Saturday, November 2, 2024

Spare a thought for national parks staff, who have to scrub and vacuum caves every winter

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In short:

Each winter, a team of Tasmania Parks and Wildlife staff take on the task of cleaning the state’s show caves.

The crew removes clothing fibres, microplastics, and dirt and spores brought in on visitors’ shoes.

What’s next?

The cleaning occurs annually, and it takes about a week to clean King Solomons Cave and about two weeks for the larger Marakoopa Cave.

Rebecca Kearns knows what it takes to wrestle a vacuum cleaner through a narrow cave.

“It’s super awkward. It takes lots of coordination, flexibility and friends,” she said.

Each winter, she and about 20 other cave-specialised Tasmania Parks and Wildlife staff take on the task of cleaning the state’s showcase caves, which include King Solomons and Marakoopa caves in the north, and the Hastings caves in the south.

Rebecca Kearns says she’s still struck by the beauty of the caves, with it satisfying to see the difference after a finished clean.(ABC News: Morgan Timms)

Despite the work being “exhausting” and in many ways mundane, Ms Kearns says she and her colleagues enjoy it as a break from cave guiding.

“It’s nice to spend time in the cave, where you can just be in your own head, even if you’re in your own head with a scrubbing brush,” she said.

A woman wearing ear muffs vacuums the path alongside massive limestone and crystalline rock formations inside a cave.

Rebecca Kearns takes the time to vacuum each stair inside King Solomons Cave during its annual clean.(ABC News: Morgan Timms)

And working in the spectacular surroundings of the caves never got old, Ms Kearns admits.

“I feel like I’m lucky, like the cleaner in the Sistine Chapel must be lucky,” she says.

“Such a beautiful space to do a mundane household chore.”

Why clean a cave?

Ms Kearns, who manages King Solomons and Marakoopa caves, said Tasmania’s public access caves require cleaning annually as part of best practice in cave management.

Caves are natural environments, so all the living and non-living things that are naturally part of them should be preserved and protected as far as possible, she explained.

A woman in a fluro orange jacket and headlamp sweeps the path beneath vast and intricate limestone formations inside a cave.

Cave guide Shannon McMonagle cleans “the temple” section of King Solomons Cave during the annual clean.(ABC News: Morgan Timms)

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