CATANAMATAIS CAVE. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. THE PURSUIT FOR THE DEEPEST CAVE IN THE CARRIBEAN ISLANDS

February 02, 2023


I eagerly walk down the dense sloping patch of Forest. The temperature drops as the moisture rises from the warm dry air of the mountainous Dominican Republic valley desert. Vines,





slippery moist ground, and the occasional tree with spines are negotiated. All too soon, a dry mossy arroyo appears leading to a large black void the swallow's water from two separate drainages.




The team already started rigging the cave.





The distant and long reverberating syntax from their voices was captured in this massive stadium entrance, making communication difficult. 



I attach and secure my descender to the 11mm rope and work my way down the rope traverse to a pitch head two bolt master point on the edge.




I peaked over the edge and the entrance room became even more impressive and colossal.



Strong modern-day zebra and scurion lights appeared as mere



candle lights as the forward team continued to rig the cave.  Continuing down the entrance the cave kept opening up.



Massive boulders could vaguely be seen in the distance as the ambient light from the entrance shined down along with my headlamp. With all this light, I still was not able to see the true bottom of the cave.



I’m going to need everything I have to light up this cave. 




Wilson and Negrito, local residents that live in the nearby village of Catanamitas, escorted us to the two cave entrances of Cueva Catanamitas.




The first entrance was a depression sink leading to a large sloping void. Vines and trees stretched across the entrance, but you could see the obvious abyss that slopped into the cave. 




From the research that we have conducted, there were two previous expeditions to explore Catanamatias Cave.



 Though known to locals for perhaps a century, this cave was first visited by Italian cavers in 1988. They drew a crude map and left almost no other details as to what they found. Another group, possibly Italian, Dominican and French, entered around 2005, and locals claim they spent three days underground, before turning around at a river. 



Locals say passage continued across this river, but the current was strong, and this group was unable to cross.
We have found no written documentation of this expedition beyond word-of-mouth from locals.



We have not been able to find information on specific equipment used to enter the cave but there is a substantial entrance drop that appears to be a 40-meter free-hang, then around 100-150 meters on a slippery 45-degree slope. The cave will need to be entered with single-rope-techniques. 



 Once at the bottom of the entrance shaft, we believe there is a pool, as there are reports that rocks thrown in bounce and fall for 14 seconds before the sound of a distant splash. Running water cannot be heard from the entrance.


Somewhere well past this entrance pool is dry passage that leads to the reported strong-current underground river. Domingo, one of the Dominican cavers that has been into the cave, mentioned that the river is not passable. 


Based on the existing map, we can see a large entrance (lower angled) drop that goes into some passage and continues into a series of multi-drop shafts. One of the two former trips reported that they ended their expedition due to depleting their resources for continued exploration. There is a basic and almost certainly incomplete plan and profile view of this cave. No other pertinent information is known about this cave.


Our expedition objectives include an entire re-survey (or first complete survey?) of the cave, as well as photo-documentation, and to explore/map beyond the limits of the previous effort.


The friendly locals have mentioned that there are multiple caves in the region.  A British group of cavers in the 1990’s came into the region around Catanamatias cave to explore other entrances, but only found short passages that ended in mud and water. 



Notably, their trip was in the height of the wet season, and these entrances may be more accessible in the dry season, when we plan to visit. Locals report they know at least 100 caves in the valley around Catanamatias Cave, and it seems unlikely that they have all been checked out by cavers.


There is a report that a resurgence is in the region and after heavy rains, the resurgence has muddy water coming out. Locals say the water appears out of a boulder sieve. No other information is known about the resurgence.



We rigged the cave with over 50 bolts and hangers which included a bolt climb in the back of the cave that led to the final stream passage with low air and the nearby insurgence sump.



I put Zeb Lilly in charge of the bolting and he had the team work on the rigging. We used 11mm rope at the first entrance drop into the cave which was around 60 ft. Having the rope 11mm and the thick mud on the wall allowed us a near vertical drop into the cave.




This sacrificed our friction levels and brought on a lot of unnecessary friction which made the descent difficult. We kept the same set up and added additional racks so people had the option to switch out stops for racks if desired. 



The remaining entrance sequence was a series of three more re-anchors that got us to the bottom of the entrance sequence and the beginning of the Boulder field we had to negotiate. To my surprise, over half of our rope access anchorage sequence was on one massive flow stone! 




Once at the bottom, we encountered another short 20ft free hang rap that took us deeper into the cave. We encountered a short bypass drop that could allow us to skip a portion of the cave that we call” Jefferson’s Bypass” but the corkscrew was deemed restricted and unnecessary especially for hauling dive gear through. 




We continued into the cave and noticed that the cave became warmer and the humidity increased enough to leave a noticeable border. A rope traverse was set up to go around a section of pools which led to a small 10 ft drop.




There we found a piton that the Italians left. After a few days of using the piton as an anchor, the piton became loose and was re hammered into the rock with rock chocks supporting the lateral movement along with a new bolt made this anchor complete.



Continuing down the cave we encountered some more nice flow stone features and a small down climb that led us to another 60 ft pitch. This drop had a redirect and a re-anchor to avoid rock abrasion.


Once at the bottom of this pitch the cave went left and right. Rachael and I surveyed the left which was not included on the original map of the cave, potentially due to water levels.



Zeb, Ceth, Steve, and Jefferson initially explored this passage and found that the oxygen levels were depleting to a point where they could not continue. Unfortunately, this passage was descending down into a canyon and was opening up more.



We speculate that a sump would have eventually been found since the movement of the atmosphere was static. We called this section “ Ceth’s Gas Crevasse”. 



Going back to the bottom of the previous drop and the passage going right, we continued over some boulders and pools of water to another drop which had a gallery of rimstone dams.



This is where Jefferson’s bypass connects into. The cave becomes a bit more vertical with a 20 ft drop and another 25ft drop. At the bottom of the 25ft drop we encounter a spot to stage gear and food for people to eat. 



The previous rigging team stopped here so I took over the bolting with Steve Lambert. Continuing down, I spot steve and follow him down. we encounter a steep Slope 60 ft pitch that we re-anchor, down cave right, for another 60 ft pitch and a re-direct that connected down into another 25 ft pitch. This brought us to a bottom. 



All too soon a passage that continues down and another passage that breaks right leading to one of the sumps that we pushed through the means of cave diving. 



Continuing down the passage, we found a gradual down climb where we hard fixed rope to a Boulder chock with a re-anchor halfway down that brought us to another bottom. 



At this point we encountered a left and right intersection where water seems to flow through. The left passage led to a sump called Jefferson’s sump and the right was a dive that quickly led to Steve's sump. Continuing into the cave, it opened up a bit but was soon met by a pool of water. 




The initial exploration of this pool revealed that there could be potential for a dive and water could be heard flowing somewhere beyond the wall. This peaked our interest to continue exploration and attempt a dive here.




Further into the cave, Jamie and I performed a lower angled bolt climb that took us to a breakout where we could hear water flowing. We continued to rig our way down into the cave and found another 40 ft pit and a down climb series that led us to a stream passage, low air, and a sump just downstream. 



Steve describes the conditions of the Sump dives: “Not sure what kind of conditions we would be encountering in the cave, Jefferson and I prepared enough equipment for extended dives at depths up to 60 meters, figuring if the dive exceeded that depth, we would be planning a return trip at a later time.



Dennis at Golden Arrow Technical Diving Center in Santo Domingo was kind enough to lend us several sets of tanks, as well as o2 cylinders for our O2ptima CM rebreathers.



 The team had located 4 sumps at the bottom of the cave. Jefferson and I decided it would be most efficient to bring minimalist kit for 2 divers to dive at the same time, using the second divers kit as spares if necessary.




It took 9 people to sherpa all of the dive gear, even with minimalist configuration. Several members of the team accompanied each diver to assist with entering the sumps. 




The first sump had no flowing water. It went to a depth of 11 meters, where I turned at a restriction that was passible, but small enough to make me want to turn the first dive there before going back and passing through it.



. The restriction seemed to be a sand trap and looked to be going up on the other side. The second sump had clear water flowing into it, went to a depth of 2 meters, and was approximately 15 meters long.



It surfaced in ongoing passage in solid rock with several in feeders, as well as a streamway that continued on. The air beyond the sump was not safe to breathe, so the exploration was limited to what I could tolerate while wearing my rebreather through the dry passage. 



The third sump was located at the base of the bolt climb, and a faint rumbling sound could be heard if you sat still on the edge of the pool. 


There was no flow going into this sump, and unfortunately several team members had crossed it the day before the dive to look for continuing passage. 


When Jefferson began his dive, the visibility had not recovered, and he was limited to diving by feel. 



He was not able to locate any significant passage in the sump, and we hypothesize it may just be a low point in the cave that collects water. 


The fourth sump has the best looking of them all and was fed by a consistent stream running down a large flowstone on the left side of the passage. Jefferson dove through what was practically a duck under into continuing dry passage. The air was not breathable, and he was not able to continue exploration. 



After learning that both sumps had bad air on the other side, as well as being worn out by a long and cold day in the cave I decided that the first sump would most likely surface in bad air as well and determined that the work necessary to do one more dive that day was not worth the likely results.




The worn-out team trickled out of the cave as they finished their work, and the rest of the dive gear was carried out of the cave over the next several days. 



The results were that we found that the depth of the cave was not over 300 meters and the map that the Italians made was inconclusive, missing passage, and not accurate.



Additionally, we found that the dry passages beyond the sump were not habitable and life sustaining without lightweight breathing apparatuses for us to continue exploration.



Lighters would not light in the passages beyond the sumps and we found that very small activities would leave the divers gasping for air.



This was deemed too dangerous to continue exploration within those air passages beyond the sump. The “impassable raging river” seems to have been the least stream passage we encountered that was impassable due to the sump.




This particular sump was not deemed necessary to dive due to the probability that we would find unbreathable dry passage beyond the sump and the preparation would be worth the effort. 





The low air passage in Ceth’s Gas Crevasse was the only passage that was first seen by human eyes. 



Expedition members sorted by first name: 


Adam Haydock (expedition co-leader), Ceth Parker, Gustavo Quesada, Jamie Goodwin, Jefferson Marchand, Lukas Eddy (expedition co-leader), Rachael Crawford, Steve Lambert, Suhei Eddy, Zeb Lilly. 







 

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