During the lead in to, and during the expedition itself, I’ll be making regular postings about what’s going on at my website rather than here.
To follow developments, please follow the link to techdivertraining.org
Thanks.
During the lead in to, and during the expedition itself, I’ll be making regular postings about what’s going on at my website rather than here.
To follow developments, please follow the link to techdivertraining.org
Thanks.
Winter in Newfoundland can be bleak and is most definitely cold, but this week, a group of volunteers and Bell Island Heritage Society staff ignored the weather and did a huge amount of setup work getting things ready for Mine Quest 2.0.
As well as building a platform/staging area for the exploration team to work from, during mid-February’s expedition, they carried several hundred kilos of materials more than 225 metres down a ten-degree incline from the surface to the water’s edge. Before the building commenced, using pickaxes and shovels to clear away loose rocks from the roof and walls of the mine shaft, then installed temporary lighting.
After the clean-up… the mine shaft we will be working from
Eventually, it’s hoped the mine on Bell Island will feature permanent infrastructure that will add dive adventure tourism at the historic site to the world-class wreck diving found just off the island’s coast. For the time-being, the hard work will help simplify, and aid the success of an effort to add the the two kilometers of passage explored and lined during the 2007 project I was lucky enough to be part of.
Over the next several weeks, and certainly during Expedition Week (February 13 – 20), I’ll try to keep you up-to-date on progress and exactly what’s planned.
In the meantime, hats off to Mark ( Magoo) McGowan, John ( Johnny O) Olivero, Nick Dawe, Kyle Morgan, Rick Stanley, Ron Reid, Teresita ( Teddy) McCarthy, Des McCarthy, and Tom Spracklin.
Thank you for your efforts folks.
For a comprehensive line-up of who will be working on the project, visit my friend and co-leader’s blog… Thanks Jill.
http://www.intotheplanet.com/newfoundland/