Times Colonist

Canadian explorer recalls being trapped in cave

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An Alberta-based explorer who was trapped in a partly flooded cave for days says her heart goes out to the members of a boys’ soccer team as they await rescue from an undergroun­d cavern in Thailand.

Kathleen Graham, president of the Alberta Speleologi­cal Society, said she remembers “pure relief” washing over her as she emerged from the darkness of Mexico’s Sistema Huautla in April.

Unlike the group of a dozen boys and their soccer coach who went missing on June 23 when flooding trapped them in a cave in northern Thailand, Graham said her team had supplies on hand.

It helped sustain them through the four days they were stranded after torrential rains blocked their exit route. “We were planning to camp, so we had food, we had sleeping bags. These kids don’t,” she said from Calgary on Tuesday.

“Still, it really weighs on you, because you don’t know. You’re just waiting. You don’t have any communicat­ion to the surface.”

As her colleagues fretted over fears they would never again see the light of day, Graham said she focused her energies on survival.

She said she had to stave off panic to keep water levels steady in the one-inch pocket of air that allowed her and her team to swim out of the cave.

It was only then, she said, that the gravity of the situation hit her.

“You’re trying to trick your own mind into being in a positive place,” she said, “but then when you get to the other side, it’s just pure relief.”

She imagines that the boys, aged 11 to 16, and their coach have found some hope after being located by rescuers Monday.

But even as the group of 13 receives medical attention and nourishmen­t, she said, their path to safety remains uncertain.

Floodwater­s as murky as “chocolate milk” and narrow passageway­s could make it difficult for the young men to dive out of the cave, Graham said.

Christian Stenner of the Alberta/B.C. Cave Rescue Service said coaching the young men to swim out of the cave could prove to be risky under conditions that would challenge even an experience­d diver. Stenner said the perhaps safer option would be to wait for water levels to recede — but spending an extended period of time undergroun­d could take a psychologi­cal toll on the group.

Stenner said there have only been about five flooding-related cave incidents in Canada in the past 25 years, but Graham said she is keeping an eye on the rescue in Thailand for lessons that could be useful back home.

 ?? JARED HABIAK, VIA CP ?? Kathleen Graham leads an expedition of Bisaro Anima, which she calls the deepest cave in Canada, near Fernie.
JARED HABIAK, VIA CP Kathleen Graham leads an expedition of Bisaro Anima, which she calls the deepest cave in Canada, near Fernie.

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