My First Cave Crawl
My first cave crawl was done at Moaning Cave, California. This is a sort of interactive map of the crawl route that Jessie and I did.
The Black Hole is where you slide down from the bottom of the walking tour route that’s about 170 feet deep. You end up in the Upper Mudflat area where you all regroup. Then you slide down to the Lower Mudflat area where you can peak into a big nook and view a huge stalactite and stalagmite that have grown together.
The next stage is Joe Adventure. This is where you get your first encounter with a tight space. You have to squeeze up and over a large rock formation and then slide down into the breakdown room. The Breakdown Room has a small offshoot that is called the Conference Room that fits about four people. I didn’t bother going to see, I was too busy recovering from my initial encounter with tight spaces! The Breakdown room is the lowest point of the crawl.
From there you up a series of steps, take a left and head through the Meat Grinder. If you were feeling especially claustrophobic after Joe Adventure, then there’s an escape route out through the Mushroom Patch that leads right back into to same area as the Black Hole where you start. Of course, Jessie and I headed left, with just a little bit of trepidation on my part. The Meat Grinder is so named because it goes up and down over a series of stalagmites that force you to crawl up and over them multiple times. I came pretty close to getting stuck here when I slid down to the right of one of the stalagmites. I had to pull myself around the side and earned some pretty good sized scrapes on my shoulder. From there you slide down into the pancake room. The tour guide jokingly told me that there was a pancake there waiting for me. He wasn’t exactly lying, but let’s just say I was disappointed.
Inside the pancake room are a couple of offshoots that you can explore while you’re waiting for the people in front of you to make their way out. One is the Roach Motel, which is about ten feet below the pancake room and has just enough room for you to turn around. There’s also a little spot where you can view another column like the one off the Lower Mudflat. Turns out the “pancake” was a large flat rock that was bridging a gap that was just big enough for you to slide through on your back. It’s about no more than a foot tall and about seven feet long. You can push your way through most of it with your feet, and then grab a ledge on the other side to pull yourself the rest of the way through. Then, you’re faced with the long narrow tube leading up to Godzilla’s Nostril. This tube is called the Birthing Canal. You have to slide up it sideways using your feet to kick your way up the tube while holding a rope. When you get to the top, there’s no hand-holds. You have to pull yourself out using the rope and bracing yourself on the sides with your feet and knees. This was definitely the tightest and most difficult part of the crawl.
At Godzilla’s Nostril you’re faced with a choice. If you’ve had enough, you can climb up about ten feet out of Godzilla’s Nostril and you’re back to where you started. The more adventurous people in better condition can go a little further and use the Chimney exit. You crawl up another 40-50 feet, and then you’re actually about 30-40 feet above the place where you start. Then you use a rope to slide down the side of the cavern to the place where you started. Jessie and I both were exhausted after the Birth Canal, so we exited out Gozilla’s Nostril, stripped the gear off, and collapsed on a couple of benches that are available.
All in all, we were underground for a little better than an hour. It was a fascinating, exciting, dirty, and challenging experience. If you don’t know if you’re claustrophobic, then you’ll figure it very quickly when you go through Joe’s Adventure. I had a couple moments of panic when I went through, but it turns out that was mostly because I had my chinstrap on my helmet so tight that I was choking myself when I’d look up to see where I was going! After loosening the strap I only had some mild moments of butterflies when I’d get ready to attempt some of the smaller spaces and it was easy for me to mentally push them aside and focus on the task at hand. It’s not like you can just bail out at any time. Once you go through the Meat Grinder you’re committed and you have to go through the rest, so the butterflies and panic don’t help you.
Would I do it again? Well…

