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Rowten Pot is one of several entrances into the long cave system that drains
Kingsdale Kingsdale is a valley on the western edge of the Yorkshire Dales National Park in northern England. The name Kingsdale derives from a combination of Old Norse and Old English (''Kyen'' and ''Dael'') which means ''The valley where the cows were ...
in
North Yorkshire North Yorkshire is the largest ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county (lieutenancy area) in England, covering an area of . Around 40% of the county is covered by National parks of the United Kingdom, national parks, including most of ...
,
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
. Its entrance is a shaft some long, wide, and at the southern end deep.


Description

A stream enters from just below the surface at the northern end. The cave is largely vertical, but at the bottom the stream flows through a short section of passage into the underground West Kingsdale river. This connects downstream with the ''Kingsdale Master Cave'' through three short sumps. Upstream, longer sumps may be followed up the valley for over , passing below the final pitch of Aquamole Pot. The cave is usually descended using single rope techniques, and is popular with cavers, being spacious and offering a variety of aerial routes. The three short sumps which connect to the Kingsdale Master Cave can be free-dived. The water which descends Rowten Pot sinks to the west of the pot on the other side of Turbary Road, into a shallow horizontal cave system, known as ''Rowten Caves''. This can be followed past a junction where Jingling Cave enters, through to where it emerges in Rowten Pot a few metres below the moor. Other nearby caves which also connect to the West Kingsdale System include
Swinsto Cave Swinsto Cave is a limestone cave in West Kingsdale, North Yorkshire, England. It leads into Kingsdale Master Cave and it is popular with cavers as it is possible to descend by abseiling down the pitches, retrieving the rope each time, and exiti ...
, Simpson Pot, Aquamole Pot and Valley Entrance.


History

The first description of Rowten Pot appeared in verse in Thomas Dixon's ''A Description of the Environs of Ingleborough'' of 1781:
The Routing-Chasm amazing to behold,
With dreadful yawn intimidates the bold:
The depth unknown, vast, dismal, dark and wide,
With rugged pointed rocks on every side;
A rapid stream falls in with hideous roar,
Growls thro the mountain to some distant shore:
Dismay arrests the man that ventures near,
His face turns pale, his courage yields to fear.
In a guide book published in 1865, there is an account of a Mr. Hunter claiming to have made a complete descent, but the account is exaggerated and bears little resemblance to reality. It is likely, however, that the
gully A gully is a landform created by running water, mass movement, or commonly a combination of both eroding sharply into soil or other relatively erodible material, typically on a hillside or in river floodplains or terraces. Gullies resemble lar ...
had been descended to the start of the vertical descents. A considered description appears in Balderstone's 1890 ''Ingleton, Bygone and Present'', where it was variously given the names of Rowantree Gulf, Rowting Hole, and Rowton Holes. Balderstone also claims to have explored down the gully to a depth of . It was first fully descended to the sump by a
Yorkshire Ramblers' Club The Yorkshire Ramblers' Club (YRC) is the second-oldest mountaineering club in England, the oldest being the Alpine Club. Founded in 1892, the YRC is still a highly active club mountaineering and caving in the UK and all over the world. Histor ...
party in June 1897. It was not linked with Kingsdale Master Cave through the downstream sump, however, until July 1966, shortly after the discovery of the latter. In 1939 the second recorded Yorkshire Dales caving fatality occurred in Rowten Pot. John Lambert initially fell a few feet and was made comfortable on a ledge by his companions. Water levels then rose and he either fell or was washed off down a drop and died. Such was the effort required to rescue Lambert's companions, who were trapped by water in the shaft, that the
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broadcast an appeal for any available potholers to help. The first fatality for the Cave Rescue Organisation on a rescue occurred here in 1986, when Dave Anderson slipped from a traverse into a gully near the bottom of the last pitch when searching for two missing cavers, and drowned under the force of the water. An accident in 1989 involving a threaded and worn out
anchor An anchor is a device, normally made of metal , used to secure a vessel to the bed of a body of water to prevent the craft from drifting due to wind or current. The word derives from Latin ''ancora'', which itself comes from the Greek ἄγ ...
on the entrance shaft which resulted in a broken back, hastened the development and installation of permanent anchors in popular UK caves.


References

{{Reflist


External links


Online surveys of Rowten PotRigging guide for Rowten Pot
Caves of North Yorkshire Limestone caves