Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Caves' school schedule winding down!


The summer months are well and truly upon us and Christmas is just around the corner... meaning day visits and school camps to the Capricorn Caves are winding down for another year.

But what a year it's been!

2010 has seen no less than 80 school groups experience all there is to offer at the Capricorn Caves; from standards including adventure caving, cathedral tours and the high ropes course, to initiatives challenges, environment presentations and our ground breaking new geo-tour.

And if you thought it was only local schools taking advantage of our state of the
art camp and lodging facilities... think again!

This year schools from as far as Gympie and Ayr have made the trek to Capricornia and word is spreading with schools from across the border now expressing interest in a Capricorn Caves experience.

This week though it's been the sixteen students from Avondale State School, west of Agnes Water, that have kept staff on their toes.

After a hearty morning schedule of adventure caving and the always popular crate climb, the students - ranging from grades 4, 5, 6 and 7 - will have the afternoon to relax before a night tour and camp fire round out their stay at the Capricorn Caves.

80 schools down, four to go... until next year that is!

Encore! Encore!















Three performances. Three sell out shows. Hundreds of satisfied guests!

In just its third year, the Capricorn Caves' Underground Opera is fast becoming one of the real highlights on Central Queensland's social calendar.

Indeed such is the growing popularity of the show that additional seating had to be supplied to cater for all the guests during the recent November shows!

"The staff had to find room for around 40 extra chairs so that was a job in itself carrying all the extra seating into the Cathedral," Cave owner Ann Augusteyn laughed.
And For three consecutive nights there wasn't an empty seat in the house ( or cave... as it were) as crowds flocked to see such classics as 'Sweeney Todd' and the 'Barber of Seville' in a somewhat surreal limestone setting.

Staff from SKAL International Capricornia were the given the VIP treatment as special guests for the evening and judging from their response, Ann believes they'll be first in line for tickets come 2011.

"They had never seen anything like it," she said.

"The majority of the guests have seen the show every year since its inception in 2008 and they keep coming back so we must be doing something right and I'm sure we'll see them all again next year."

The concerts will return again in May.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Capricorn Caves' European Cousins!


"Believe it or not the Capricorn Caves are very similar to those in Poland around 60 or 70 million years ago."

It may sound strange, but it's this fun little fact that has prompted two of Europe's leading karst and geomorphology experts to shed the winter woollies and ply their trade right here in the tropics.

Along with Associate Professor Armstrong Osborne from Sydney University, Bojan Otonicar from the Karst Research Institute in Slovenia and Andrzey Tyc from the University of Silesia in Poland have the spent the past two weeks studying various cave and karst formations at the Capricorn Caves.

As part of a joint three year study, the trio hope to shed a little more light on exactly how these magnificent chambers were formed and indeed how they'll be shaped by the elements in the future.

Professor Osborne said they were looking for caves that boast similar landscapes and features to some European caves, but in a vastly different climatic setting.

"The caves we are looking at in Poland are about 50 degrees north while the Capricorn Caves lie on the Tropic of Capricorn... so it's fair to say that Poland and Central Queensland are quite different!" he laughed.

But here is where it really gets interesting.

"Our work is based on the theory that caves were formed from water travelling from bottom to top, rather than top to bottom rather than the other way around."

Meaning that the long held belief that the caves were formed by rain water trickling through cracks and crevices and slowly dissolving the limestone could in fact be somewhat upside down.

"That's the theory so we're looking at and measuring features that might show which direction the water moved, geological structures and things like that," Professor Osborne said.

For his European counterparts, the three week sojourn is also a chance to soak up some Central Queensland sun!

"I'm enjoying the warm temperatures," Bojan said.

"It's probably very close to zero degrees in Slovenia right now so it's nice to be able work in a t-shirt!"

The trio will continue their study in Poland next June.