The loss of this site has been imminent for years and everyone always says "Ahhh, it'll never happen, but it is".
We found it highly odd how the clwyd cap had been covered over with a tarpaulin.
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After removing this and the cotoneaster from the shaft mouth, we dropped it and went into this.
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The bottom of the shaft is choked with sawdust and there are 2 levels higher up which are short and go into narrow stoping with bat dung in there. The bottom level continues into bad air towards the engine house (bad air due to sulphides and sawdust) and the other way towards the footway has breathable air with some holes into stoping above and below. The closer you get to the footway, the clearer the air becomes.
Here is a skyshot of what's what on the site now. (Thankyou google)
🔗HALLENBEAGLE-Mine-User-Album-Image-62290[linkphoto]HALLENBEAGLE-Mine-User-Album-Image-62290[/linkphoto][/link]
....and here's how the shafts will be obscured.
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Sticking a camera down the shaft will show you nothing apart from a 2 levels off the shaft which peer into a stope which you can't see much in, unless you go down and then a shaft station at about -120ft. On the footwall of the shaft on the way down, there are several birds nests made of mud which I've never seen in any other shaft.
There is a pile of what appears to be bat poo in one of the drives from the shaft.
I'd like to see that these 2 shafts get caged in the name of a habitat rather than plugged and I've been rattling a few cages about it (lol) however, it seems to be a done deal.
I'd rather not put photos of bats up (as people start getting excited) but I have a good one of a small skeleton, which is interesting. Not sure what it is, but it looks batty.
As far as a mine trip goes, there is nothing much to see down there for the extreme explorer apart from a bit of stoping and a few old ladders in a tunnel with pretty marginal oxygen.
Edited to add:- If they do monitor the shaft, they will probably find what they wanted to, ie:- there were no bats. This of course would be the case as the shaft cap was covered by a tarpaulin until quite recently. However, the evidence of bats in the form of a skeleton (have to bring it up to prove it) and bat poo would suggest it was a habitat prior to them putting a tarpaulin over it
Obviously, this last fact would be pretty damning as far as the officials are concerned.
Edited to remove the bat skeleton photo. Possibly a legal grey area.