats. The species hibernates in the cave during the winter.  
“It’s perfect timing,” Hartt said. “It just finishes the project.”  
Rare raptors have also been known to use the cave and similarly need  
protection at certain times of the year.  
Hubner’s parents had the bench at Pass Island installed in memory of their  
son. With the new gate serving as a deterrent for other curious hikers, closure 
 is now attainable.  
“I’m so pleased, not only for the park’s sake, but for the family’s sake, 
and  for the community’s sake,” Hartt said. “Nobody needs to go up there now.”
  
Installing the grating was no small feat. The Buckhorn crew, all professional 
 climbers skilled in the specialized work, accessed the cave from the top and 
 lowered the material by rope.  
“That’s where they earned their money,” Hartt quipped. “They did it piece 
by  piece. It was not easy. That’s thousands of pounds of grating plus all of 
their  tools. It was fun to watch.”  
In spite of repeated safety warnings, Hartt has observed tell-tale signs of  
activity around the cave since Hubner’s death. Hiking to the impressive 8-foot 
 by 10-foot opening, which led into the natural cave expanded in the early 
20th  century for mining, was not illegal. Park officials could only caution 
people  and the mere thought of another tragedy was terrifying.  
“I’m so relieved this is done,” the park manager said.  
_http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=84&cat=23&id=1092
302&more=0_ 
(http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=84&cat=23&id=1092302&more=0)
 




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