THE MITES GO UP AND THE TITES COME DOWN
All because of some bats... the caverns were discovered by a curious 15 year old boy, named Jim White in the late 1800s. In the summer hundreds of thousands of Mexican bats call the caverns home. They come to have their babies. Each summer evening the adults stream out of the natural opening to feed on insects. It's like a big black cloud, which caught the attention of the boy. He thought it was a fire, and came over to investigate. Of course we didn't get to see the bats, they spend the winter down in Mexico. It's quite a sight, they say. That will have to wait for another day!! Scratch one off the bucket list, add a new one to the list!! : )

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| Draperies |
We traveled down 750 feet in an elevator. Thank goodness. Then went on an addition guided tour that went nearly 100 additional feet down. It was amazing, how huge some of the areas were inside. When the stalactites and stalagmites meet it forms a column. Draperies were hung where water ran down a slanted ceiling. Popcorn formed when water evaporated and left behind calcite.
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| Columns |
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| Popcorn |
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| Soda straws |
The park ranger with light and without light

The caverns are pretty well dead. Meaning the formations have stopped growing. There was only one active formation. But for the most part the cave is very dry, although there are some small pools of water. We only encountered a few drips!! The main tour around the big room is about 1 mile, but then we took an additional tour with a park guide to the kings palace and queens chamber which was another mile. The temperature stays an even 56 degrees year around. At one point the guide turned off all the lights. You could not see the hand in front of your face. I can't imagine Jim White as a young boy exploring the cave by himself with a coffee pot with oil and a rope for the wick to provide light. He was very disappointed when the cave was wired with electricity. He thought it was much more beautiful without the lighting. He spent most of his life exploring the cave and working to preserve it. The guide told us about the few living organisms in the cave. Most are very tiny and a person just walking thru would never see any.

This is the one active formation. I'm not sure, but I think this is the one they call the Christmas tree. It looked like one to me. It kinda glowed in the light because it was wet. Very beautiful.
One little story that the ranger told us about some living creatures in the caverns just reaffirms to me that this world had to be created by a Supreme Being! Some of the pools have little almost microscopic worms. They lay their eggs on the sides of the pools. Now when the cricket comes to drink, it ingests some of those larva. The cricket is a fine host for the worm, it lives and grows dining on the organs of the cricket. When it is ready to "hatch" it produces a chemical that goes to the brain of the cricket and makes him thirsty. So of course the cricket goes back to the pool and deposits the worm in the water where he can flourish to start the cycle over again. There is a God and He is in charge!! Thank goodness!!