can't really think where this belongs, so here it is.
just had my long-delayed trip to Cornwall.
first off, Cornwall Institute of Engineers at Pool, for Hydrock's presentation on the Combe Down project. Arrived late after a long drive in filthy weather, followed by getting completely lost on the campus.. satnavs don't work too well finding unlisted entrances in the middle of roadworks :blink: and my 30-odd year old recollections not so good!
Interesting video ( although I've seen it before ) with much background detail of the 'oral heritage' sort from the miners. I've heard of good deal of this on the site, the miners have generally been very conscious of being the last generation to work that way, in their industry at least, and most tell you they have been glad to come back to it from whatever they have been doing since mass redundancies in the 90s. This is a side you won't get from pipestems etc, their view of what mining means to them.
saw Tony from Rosevale at a few other faces there, didn't get time to speak to some because of prompt chucking-out
pint and a night's sleep at Tyacks, apart from the uproar outside at about 2am anyway.
driving round Camborne and surrounding area next morning. Interested in the Great Flat Lode Trail, haven't seen this before. Places like Wheal Frances which were pretty jungly when I last saw them, like Sleeping Beauty's castle, now have carparks and a footpath. Mind you, this is probably why they are relatively complete, quite monastic in a way, rather than being robbed for stone long ago.
catch up with agricola and others at end of day for long interesting conversation, interesting to surveyors anyway. Various chit-chat and comparing notes regarding integrating historic and current survey data plus state-of-the-art laser scanning, 3D modelling of underground shapes, distortion monitoring, surveying down drifts, data capture and booking, more in the same line.
More discussion of heritage, Cornish heritage as centre of current industry technique vs tourist 're-enactors' in Poldark hats; headframe as iconic emblem or decaying obstruction, take your pick. From various comments and personal knowledge of corrosion management on large steel structures offshore, there's an expensive long-term problem there for someone
off for beer with some old mates, kip on sofa, wake up feeling like, well, someone who has had a skinfull of Jubilee.. heritage an issue again. Old mate's son has done a Lottery-funded course to learn Cornish hedging, sounds like hard work to me, good luck to anyone working in building trade sez I. Has a job taking down collapsing hedge and rebuilding it, more work later it seems. Discussion about costs of hedging, viability or otherwise
drive to Pendeen in lashing rain, to meet Bill at Geevor. Set off down cliff 'path', cissy townie ideas about paths as recognisable routes between places quite useless. Caving chit-chat and old names produced and recognised, usual 'small-world' coincidences involving people I haven't seen for years. Various discussions of caves in Ireland, Kingsdale Roadside Nudists and other speleological matters. Interesting splosh about in adit and up shaft.
weather still absolutely vile, so seafood broth plus rum-and-shrub with a spot of hot water in it at Queens Arms. Sit there glowing like kid in Readybrek ad.
weather picks up a bit so stroll about on cliffs above Crowns, take no end of photos of Allen's headframe and Crowns engine houses, most later discarded due to variable lighting. Drive back to Camborne for dinnner and beer.
early night ::) midnight more like it, then early up an Ho! for the open road.....
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.