A Quiet December Day Exploring
The Cavern’s Underground Wonders
Last December, my girlfriend Craig and I headed south out of
Santa Fe on highway 285 to Carlsbad Caverns National Park with plans to spend a
full day exploring Carlsbad’s underground wonders before continuing on to
visit Guadalupe National Park and Chamizol National Monument in El Paso. All three parks are easy to fit into a four
day loop out of Santa Fe.
You see, I like caves. Recently we’ve been underground in
marble caves (Oregon
Caves National Monument and Preserve), pristine limestone caves (Kartchner
Caverns State Park in AZ), and lava tube caves (Lava
Beds National Monument in California).
And in my college days I spent several summers exploring obscure lava
tube caves in central Oregon. This
caving thing is a long standing interest.
So when a trip to Carlsbad Caverns National Park became a reality, I
not only relished another stamp in my NPS passport, but I got to check out a
cave that totally boggled my mind.
Little did I know that the highway to Carlsbad went right by
the International UFO Museum and
Research Center in Roswell, New Mexico.
We had to stop and check it out.
I cannot imagine that we are alone in the universe. There are just too many galaxies for us to be
the only living creatures in all of space.
Now whether we have had visitors from those far-flung galaxies is
another question and one that is really quite fun to contemplate. Science fiction writers and Hollywood
producers certainly stoke our imagination with their versions of alien
visitation. But after spending time
reading about the mysterious goings on in/around Roswell in July 1947, you have
to wonder if aliens have visited earth. The museum presents interviews with dozens of
military personnel that were involved in the “Roswell lncident.” Some claim they saw alien bodies, others saw
pieces of what they claimed was a space ship.
No one knows the full story, but it is certainly something the
government wants to keep a secret.
With aliens on our mind, we rolled into the town of Carlsbad
in time for dinner at Yellow Brix, a small and inviting bistro with a good
selection of local beers. I like hops,
so ordered a very tasty Elevated IPA from Albuquerque’s La Cumbre Brewing
Company. At dinner, a small brochure on
our table pitched nightly cruises down the Pecos River to view the Christmas
lights. With nothing else on our evening
dance card, we made a reservation for the 40 minute Christmas On The Pecos boat
ride. This was a great call as we settled
into a chilly but totally entertaining trip to view the extravagant holiday
lighting displays on the lawns of private homes and businesses fronting the
river. The Park Service even had their own lighting
display!! After a restful night dreaming
of Christmas lights and cold beer, it was time to go cave exploring.
The Park is about 25 miles from the town of Carlsbad and
since we planned to spend all day underground, we booked two nights at the
local Hampton Inn. It was just
too cold to camp out. And December is
a really good month to visit Carlsbad as the crowds are almost non-existent and
hotel rates are pretty reasonable. I
cannot imagine what it would be like to visit in the summer when, on the
Fourth of July weekend for example, as many as 5,000 people can be in the
Caverns. In the winter, daily visitation
is in the low hundreds.
Our morning drive up the 7 mile twisty park road to the
Visitor Center and cave entrance was shrouded in fog. We had no idea of the elevation we gained or
the view to be had until later in the afternoon when we emerged from
underground. The fog had burned off and
we found ourselves on a ridge with an expansive view of the Chihuahuan Desert
below. It was near freezing with a light dusting of snow when we arrived and
it warmed up to almost 50 by the afternoon.
But the outside temperature wasn't a concern as it is a balmy 56 underground
and a light jacket and good walking shoes were all we needed.
The caves of Carlsbad lie on a 400 mile long, 250 million
year old reef left behind from an ancient inland sea. As the land lifted up to create what would
become the Guadalupe Mountains (Guadalupe Mountains National Park is just 31
miles further down the road), sulphuric acid was created when rain water migrated
down through cracks in the limestone reef and mixed with hydrogen-sulfide
enriched water pushing up through underground oil and gas deposits. The
sulfuric acid dissolved the limestone and created the huge caverns that are now
Carlsbad Caverns National Park. The
stalagmites, stalactites, soda straws, draperies, columns, popcorn and other
formations have all been created in the past half a million years as surface
water, enriched with calcium bicarbonate, seeps down through the earth and drips
into the much older cave, leaving calcite formations behind. While much of the cave is inactive, there are
places where surface water, taking about 9 months to seep through to the
caverns, is still creating formations.
Ancient drawings on the stone walls near the entrance tell
us that Native Americans knew about the cave for at least 1,000 years before a
local cowboy, Jim White, began exploring the caverns. In 1915, White brought a photographer into
the caves and the pictures created quite a sensation. In 1923, the Interior Department sent someone
to see what the buzz was about and later that year on October 25, President
Calvin Coolidge used the Antiquities
Act to create Carlsbad Caverns National Monument. Congress made it a
National Park on May 14, 1930. Early on,
Jim White lowered visitors into the cave in a large bucket also used to mine the
cave’s extensive bat guano deposits. A ladder was installed in 1925 and the first elevator was
operational by 1932. By 1937, the park
had received its millionth visitor!!
We began at the Visitor Center where we made reservations
for the guided walk through the Kings Palace which took us into the deepest
part of the cave and some of the most spectacular formations. Reservations for Kings Palace are a
must. There are 119 caves identified in
the park of which Carlsbad Caverns is one of two available to the public, and
by far the most visited. The other is Slaughter
Cave, which also requires a reservation for the once-a-day Ranger led hike with
flashlights and no paved trails.
Our plan was to explore the self-guided part of the cave
first and finish up our day on the ranger led walk through the Kings
Palace. A short trail from the visitor
center drops you into the cave’s entrance trail and a one-mile descent to the Big
Room. This is a steady downhill walk beginning
at the huge hole in the ground that first caught Jim White’s attention as he
sat and watched “millions of bats” flying out in the early evening. They were so thick, he initially thought it
might be a volcano erupting. The path is
paved, there are good interpretative signs throughout the caverns and the
lighting, recently upgraded to LED, is very tasteful and helps the caverns come
alive.
If you don’t want to walk down, or back up at the end of
your cave explorations, there are elevators to take you to and from the
surface. In the summer months, the wait
for the elevators can be as much as three hours.
At the bottom of the entrance trail, 755 feet below the
surface, I was surprised to find a well-designed rest area with t-shirts
and post cards and a small food concession.
Yes, we bought a t-shirt!!! There
are also some of the coolest rest rooms I’ve ever used – carved into the side
of the cave.
The self-guided tour of the Big Room is a one mile path
through some of the most famous formations: Rock Of Ages, Giant Dome, Temple Of
The Sun, and the Painted Grotto. We
spent a good 90 minutes on this route, reading the signs, trying to take good
photos and being amazed at the sheer size of this cave. Then we queued up for our ranger led walk
through the Kings Palace.
Starting in the underground rest area, the Kings Palace tour
takes you down to 830 feet below the surface and through four amazing
chambers. This area was once open as a
self-guided trail, but the close proximity of delicate formations was too much
of a temptation for some visitors. They
just couldn’t keep their hands off. To
stop the destruction in the Kings Palace, access is now only available on a
ranger-led hike. But if it hadn’t been
for Toni, our ranger, we would have missed out on some great stories. We learned that you cannot bring your own
food into the caverns because inadvertently-dropped food attracts
raccoons. At the peak, over 300 raccoons
infested the cave, all drawn by food crumbs dropped by visitors on the access
trail. Once those 300 were cleaned out,
the Park Service had no desire to have the caves re-infested. Hence the no food policy. You can buy concession food so long as you
eat it in their designated area.
We also learned from Toni that recent science has discovered
LOTS of microbes living in the cave.
Originally, the studies were expected to show that nothing lived
underground in the dark, but that was soon dispelled as unique microbe
communities are literally found in each major chamber in the cave.
And we got to experience the cave in the dark when Toni shut out the lights. Blind Descent, one of my favorite Nevada Barr books, (mystery novels based in national parks), takes place at Carlsbad. Her protagonist, park ranger Anna Pigeon, finds herself deep in the caves and she loses her light. Barr’s written descriptions of being without light in the cave gave me the willies and now I experienced it first-hand. I cannot imagine what it would be like to lose your light so far underground. You’d probably turn into a fossil. Fortunately Toni turned the lights back on and we ended our guided walk back at the rest area. Having spent most of the day underground, we opted for the speedy elevator back to the surface.
And we got to experience the cave in the dark when Toni shut out the lights. Blind Descent, one of my favorite Nevada Barr books, (mystery novels based in national parks), takes place at Carlsbad. Her protagonist, park ranger Anna Pigeon, finds herself deep in the caves and she loses her light. Barr’s written descriptions of being without light in the cave gave me the willies and now I experienced it first-hand. I cannot imagine what it would be like to lose your light so far underground. You’d probably turn into a fossil. Fortunately Toni turned the lights back on and we ended our guided walk back at the rest area. Having spent most of the day underground, we opted for the speedy elevator back to the surface.
Not all of Carlsbad is underground. In 1978, Congress designated 33,000 acres of
the park as Wilderness. This Chihuahuan
Desert landscape is fairly easy to explore on some of the 50 plus miles of
identified trails in the park. Much of
the trail system is marked only with rock cairns, so you need to be familiar
with backcountry travel. We chose to
leave the caverns on the 9.5 mile scenic drive through this beautiful desert
and were treated to six mule deer, a totally disinterested raccoon, and flock
of white-crowned sparrows.
Back in the town of Carlsbad, as we kicked back with a cold adult beverage, Craig and I marveled at the sheer size of the caves and
the formations we’d discovered that day.
Carlsbad is one of the largest limestone caves in the world and we are
so blessed that it is protected and open for visitors like us. The one thing we missed were the bats. They only inhabit the cave from early spring
to October. So, bummer, I guess we’ll
have to come back again.
Very cool. I've never been and would like to!
ReplyDeleteHave you visited Lewis and Clark Caverns (a state Park) in Montana near Three Forks? It's a great one-way tour down through the caverns with a hike back--and the scenery above the Jefferson River is spectacular too.