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WEBMASTER
C o n t a c t

 

       

ALBANIA-CROATIA 2004

 

In the late afternoon of Friday the 6th I leave Lecco in direction of Ancona, while the rest of the group formed by Jean Jacques Bolanz, Simone Piscitelli and Marcello Ferretto will depart Saturday morning. I prefer to travel at night because the traffic is definetly less intense and with the trailer for the material I am much slower than the others. I stop to sleep in the parking lot of a truck stop just after Rimini, I open the tent mounted on the roof of the car and among the various noises I fall asleep.

Saturday 7 - I wake up at 07.00, I open the tent and I see the highway jammed for which I decide to get going immediately even if I am clearly in advance. I think about the others and worry.

A first round of phone calls to the friends in the other two cars, who have taken different roads because of a series of inconveniences, confirms my worries concerning the traffic that they have to face.

After a refreshing swim in the Senigallia Sea, I reach the harbour of Ancona at 15.00; the news that I receive from the others is not encouraging, the highways are jammed in different points and both the crews are still very distant.

At 16.00 Jean Jacques is almost at Ancona while Simone is still in Bologna: the ship that will bring us from Ancona to Bar in Montenegro departs at 18.00.

At the ticket office of the " Montenegro Lines" people begin to crowd, and to make the check in becomes an enterprise. Jean Jacques reaches the harbour at 16,30 while Simone succeeds in presenting at the passport control at 18,15.

We relax when they inform us that the ship will depart with a delay of one hour. We reach the entry of the ship at 19.20, and from the queue that we observe at the check-in we assume a consistent delay. Because of the trailer I am made entering the ship among the last ones. We finally depart at 22.30, we just do in time to see the harbour geting distant, and we are already on the bridge sleeping in our sleeping bags. The long trip of 18 hours is not pleasant, the already dirty ship has not been cleaned when it arrived in the harbour, the garbage bins are already full even before being used, the only bathrooms for men remain closed for almost the entire trip…

Sunday 8 - we slowly approach to the shore and the landscape that is showing before us is enthusiasting us: the coast is wild, the tall mountains of limestone at a few meters from the sea, the dreams arise.

We leave the ferry at 17.00 and after a few meters there is the customs.

I am the first one of the group to reach the customs officer who, having seen the enormous load transported by me, "kindly" makes me stop, a few minutes later same fate is waiting for Jean Jacques while Simone succeeds in passing uninspected and waits for us at the other side. It is Sunday, and the customs officer sends us to the only shipping agent that works at the harbour, who  has to compile a list of the material and the consequent permission of transit. We are asked the kind and quantity of equipment that we have, but we realize that it isn't necessary to be precise because it is a pro forma. In the agent's office between problems of communication and a long wait, I understand that to let us pass they demand 500Euro; an amount that is exaggerated, for which I get annoied declare that we immediately return to Italy. The dogmatic character affirms that 500Euro are for the value of the commodity of two cars. More than one hour later the loyal officer shows up with all the documents ready and an application of 290Euro; new discussion: even if the demand goes down to 200Euro in a few minutes, we still refuse to pay; the officer gets angry and tears up the compiled documents and leaves the harbour. By now it is 19.30: we start eating and wait that someone is moving. At 20.30 I approach the head officer of the customs which explains to me that the ammount to be paid is not a government tax but the payment for the shipping agent who compiles the documents.

Ennio, Gezim My. Uruci, Alfrida Uruci and Kujtim Gilbega who have come to harbour to wait for us, decide to reenter in Albania: for them it has got late, for us the customs for goods by now is closed and therefore we are forced to remain at Bar. Chatting with the people of the place we succeed in finding another shipping agent who for "only" 130Euro prepares our documents for the transit.

Finally delivered the documents at the customs we can continue the trip, that results to be only a couple of kilometers long: in fact we are dissuaded to leave the city and drive in the mountains at night; once found a parking lot for trucks we stop and sleep.

Monday 9 - Alarm clock at 06.00 and departure in direction of Albania.

We travel along the coast of Montenegro for a while and then we start to ascend the wild mountains, up to the lake of Scutari (Liqen The Shkodrës): a magic place. The morning fog allows to glimpse at a chain of limestone mountains of triangular form, at first low then rising higher and higher from the shore, reeds stolen by birds, row boats of fishermen silently cutting the water: a suggestive vision difficult to forget.

Reached the frontier, we hand over the permission of transit to the Montenegrian officers. We don't reach the Albanian barrier before having crossed a dark puddle of water to disinfect the tires at the cost of 2euro. In front of us the untiring Ennios, Gezim and Kujtim with the Albanian friends; from this moment on the communication with the authorities becomes easier and formalities are passed in a "moment". Again in car on the way to Shkodres (Scutari), the asphalt is not the best, the road is full of holes and driving with the trailer is not easy; I am forced to travel at 50km/h in order to avoid problems with the wheels and the suspensions. The landscapes are more and more intriguing and the first situations of contrast point out: flaming motorcars of prestigious brands that surpass carts pulled by donkeys, cellphones all over and flocks of sheep that walk on the road frightened by the continuous blowing of horns, etc. Once reached the city we are accompanied to the house of Ritvan Mandia.

At our disposition there are two rooms, of which one has furnitures and a ceiling in wood with a history of around 200 years and a really enormous store, ideal to contain our voluminous equipments; without wasting time we unload everything, then a deserved shower, a supper and a healthy sleep.

Tuesday 10 - Finally we go to see the springs that are at a distance of about one hour from the house where we lodge; once reached the place we find ourselves in front of two enormous flooded sink holes: under conditions of flood from one of these sink holes a river exits entering the other one, forming a little pond called Hurdhanat and Sheganit or Lake of the noise because of the rumble of the water that comes out; the same water exits in the lake of Shkodres at around 500m of distance. After 200m we reach the first objective: a spring called Syri i Sheganit (Eye of the lake); the river that is formed by this spring also flows after about one hundred meters into the lake of Shkodres;

Entrance of Syri i Sheganit

Moving about one hundred meters to the left we are showed an enormous hole that is opening at the shore of the lake Shkodres called Viri i Sheganit (Fountain of the lake) that goes down vertically and in which 4-5 years ago during a hazardous manoeuvre a truck has fallen.

We organize the dives beginning the works in the Syri i Sheganit spring brevely explored for short part by Bulgarian cave divers in 92 and in 93. Their exploration line has remained and it is tied off at the ending point of their exploration. The first one to descend is Jean Jacques: he reaches a distance of 100m from the entry passing a tunnel with some not very wide passages, almost horizontal, at a depth of -25m in average for then arriving at a shaft that goes down to -45m. I have some problems with the equipment (oxygen sensors) and therefore I descend only the initial fracture up to -20m. The temperature of the water is 11°.

Wednesday 11 - Jean Jacques continues the exploration of the Syri i Sheganit spring and takes a a 12l safety tank to -30m, considering the fact that he uses only one semi closed circuit. He reaches the base of the shaft at -60, and continues in an almost horizontal tunnel that descends another 5m. I make a touristic tour using the closed circuit Voyager which I use for this kind of dive. In this spring there are ramifications all over and the exploratory potential is really notable.

Simone and Marcello will dive in the Hurdhanat and Sheganit sinkholes.

    The first and second sinkhole of the Hurdhanat e Sheganit system

In one of them Simone doesn't find prosecutions but trees, mud and rocks, in the other one Marcello descends to -25m, and stops having reached his safety limits, in a point where the sink hole continues to go down.

Giovedì 12 - it's my turn: I use my closed circuit with two 2l tanks of O2 and one 2l tank of argon, one 10l and one 12l tank with different gas that I attach as diluent and that in case of problems of the closed circuit allow me a return in open circuit.

The entrance in water from the most comfortable place across alga which covers part of the lake

The visibility doesn't pass 5m and as long as I pass the narrow sections it is not bad, but when I begin to descend the shaft that measures at least 7m in diameter I don't succeed in seeing a lot anymore; I follow the line of Jean Jacques observing only the wall on which is placed. At the base of the shaft I would be tempted to advance on the right side. In front of me there is a void, but the line enters a perfectly round and smooth tunnel on the left side with 3m in diameter, which is too inviting to snob it, therefore I follow it until I reach the exploration reel left by Jean Jacques.

I begin to lay out line and after a few meters I am on the edge of a new shaft: how beautiful! but what impression, everything is black around me! I verify the analysers: the ppO2 of 1,4 is a little high, for which change the type of diluent, I flush the counterlungs thinking about the moment I tell Jean Jacques about this shaft so near to the end point of his exploration, and then I descend to the bottom at -72m. Here the dimensions of the tunnel are about 12m for 7m, I see an eel below me that it is hidden among the rocks, I see different fish and about ten small shellfishes that accompany me in this black straight tunnel gallery. I have two depht meters: one of them, after about ten meters of progression, shows -76m while the other one shows -74m; after 80m of continuation at constant depth, I arrive in a section obstructed by big blocks. I choose to pass above, I slip into a passage that measures 1m in height and 7m in width, I pass it and again I find myself in a great hall; to my left I see a tunnel, I think this will be the low passage that I have observed before the rock slide, I continue, and again I find myself in a passage of 1m in height.

I decide to stop: I have passed 260m from the entry of which 120m in more than -65m of depht. When I start the return 25 minutes have passed; I reach -60m after 35 minutes of run time, I take the time to observe what surrounds me and see at least about ten interesting continuations.

Decompression with Closed Circuit Rebreather

In decompression, at a depht of -50m, I observe stalactite of 5m in height and above me, from -45m to -30m, on the walls of the shaft I see thousand of fossils. I reach the narrow zone, I try to force it with everything attached but I get jammed in bad way, I don't succeed anymore neither to advance neither to move backwards; fortunately I succeed in unhooking the bailout tanks and then I pass the passage easily.

Last check of the oxygen sensors before the dive

I resurface after 105 minutes, happy about the result and the performance of the Voyager's consume: 60Bar of O2 from the 2l tank, 20Bar of trimix 18/60 from the 10l tank and 30Bar of trimix 12/60 from the 12l tank. Like the difference between the semi closed circuit and the open circuit I now see again the difference between the closed circuit and the semi closed circuit.

The same day Jean Jacques verifies a continuation in the same spring up to the depth of -30m, further on it results closed.

More fortunate are Simone and Marcello who go to check an enormous black void at the entry of the same spring at -22m, on the right of the principal guide line. Simone who is more expert descends reaching -45m, stopping for having reached the limits of consumption; he leaves the exploration reel ready for the continuation of the exploration. Marcello, that crosses the hall horizontally and who reaches the opposite wall, finds himself at the beginning of an even continuation at the depth of -21m.

Friday 13 - Jean Jacques decides to modify his semi closed circuit used up to that moment as single unit and assembles it in couple with a second unit. The morning and part of the afternoon, pass in a moment, and we are forced to abandon the idea to start with the dives in the Viri i Sheganit spring, postponing it to the following day, and to dedicate instead to the other planned dives.

Nevertheless Marcello is not feeling well, therefore he doesn't dive; Jean Jacques wants to try the new drysuit but having his rebreathers all dismounted, he has to use an open circuit: will he still be able to use the regulators after almost one year of semi closed circuit?

Simone cannot wait to continue the shaft started to explore by him the day before at Siri i Sheganit; I will go to check a ramification, in the tunnel explored by me the day before.

At the end of the day, the only one to have reached some result is Simone. He descends to -60m in the shaft but doesn't go further because he is impressed by the black in front of him. He decides to ascend but maybe he hurries too much, because, after he resurfaces, symptoms of DCS occur to his arm.

By my account I quickly reach -20m, I realize to have problems with the sensors, for which I decide to return in order to correct the error: at the end I desist and give up the exploration.

Saturday 14 - During the night a strong storm unloads rain and lasts until the morning. When we reach the springs we notice that at Viri i Sheganit even if the level has not increased, the water is turbid and the brown color is little inviting, this is due to the violent rain that has transported clay in the lake and to the movement of the waves on the muddy beach; Jean Jacques who had planned a dive there, is forced to renounce.

We move to Syri i Sheganit: the visibility here is also reduced to around 3m, but we decide to dive; Jean Jacques will continue the shaft already explored by Simone: He descends to -65m and reaches a hall on the bottom of the shaft, he searches…, enters a narrow passage, but he remains jammed: it also happens that he gets entangled in the line with the low part of the circuits, therefore, after having resolved the problem, he returns.

My dive doesn't bring appreciable fruits: I go to check the range until -45m in the shaft already explored by me, but in spite of what I had hoped, I don't find continuations.

Fact is, that using the closed circuit, the consumptions are so limited that the autonomy of dive time increases the possibility of searching new passages in full calm notably.

In ascent, at about -30m, I slip into a promising narrow passage: I put it on the notes for next year. During the return I remain for a couple of hours at -6m, to make company to Simone who is diving with oxygen to facilitate the recovery of his arm.

Marcello who is reestablished, follows and controls the series of tunnels already explored.

Sunday 15 - A strong inflammation in the ears makes me take a drastic decision: I give up to continue my exploration and I will take advantage of the next days of transfer to get myself back in order.

Jean Jacques turns his attention to "Viri i Sheganit", already explored ago a few days up to -65m by Luca Vincenti, a cave diver of the group of Ennio (Cavers Group "Gruppo Grotte Giara") who participates in the speleological expedition of research in the mountainous area of Tamara.

 

 

 

At the shore of Liqen I Shkodrёs near the entrance of Viri i Sheganit

The most comfortable entrance of al! Jean Jaques is accompanied into the water sitting in the rear of his van, with the risk to find himself on the bottom of the lake observing a new wreck

JJ reaches -86m, on the route he finds three sunk boats and a truck fallen in during a hazardous manoeuvre necessary to launch one of the sunk boats. The visibility is scarce, 3-4m, the big dimensions and the strong presence of clay on the walls and on the bottom don't help; difficult to find the continuation. After a careful search that lasts several minutes, JJ sees a possible continuation that is put on the list for next year.

The days dedicated to diving in Albania for this year are finished.

It is Marcellos task to recover the material from Syri i Sheganit.

Monday 16 -this day is dedicated to studies of the territory.

The Liqen I Shkodrёs seen from the road to Tamara

Simone who still has a swollen arm, is allowed to rest on the shores of the sea, while the group moves up the impending mountains for having a perspective of the zones of absorption that feed springs visited by us. More precisely we go to Tamara, a little village in the middle of the mountains, base camp of the speleological expedition of the GGG. We need 3 hours to pass about 80km. We go beyond the zone of the springs, we arrive at a few kilometers from the border with Montenegro, then we begin the ascent on the mountain; we reach 1100m above sea level and the landscape that is opening before our eyes is of a wild beauty. At our shoulders the lake of Scutari and the mountains of Montenegro, to our left still mountains of Montenegro, to our right and before us the mountains of Albania. scarce vegetation, limestone with unique forms of erosion in their expression and coloration, some mountain huts, a steep road excavated for reaching the bottom of the valley and some cars passing.

The valley leading to Tamara

At Tamara today a traditional festivity starts, to which the people that live in the mountain villages around have come, with their own traditions and habits, some emigrant have returned for vacation visiting the relatives, some citizens are visiting friends and some curious tourist like us have come, too.

We reach Tamara after having crossed a valley, after having inspected some interesting springs, after having sipped a good Turkish coffee waiting for the friends. Together with them we still travel one hour of gravel road ascending to 1200m above sea level. Once reached the village Bardolez we assist an unusual Mass celebrated by the Francescanian Monk Father Sergio, integrated in the discussions of the local heads. After the ceremony is finished, on board of a truck and after about a quarter of an hour; we reach a place even more lost in the mountains.

Ennio and Marcello, hungry

In the background the limestone mountains of "Malesise se Madhe" offer a superb image of themselves with the tops still snowy. Around us the vegetation is exuberant. We are guests for lunch in a cottage that serves as summer mountain hut, with simple food, nice and simple company, breathtaking panorama.

The limestone mountains of Malesise se Madhe

We return to Scutari in the late evening, returning over the pass: in the dusk the games of light on the hillsides are getting distant and this is the final greeting we receive from Albania.

Tuesday 17 - The departure takes place in the late morning.

The tax for leaving Albanian territory is 10euro, while for the entry in Montenegro there is a fee of 3euro for the disinfectant that is in the puddle of water that washes the tires of the passing cars. The same washing at arrival cost 2euro, will it be because of a more precious disinfectant? However we pass the two borders in the turn of one hour without serious problems, with the conviction to have been cheated, when at arrival we have disbursed 130euro: in fact, during this transit we have not been asked anything. In zic zacs among suggestive landscapes we reach Dubrovnic . We stop to sleep near a beach, after having taken a joyful bath at night.

Light problems of health rise up: three of us have attacks of dysentery, and I decide to put an antibiotic pomade in the ear from the moment that, with the usual disinfectant, the inflammation of the preceding days doesn't improve.

Wednesday 18 - we reach Vrlika in the afternoon. There we meet our Croatian friends who camp near a clear spring; after having chatted a little, they accompany us to the spring that we will have to explore. The entrance pool is fabulous: about twenty meters of diameter of crystalline water, in the transparence some trouts and a myriad of prawns can be seen; on the edges, an enormous swarm of bees hums while the swallows make breathtaking nosedives until little above the surface of the water. After having observed for the place well, we begin to unload and to prepare the base camp. This is the spring from which water is pumped, bottled and labled with the name of water " Cetina ".

Thze spring of Milaševo Jezero and part of the base camp seen from above

Thursday 19 - During the preparations of the morning, while the just charged tanks are cooled by putting them in the 7° spring water, a 7 lt tank escapes from the hands and decides to ruin the exploration, slowly slowly slipping on the funnel-shaped bottom of the entrance pool, then it disappears in the shaft. Jean Jacques, who is diving as the first uses air and descends to -73m, the bottom of the initial shaft and there it is the fugitive tank: the development of the cave up to here is exclusively in vertical. Jean Jacques resurfaces and in ecstasy he tells that the visibility is more than excellent, that the shaft is of an impressive beauty and that up to the depth reached there is no need for additional lights, because the light of the sun penetrates through the transparent water. He regrets only not to have foreseen to bring the right mixtures to be able to follow the temptation to continue the exploration. Marcello begins to set up the three 4 lt tanks that I will use for tomorrow's dive.

The walls of the cave in 20 m depht can be seen

Friday 20 - Today it's my turn. After three days of dysentery, I have been forced to take a pill to stop the flow, (unpleasant to have some "necessities" wearing a dry suit) and I continue with the antibiotic pomade in the ears for the inflammation of the eardrums; considering that the pain has almost disappeared, I decide that I can dive. We wake up at 06.45, we have an adequate breakfast, the last preparations are made, so that at 10.00, I am ready to gear up punctually avoiding the midday heat. For this time, I use the two semi closed circuits so that I do not have to prepare a return in open circuit; I have the gas mixes that allow me to descend to 130m with me, as I don't know the spring. I have seen only a sketch made by a Czech coral diver who was diving with air some years ago. I know that after the shaft the tube should go down tilted up to -103m. I finish the preparation on the edge of the entrance pool, two footsteps and I let myself slip in the water. What a spectacular shaft! What a visibility! I resurface for a moment and I signal my first impressions with gestures. I begin the descent while Alan Kovacevic takes some images with the video camera, before I disappear in the shaft. I anticipate the gas changes at -15m and -50m, so I am faster in the descent; with surprise I see my exploration reel shining on the bottom, I reach it and begin the descent on the gravel: the tunnel is about ten meters wide and at least six meters high; on the bottom there are some tires, various wreckage and I have been told there could also be some bombs. I continue to descend, I kick with my fins against a light current; the tube is slightly tightening and I don't need to tie off the line because it is very straight indeed and with such a visibility I remember the beautiful times of the exploration of the Gorgazzo. Along the route, always some tires and wreckage, that show in a sad way until which point the level of barbarism of some arrives! At about -95m, I note that in the distance the shaft closes. I go on, hoping for a continuaion but, alas, once reached -109m at 143m from the entrance, befor me I see one single small passage of triangular form that measures 80cm by 80cm; I lean out: it is only about one meter long and beyond the tunnel continues with generous dimensions. At this point the exploration is stopped, but next year, when I have tested my two closed circuits to use with sidemount technique for good, this narrow passage, obstructed by a substantial deposit of gravel and stones, won't stop to me from going on. During the ascent, I observe all the angles, but I don't see any prosecution; at -80m I switch off the lights and look up: it doesn't happen often in a cave to ascend from these depths, seeing the daylight. At -75m I meet a trout of at least three kilos, that stares at me immovably, I look at it too, then I lift the look upwards before continuing the ascent: how far the free air seems! the ellipse and the walls of the shaft give the feeling of sinking. I slowly ascend observing the erosion of the rock and sometimes, I cast a glance upwards to fix the images in my memory like a photo. At -30m I succeed in distinguishing the brand of my car, the base camp, the tanks on the shore, the church on the little hill. After 81 minutes I resurface. For safety reasons it is better to wait for next year to continue the exploration and for the moment I comfort myself drawing the topography.

The shower zone. Better heat the water with the sun than diving in the cold waters of the spring

Saturday 21 - Jean Jacques descends to see the passage on the bottom of the cave.

Simone after his deepest cave dive

Since the swelling and pain of his arm have disappeared completely for days now, Simone starts diving again and makes a tour to -60m. Marcello has the task to position the tanks that serve me for the decompression and then he satisfies his desire to look around a little bit. Resurfacing, Jean Jacques speaks to me of the possibility to make some rocks roll toward what seems to be the bottom of the cave, but I am a little perplex about it because, given the inclination of the shaft that descends from -73 to -109, shifting some rocks could resolve the obstruction of the small passage.

Check of the semiclosed circuit before the dive

Sunday 22 - Today it is not warm, and we can prepare without suffering. I go down to the bottom of the cave to pick up the data for the topography for the whole part explored. There are 143m of total lenght of which 80m in vertical; considering the fact that this last part I will pick up on the notes during the decompression, there are 63m remaining for the topography, all in a depht range between -109m and -73m. I quickly reach the bottom 5 minutes from my departure. I remove the elastics that hold the pencils in place on the slate onto which the necessary tools are mounted: a depht meter, a compass and sheets of special paper designed for underwater use. I begin drawing sketches: length of the line, direction on the compass, depth, width and height and a squirt with the salient details of the plant and the section of the tunnel. The ascent is very slow and the sketches take a certain time; fortunately the points to measure are not many because the tunnel over the entire length is almost vertical, from 180° to 200°; anyway I need 30 minutes to reach -73m. The decompression will give me the time to finish the topography with calm on the way to the surface. After 115 minutes I resurface satisfied for the work completed.

Jean Jacques descends to check a horizontal tube already explored by Croatian cave divers. It starts at -28m. He passes it for one hundred meters; after about one hour Marcello goes to snoop in the same tunnel. Simone instead decides to descend to the bottom of the shaft at -73m.

Jean Jacques helps me with the completion of the gearin up

Two steps and...

Entrance to paradise

Return to  lightings, guide reel and bailout tank

Breathing the unit before the rapid descent in the shaft

Monday 23 - We load the cars and begin the trip towards Racovica where another spring waits for us: Sinjac. The trip is relatively brief, less than 200km. We reach the " cave-house ", a structure that serves the speleologists as base camp, a very quiet place constituted from two enormous houses that allow to set up the equipments in the inside, while we sleep in tents. We also go to see the spring that is at a distance of about forty kilometers. We ascend to the highland where the lake, that I had dived last may to inspect the cave of Velika Pecina, is found. In this dry period the lake is completely dried and its waters, confined in the inside of the cave, have dispersed in the belly of the earth up to the point where they reach an impermeable zone, from where on they flow until they meet the surface in some other springs of the region.

Some kilometers further we reach the bottom of the valley where the waters of Sinjac gush out. Noticing that there is no sign of current, we hope that the passage through the restriction in the deep zone at -103m, is facilitated, even if the visibility, because of the standing water and the decomposition of the plants, is only about one meter.

Tuesday 24 - Simone is forced to return to Italy due to problems with his job, he has a certain regret, the rest of the group is organized for the test dive at Sinjac. Jean Jacques descends first with the intention to lay out line up to -70m, I limit myself to a little stroll with Alan who has a good time filming and Marcello hurries to get ready the tanks for the decompression. The parameters I verify are that the visibility is scarce up to a depht of 4-5m, then it stabilizes in the whole rest of the tunnel and one can see up to 5m, no more. The temperature of the water is 14°.

Wednesday 25 - A new attack of dysentery that had never really passed and the pain in the ear getting acute again, prevent me from diving and I postpone the exploration to the following day. I take advantage therefore to dedicate my time to the maintenance of the equipment. Once finished this activity, I visit Plitvička jezera, a place that with his picturesque little ponds and gorgeous water falls makes clear what water is capable to do, to create marvels of nature.

Thursday 26 - This time it is the weather conditions to make a dive impossible: a violent storm that discharges rain and continues for the whole day makes us desist. Jean Jacques and Marcello decide to depart definitely in direction of Italy, while I remain to recover the exploration reel and one oxygen tank remained in the spring. The time dedicated to the explorations in these regions is by now running out.

Friday 27 - I organize the dive with Alan: if the conditions of the spring are good I will push the exploration limit to the most possible level, in contrary case I will limit to recover the exploration reel at -72m, and the oxygen tank at -6m. Before beginning our work in the spring, we linger during a visit of the touristic cave of Baracevac. The fame of this cave has attracted 2000 visitors in a couple of months. We finally reach Sinjac at 14.00. The conditions of visibility at the first glance don't seem to be changed: the level of the water has risen for about ten centimeters and while I am observing it I reflect about my physical conditions which are rather not improved, I also suffer from a headache. Probably, at the end of my trip, I suffer a little both on the psychological and physical level. With this spirit, I prepare the two semi closed circuits with two 10l tanks of trimix and one 2lt tank with argon, I prepare the three bailout tanks of which one is a 7lt tank with a travel mix and two 5lt tanks containing hyperoxyc mixtures. The last accords with Alan are that he will follow me with its faithful video camera up to about -40m, and in a second take, he will meet and film me during decompression, one hour after my departure. I begin to get ready with little conviction, but as soon as I put my nose in the water, my mood changes completely: I become aggressive and all the afflictions seem to disappear. I cross the lake and reach the start of the guide line, I discharge the air from the dry suit and quickly I descend in the shaft. I should leave the EAN tank at -21m but I arrive a little distant and I am forced to leave it some meters deeper; at -30m. I change the gas in the circuit and once reached -36m I leave also the second decompression tank. For not wasting time to make washings of the scounter lung in descent, I have to anticipate the changes gas: the last change at -50m and I change to the bottom mix. Once reached -72m I leave the 7lt tank, I take the exploration reel and continue the descent following the old line laid out some years ago by French cave divers. The maximum visibility of 4m doesn't allow me to observe the whole tunnel that descends with an inclination of at least 30°; I perceive only that the height of the ceiling gets lower until it reaches about 1,5m; by now the sand on the bottom is inevitably touched by my fins, for which I assume that at the return I will have bad visibility. I am at -100m.: unlike my predecessors that stopped at -103m in a restriction, decide to cross the tunnel and go to the right side; I cross the slide of sand and with a lot of attention I cross another slide of clay; I go on for about fifteen meters and reach a point in which the tunnel returns to be of big dimensions. I continue to lay out line on the right side: the tunnel descends, I stop at the point where the oxygen analyser shows a PpO2 of 1,6, I tie off the line on a rock prominence: I am at -119m, at 203m from the entrance, the water is rather turbid, but I below me the bottom seems to continue in descent. 19 minutes have passed when I start the ascent: in some points I am forced to proceed slowly because of the reduced visibility. When Alan passes to meet me, I am already at -21m just in time to write the result reached on the slate, and to pass him the equipments which I won't need anymore to continue the decompression. I am aware that for the whole rest of the decompression phase I won't have other contacts with the humans on the surface. A little before reaching the surface I find a military rifle at -5m under the mud: in my mind the horrible images of a war fought in these places few years earlier pass. This war that has left deep signs in the population and in the ways of live of the people that live near the most stricken zones. After having extracted it from the mud, I realize that it is very antique and that it most probably dates back to the first world war; at the exit I deliver it to Alan who in turn will bring it to the museum of Racovica. The dive ends after 105 minutes. Feeling sorry I realize that it is the moment to return.

The calm after the storm is announced by two rainbows

The church that dominates the hill above the spring

The balance of the explorations is positive: if I consider the physical afflictions arrived unexpectedly, and not only, and how we have succeeded in limiting the consequences, the balance becomes even more positive. For the more the contacts made and consolidated in the two visited countries open us doors to a series of promising explorations both in the caves already visited by us in this first experience, as well as in a lot of others, at the moment known only by name and not yet directly visited. The impressions gained by me on this trip are very similar to those gained in other trips, nevertheless they enjoy to be unique, and so are the people met and their way of living.

 

A great thank you goes to all who have made this expedition possible:

Aquatica, Best Divers
Ennio Lazzarotto, Hrvoje Cvitanoviċ, Alan Kovacevic, Tihi Kovacevic, Jean Jacques Bolanz, Marcello Ferretto e Simone Piscitelli.

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