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Talk about a trip you took out to Anza Borrego

Arroyo Tapido mud caves Messages in this topic - RSS

tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371


11/9/2020
tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371
Been on my list a while. I didn't have any specific beta, just drove out and looked around. I tried five or six promising starts but only two led to long tunnels/slots. I know there must be more I didn't find.




Cave #1:









Cave #2:








Heart of mud

Some video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEQypprK8kE&feature=youtu.be
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Rocko1
Rocko1
Posts: 600


11/9/2020
Rocko1
Rocko1
Posts: 600
Very nice. Did those about 5 years ago. Found some cool routes that popped up a vertical shaft near the top of a hill. Could really get 'lost' out there is enough time is spent.
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ziphius
ziphius
Posts: 911


11/9/2020
ziphius
ziphius
Posts: 911
Very cool! Never been there, but admittedly a little scared.

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tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371


11/13/2020
tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371
ziphius wrote:
Very cool! Never been there, but admittedly a little scared.


Haha, I was too, that's why I knew it was worth doing smile
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tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371


11/13/2020
tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371
Rocko1 wrote:
Very nice. Did those about 5 years ago. Found some cool routes that popped up a vertical shaft near the top of a hill. Could really get 'lost' out there is enough time is spent.



"top of a hill" is where the danger is. I got about 20' up a side branch of cave #2, then my footsteps sounded hollow. Immediately went back.
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Rocko1
Rocko1
Posts: 600


11/13/2020
Rocko1
Rocko1
Posts: 600
tekewin wrote:
Rocko1 wrote:
Very nice. Did those about 5 years ago. Found some cool routes that popped up a vertical shaft near the top of a hill. Could really get 'lost' out there is enough time is spent.



"top of a hill" is where the danger is. I got about 20' up a side branch of cave #2, then my footsteps sounded hollow. Immediately went back.

Yeah, I sat on the edge of the opening, thought about that no one probably explored the 'canyons' that are more than likely above hollow ground and went back.
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dsefcik
dsefcik
Administrator
Posts: 2624


11/14/2020
dsefcik
dsefcik
Administrator
Posts: 2624
The mud caves are fun and need several trips out to really see most of everything. On busy weekends there are groups of people everywhere and you will see where all of the entrances are, many are so small and hidden they are hard to find even if you know where they are. In Schad's book he advises not to walk on top of the caves as they are subject to collapsing down. Tragically this happened back in 2012 to a young man named Guillermo Pino so folks should use caution when exploring the caves.

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http://www.darensefcik.com
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tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371


11/14/2020
tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371
dsefcik wrote:
The mud caves are fun and need several trips out to really see most of everything. On busy weekends there are groups of people everywhere and you will see where all of the entrances are, many are so small and hidden they are hard to find even if you know where they are. In Schad's book he advises not to walk on top of the caves as they are subject to collapsing down. Tragically this happened back in 2012 to a young man named Guillermo Pino so folks should use caution when exploring the caves.



Thanks for the info and warning. That's a rough way to go. The signs there advise against exploring the caves, but clearly a lot of people do.
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rockhopper
rockhopper
Posts: 668


11/14/2020
rockhopper
rockhopper
Posts: 668
Probably used as temporary shelter over the years. I remember when the young fella fell down and got wedged in a cave far below. They had a huge search party out there when he went missing. I wanted to go help but couldn't make it.
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rockhopper
rockhopper
Posts: 668


11/14/2020
rockhopper
rockhopper
Posts: 668
On a lighter note. The silt, sand and mud stone you are walking on is over Four (4) miles thick ! The eroded down Colorado plateau during the past one to five million years. Faulted, subsided, tilted, the bad lands contain fossils of over 500 species of flora and fauna.
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Buford
Buford
Posts: 461


11/16/2020
Buford
Buford
Posts: 461
Nice. I like the idea of exploring the mud caves, but I don't think you'll ever find me in there. Too scared. I was in Arroyo Tapiado a couple days after a storm once and saw a couple/heard cave ins and slides happen in different sections of the wash over a couple hours. It was kind of eerie standing in the wash bottom when all of a sudden you hear small pebbles rolling down hill followed by a bigger thump sound. This happened more than once that day. People were still crawling around the caves as this was happening.

I talked with a SAR person about the guy that disappeared. His last known location was only feet from where he was found yet it took them weeks to find him from what I remember of the case.

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Links to my photos: ABDSP photos, Bighorn sheep photos, ABDSP time lapse video, Wildlife photos (mainly birds)
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tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371


11/17/2020
tekewin
tekewin
Posts: 371
Buford wrote:
Nice. I like the idea of exploring the mud caves, but I don't think you'll ever find me in there. Too scared. I was in Arroyo Tapiado a couple days after a storm once and saw a couple/heard cave ins and slides happen in different sections of the wash over a couple hours. It was kind of eerie standing in the wash bottom when all of a sudden you hear small pebbles rolling down hill followed by a bigger thump sound. This happened more than once that day. People were still crawling around the caves as this was happening.

I talked with a SAR person about the guy that disappeared. His last known location was only feet from where he was found yet it took them weeks to find him from what I remember of the case.



Yeah, after a storm is the worst time to go. You want that mud to be hard and dry. I can easily see if someone fell through to a hollow cavern, they would be almost impossible to find. Another geological wonder in AB.
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