Unearthing Slovenia’s underground labyrinths

Unearthing Slovenia’s underground labyrinths

The caves of Ljubljana have been a major tourist attraction for centuries, yet even more are being discovered today.

Slovenia is rich in caves, which are a major draw for tourists. (AFP pic)

LJUBLJANA (Slovenia): The grass flickered gently above a crack in the limestone and Ludvik Husu instinctively knew he had found what he was searching for – a new cave in Slovenia’s dramatic Karst region.

The seasoned cave enthusiast, with more than 50 years’ experience, said “the conditions were perfect; all signs pointed to something beneath” as he felt the air current push up from below.

The 63-year-old had come across a new, 60m-deep limestone cave, a discovery that made the headlines in a country that already prides itself on its 14,000 underground grottoes.

The tiny Alpine nation is unusually rich in caves, a major tourist attraction. One even houses an entire castle and another was used by the European Space Agency to help train astronauts.

Perhaps best known is the Postojna cave system, the longest in Europe, unearthed by another amateur enthusiast two centuries ago.

When local lamplighter Luka Cec decided to explore a hidden crack while scouting out the Postojna area for a visit by Austrian Emperor Franz, he is reputed to have said he had stumbled on “a new world – a paradise!”

The Postojna system extends for 24km and has offered up valuable finds for biologists. Stanislav Glazar, a Postojna cave guide, said more than 150 species have been discovered in the system.

Among them is the “Proteus anguinus” or “little dragon”, an ancient aquatic salamander that can live up to 100 years and was once considered living proof that dragons had existed.

A cave-dwelling beetle – the slender neck beetle or “Leptodirus hochenwartii” – was also found here, reputedly by Cec.

Ludvik Husu, 63, discovered the new, 60m-deep limestone grotto in a country already famous for its caves. (AFP pic)

Glazar said Postojna is one of the richest caves in the world “in limestone formations, with a dense concentration of stalactites, columns, pillars”.

The cave, situated 50km south of the capital Ljubljana, was also home to the world’s first cave tourist train, which began transporting visitors in 1872.

‘No fear!’

Elsewhere in the Karst region, the cave systems are of historical, cultural and even extraterrestrial interest. The dramatic, medieval Predjama castle was built in a cave mouth to make access difficult and to provide an escape route through a shaft in the rock face.

The Vilenica cave, which Slovenes have been exploring since 1633, is known for the annual eponymous literary prize awarded in its interior.

And the Unesco-listed Skocjan system was where the European Space Agency sent some astronauts to prepare for life in space.

“Astronauts know that the Karst world is exceptional, in a similar way to the environment in space – you don’t know what to expect at your next step,” said Skocjan caves supervisor Tomaz Zorman.

But for Husu, it’s the hunt that proves most rewarding. The “ideal time for cave searching is the winter” when the air above ground is cooler than that in the caves.

Once he knows there is something beneath, he digs around the crack to widen it and alerts fellow cavers to help gain access. He then uses ropes and a lamp to descend into vertical entrances known as “chimneys”.

But doesn’t he feel any trepidation at entering such unexplored depths? “You enter a cave out of curiosity, there is no fear!” he said. “Those who feel fear should stay home.”

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