The Mines Pt 7.
I will skip a bit of time now:
The following day there were only about 4 or 5 of us original recruits that turned up, we were put back down on the 310 fathom level and took into No: 9 East Hot Lode, the remit was to dig and clean the drains out, we were given a banjo each and a spare ore wagon to shovel all the muck into.
Once full the one ton wagon was pushed back to and across the main crosscut into No:9 West to an old stope raise, this is where the contents of the wagon were to dumped.
The heat as described earlier was bad and the air not to good we were soon stripped down to our pants.
This was a fortnights job and clearly was supposed to be a test to sort the men from the boys, I never was a quitter so I stuck it out.
After two weeks there was just two of the original crew left, myself and a bloke called John.
We were reffered to as OC men, OC generally meant Off Contract as in drilling and blasting contract.
The OC men's wage in 1972 was £20 a week plus any bonus money, the £20 a week was gaurenteed, bonuses varied depending on what job you were doing, a particular value assigned to a particular job.
Digging the drains attracted the lowest bonus, after two weeks on the drains I had earned £50 so that was £5 bonus for each week, it was a bit more than my Radio and TV job in Cornwall.
The shift bosses confidence grew in our abilities, he started to give us other jobs which attracted a better bonus which included timbering, repairing and installing track, replacing and extending the main air and water pipes, ventilation baggings and so on.
It wasn't long before I got my break, the machine mans mate who was working that stope in Hot Lode had an accident and was going to be off work for at least a fortnight, I was to be the substitute.
The machine mans name was Joe, he was a Geordie and ex army, he had drilled and blasted a lot of the tunnels in the Rock of Gibralter, we got on fine, though working up in that stope was a killer.
The day would start off by making our way to the croust seat, after a swig o' tea a buttie and a roll up it was my job as drillers mate to climb up into the stope after the previous blast to hose down the dust off the roof, the foot wall and hanging wall, it used to stink in there first thing, the air still being laiden with dynamite fumes, once the hosing down was done then it was time to bar down or scale down any loose rock or slabs, Joe would join me for that, it was a two man watch in the interests of safety.
Barring down was done with a longish steel pinch bar, the walls and roof would be sounded out with the bar listening for any hollows, the crack was found and the bar inserted and the rock and slabs levered off.
The slabs could vary in size from fist size to those weighing a couple of hundred weight or more, only when the walls and roof rang true was it safe to start drilling, it was the mates job to haul and set everything up, sometimes the drilling machine was left up in the stope at a distance when blasting to save hauling it up and down the ladderway each time, other times the machine had to go back up to the engineering shop for maintainace/repairs.
Hauling the machine up that narrow ladder way was hard work, some times it was hauled up with a rope, other times it was carried up, depending on how fit I felt.
Also to be hauled up was all the drill steels and later on in the shift the dynamite etc.
With the work place ready it was time to start drilling, all the holes had to be collard by the mate, Joe showed me how to do this without damaging fingers or hand.
The drill steels were 2 ft (the starter) 4 ft, 6ft and 8ft in length.
Some drillers would start off drilling with a long 8 ft steel to save drill swapping time, it put the mate in a vunerable position when he was collaring the whole with an 8 ft steel, the stress on a long steel that has hardly entered the hole is considerable, they start whipping and sought of standing wave sets up on them as they vibrate, this makes for a lot of stress towards the shank end of the steel where it connects to the drill chuck and sometimes they will snap, if the machine is on the jack leg then the pressure in the jack leg will lunge the machine complete with the sharp snapped off drill shank towards the mate, if it catches you in the back then serious injury can result, it happened to me once with another driller it was a lucky escape, I have still got that snapped off drill shank somewhere!
The shift would continue, non stop drilling except for a breather and croust, for several hours, after a few days we got another machine up into the stope, we then collard all the holes in one go and got two machines running side by side Joe on one and myself on the other. I've said it before, the noise and physical vibration was painful although after a few weeks it seemed to be less and less so.
A previously said, the heat was unbearably hot, funk everywhere and drenched in sweat, your boots would fill up with sweat and they would slosh around when walking, every so and so we had to climb down from the stope down to the level to get some air, the exhaust air from the machines was full of oil from the oil feed bottle which was in series with the air line feed to the machines, we were always coughing stuff up.
Anyway, all holes drilled it was time to charge up, it was the mates job to go and fetch the dynamite, the dynamite was kept in the magazine at the shaft station which was some considerable distance away. Once there the shift boss would open up the magazine and dish out the dynamite, it was a pain carrying it all the way back in, if it was a lot then it was hard work, the only option was to find the bottom half of an ore wagon (the bit with the frame and wheels on) and used that as a trolley and push it all the way back to the stope with the dynamite on it, even that was hard work as it is uphill all the way.
Once back and hauled up the ladderway the charging would begin, the first thing Joe said to me was whatever you do don't wipe the sweat off you brow with you hand if you have been handling dynamite, how right he was, I did make that mistake once and never again, the resulting headaches were severe to say the least, like someone banging your head with a hammer, the worst I ever experienced.
Charging up was relatively simple, I have covered that in a previous part, I have not however covered what happens with a missfire.
Missfires (when the charge doesn't go off) were quite rare with electric detonators, it only happened twice in my prescence with electric detonators when working down there and once with a cut and lit safey fuse.
With an electric det. missfire zilch happens when you fire the exploder, the brief was to wait for 10 minutes the go in and sort it out, it was the mates job!
On this particular occasion I drew the short straw, checking the main detonator on the way in I went, climbing up the ladderway, it's a lonely and nervous feeling, all is quite except for the blast reports coming up through the rock from the lower levers as blasting time had already started, there was not a lot of time, soon smoke from the lower levels would be finding it's way up, that smoke can be nasty stuff.
I climbed over the rearing into the stope, all the det. wires hanging down in a matrix, time to get on, the dets. are all wired in series, break the circuit half way and test for which half is o/c and so and so on 'till you've got the one that's duff, the det. can't be removed once charged up and tamped in, the only solution is to prick the last stick of dynamite in the hole and push a new det. in of the correct time delay, connect up and test, job done.
Time to hightail and and try again, success, all fired off and all reports counted, head back shaft.
After blasting up in a shrinkage stope the rock pile obviously takes up more volume than the rock displaced, this reduces your head and working hieght, the hieght is increased by pulling dirt from the chutes below, that's the trammers job, the machine man would tell the trammer 20 waggons from this chute ten wagons from that chute etc etc until the pile goes down, the chutes were placed at regular intervals along the lode, this means that when pulled the level of the rocks in the stope would end up having several troughs and peaks, these had to roughly evened out, the peaks were shoveled into the troughs with a banjo and a steel bar, the distance between the peaks and the roof could be very short, sometimes 2 ft or less, so it was a climb up and get on your side job, blasted granite does not make a comfortable bed to lie on, it was hard work, sometimes it would take half a shift or longer to sought it out.
Sometimes when the trammer was pulling dirt from the chutes the chutes would hang up ie: some dirt coming out but the level of the stope is not shrinking.
The quickfire solution was to blast the chute, this was the trammers job using what was called a “pop” of explosive, it was similar to a plastic explosive in a small square pad, the was detonated by a cut saftey fuse.
A length or lengths of 2 x 2 timber strapped together called blasting staffs would be stuffed up the gob of the chute with the charge on the end, the stope would be emptied of all personel and one of us would be watchman on the level at the far ladder way while the others lit the fuse and retired.
Nine times out of ten this would bring the pile down with a roar, once the smoke had cleared it was back to the grind.
Occasionally this would not work, the only alternative was to climb up into the stope and turn the water hose onto the pile and wait from gravity to do it's stuff.
Hung up chutes were very dangerous if working up in the stope, the void created can collapse at any time, burying everything with it, a no road barrier was erected in the stope around the known vicinity of a hung up pile.
To be continued.
Lozz.