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| Emergence du Russel |
Emergence du Russel is a large impressive cave that starts in the bed of the River Céle as a clean washed passage of about 150 metres in length and with a cross-section at least the size of a double garage door. It then splits into two passages: one tunnel stays shallower at about 10 m depth whilst the other runs broadly in the same direction dropping repeatedly until it reaches around 18m. The two passages rejoin (making a nice round-trip for those new to cave diving) and, 300 m from the entrance, the cave takes the first of two dramatic plunges, eventually descending in a spectacular cavernous rift to about 45 m. To swim this far takes a round-trip of getting-on for an hour but for the members of the church of scootering in our party, emblazoned with the words "Forgive me father for I have finned", this is a trifling undertaking. From this point the entrance is getting towards half a kilometre away and the dive is increasingly technical, descending first to about 50 odd metres fairly soon, then, after some time to as much as 77 m before beginning to ascend and eventually entering into another rift that towers to a dry section of cave nearly two kilometres from the start. The whole trip through is a serious expedition of several hours and has been made by only a handful of people ever. In the last year sumps beyond this, running to more than 4 km in total, have been pushed by British divers Rick Stanton and Jason Mallinson.
| Trou Madame |
Trou Madame is a short walk down a track following a dry tributary river of the Lot to a large cave entrance. This popular cave narrows-down to an entrance pool where you need to stoop. The whole cave system is a series of multiple sumps of varying length, all quite shallow at less than 15m depth and often with overhead pockets of airspace making an excellent training site. This system was explored as early as 1979 to nearly 2.5 km. The scalloped and knarled rock formations make it a favourite for photographers.
| Fontain de St George |
Fontain de St George is where some of the first penetrative cave dives were achieved in France. It is in the Dordogne Valley, near to Montvalent. The sump pool is large and picturesque, some 30m in diameter, and only a short distance from the car. The cave starts in the bottom of the resurgence pool at about 10m depth and descends at a steep 45 degree angle over a cobble and gravel slope with a low ceiling that hangs-down in a series of ridges giving the impression of gummy, mouth-like gaps. This passage can be a little awkward at times averaging about 2 metres high by 5 m wide but once you escape from it at near to 30 m depth, the passages are wide and open, even cavernous at times. Parts of this sump can be a bit gloomy on account of banks of silt but it gets gradually shallower before surfacing after a third of a kilometre in a chamber called Salle de Lavaur. The second sump passage is spacious and continues for another third of a kilometre before getting complicated by descending to more than 70m then surfacing into dry passage at over a kilometre from the start. Beyond this are more explored sumps that have taken teams of thirty people to push. After several kilometres the waters flowing through the system are known to connect with the show cave 'Gouffre de Padirac': a substantial challenge!
Serie Bleue maps (1cm to 250m) are useful because many of the sumps are marked on them.
Andrew Ward's (1997) book Underwater guide to the Lot & Dordogne, France (Aven International Publications, Swindon, SN2 2AZ; e-mail: icaver@aol.com; £7 plus Post and Packaging) provides information on the "general idea of the sumps - number, length, maximum depth etc." but by his own admissions has focused on the larger sites with good access and large underwater passages and makes no attempt to give a blow by blow account of "every rock and twist and turn".
Read the interview Andrew Ward gave to SCUBA Travel...
The Darkness Beckons by Martyn Farr superbly encapsulates the history of the great diving advances in the caves of the region and has, this year, entered its third edition. Diadem Books; ISBN 0-906371-87-2. Available from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk (30% off).
Guidebooks such as the Rough Guide can be quite useful for those intending to explore more than just the caves. They can also give a handle on accommodation but most good travel agents can easily provide a wide range too.
The Rough Guide to Dordogne & The Lot is available from Amazon.co.uk (20% off) and
Amazon.com.
There are several easy to find companies offering canoeing and other activities. We used Kalapca (kalapca@wanadoo.fr; Tel 05 65 30 23 33) on our last trip - based in the Lot valley just down the road from Le Russel.
Deep Blue Diving offer IANTD courses in cave diving, mixed gas and rebreather diving. They run regular trips to the Dordogne region and can be contacted at Deep Blue Diving, Unit 4 Thomas Street, Congleton, Cheshire, CW12 1QU, UK 01260 297998 www.deepblu.co.uk
The Cave Dive Group web-site is another useful point of reference: www.cavedivinggroup.org.uk
Marine Monitoring Team Leader, Dr Bill Sanderson learnt cave diving in the caves and mines of south Wales in the late 1980's. Now more normally accustomed to marine biological monitoring work in the seas around Wales, he accompanied some old cave diving friends on a holiday in France. He is also the author of Dive Sites and Marine Life of the Isle of Man - our September Book of the Month. For more about Dr Sanderson read our exclusive interview.
Accommodation is easy to find, however be careful in the high seasons of second half of July and August. There are numerous camp sites, hotels, cottages and bed and breakfasts.
Les Tilleuls Bed and Breakfast
Close to the Dordogne and Lot rivers
Vidille
46310 Frayssinet Le Gourdonnais
France
Tel: 05 65 36 82 91
E-mail: Don.Jones@orange.fr
http://www.lestilleuls.co.uk/
Chambre d'hote
Bed and Breakfast, in the heart of the Causse du Quercy National Park, but close to major dive sites and with access to specialist cave dive shop offering info, guides and tank filling.
La Ferme Du Gravier
Gramat 46500
Lot
Tel: 00 33 (0) 565334188
E-mail: sarmteague@hotmail.com
http://www.fermedugravier.co.uk/
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