New Cave Systems Discovered in PuntaVenado
By Fred Devos
On April 12, 2000 Cave Exploration began at Punta Venado located 10km South of Playa del Carmen. True to it's name, many deer (venado) still thrive in this area along with their predatory larger felines.
Yair Azubel and myself were shown several, promising looking cenotes of which 3 had easy access (less than 300m from a road). Another 2 would require horses and/or trail cutting in order to move equipment in.
Turtle Dump Cenote
5/4/00
After 30 minutes of hammering at 16 ft. with a maximum penetration of 300ft,
line was reeled in and it was labeled a no-go. Five huge turtle skeletons were
found in the cavern zone and were most likely thrown in by a guilty conesoir
of days gone by.
Cow Dump Cenote
5/4/00
A short walk and déjà vu of the last dive resulted in another
cenote being checked off the list. 15 minutes at 15 ft amongst the scattered
bones of something bovine. Note: It's also important to know where caves do
not exist!
Sistema Venado
12/4/00
A beautiful, virgin cenote where it is a rumored, pumas come to drink. It was
a relief to find some going passage after a 1 km hike through the jungle and
two minutes into the dive showed a depth of 100ft! - A very unique discovery
as we were only 800m from the sea. Charcoal littered the floor suggesting evidence
of a forest fire. Large passage headed NE with leads to check out later. Relaxed
during 45 minutes deco before hauling any equipment back.
Sistema Carrillo
5/6/00
Christophe Le Maillot and myself accomplished the hard work of hammering small leads from
Cenote Chan Pek before discovering going passage headed N. From there, shallow,
parallel phreatic tubes split to the NE and SW with similarities compared to
Sistema Abejas near Tulum. On this first day, 2,500 ft of passage was discovered
along with Cenote Rojo Ojo, and Cenote Pajaro. Sistema Carillo was named in
honor of the landowner.
12/6/00
Sistema Carrillo came to a halt upstream at a major breakdown nearing Cenote
Turtle Dump. Passage continued downstream along with the discovery of Cenote
Chupa Hoop. Total length now exceeds 4,500 ft with nearly enough accessible
passage to lead back mount cave divers.
Future dives in this area will concentrate on determining the scope of these two new cave systems and in producing maps.
