• The Derbyshire Caver, No. 158

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Dead Sheep in Jingling pot

Getwet

New member
I was up at a rather busy West Kingsdale today.

I was informed by a group that had been down today that there is a dead sheep in jingling pot that is at a particularly "high" state of decomposure. :thumbsdown:

Anyone thinking of doing this trip may be best to wait a few weeks to allow nature to take its course
 

dunc

New member
I was up at a rather busy West Kingsdale today.
Disgraceful isn't it, was in Kingsdale couple week ago and it was very busy also.. Where have all these people suddenly appeared from??

I was informed by a group that had been down today that there is a dead sheep in jingling pot that is at a particularly "high" state of decomposure
;)  it all adds to the enjoyment, allegedly.
 

dl

New member
We were there a couple of months ago and some of the maggot population had already climbed half way up the main shaft ..... just by the P-hanger.
 

paulf

Member
Why isn't there fences around these Holes ?
Or are the Sheep supposed to be in the other area's ?
Bull Pot used to have the corrugated Metal over the Top, this now resides at the bottom of the Entrance Pitch with some Sheep Bones.
Cheers Paul
 

Ship-badger

Member
paulf said:
Why isn't there fences around these Holes ?
Or are the Sheep supposed to be in the other area's ?
Bull Pot used to have the corrugated Metal over the Top, this now resides at the bottom of the Entrance Pitch with some Sheep Bones.
Cheers Paul
:eek:
 

cap n chris

Well-known member
Surely fences are a southern invention, designed to make people wearing baseballs caps learn how to crash cars into them?
 
D

Dave H

Guest
Jingling has a relatively small problem - Bull Pot is the real sheep magnet.

The constant fetid sheep there makes it difficult to use the normal trip recollection method :-

"Oh, when P6 [Perryfoot] had the sheep blown up larger than a football just inside the entrance?" or
"The summer when there was the rabbit in the first low bit of Swildons ..."
;)
 

paul

Moderator
Dave H said:
Jingling has a relatively small problem - Bull Pot is the real sheep magnet.

The constant fetid sheep there makes it difficult to use the normal trip recollection method :-

"Oh, when P6 [Perryfoot] had the sheep blown up larger than a football just inside the entrance?" or
"The summer when there was the rabbit in the first low bit of Swildons ..."
;)

My memory of Coolagh River cave (County Clare) "the time I crawled through the rotting sheep carcass...". Yuck.

Last time I was in Bull Pot a few months ago there was a live shrew wandering about near the corrugated sheet at the foot of the entrance pitch.
 

potholer

New member
dl said:
We were there a couple of months ago and some of the maggot population had already climbed half way up the main shaft ..... just by the P-hanger.
I was there in ~July and there were plenty of maggots around on the walls, but the leading carcass then was near the bottom of the direct hang (south-ish end of the shaft).
The current carcass is rather more recent and is pretty much right at the bottom of the final hang of the swing-off-into-the-rift side route. There is a small thread 2/3 of the way down that allows a deviation to avoid the sheep and merely land on one of the maggot-covered boulders nearby.
 

potholer

New member
Jingling seems to be one of the few shafts that regularly attract woolies.

In any case, there are only a handful of UK potholes anywhere other than Yorkshire.
 

Steve Robinson

New member
Last year there was a sheep half way through the sump in White Lady Cave, Ystradfellte just where I needed to belay the line - nice! :yucky:

Refrained from Snoopying to its leg and used a convenient boulder instead.
 

dl

New member
Many years ago I distinctly remember one of the line belays in one of the downstream sumps of New Goyden being the leg of an unfortunate sheep.
 
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