The Argentine Grade

… or more photos of holes.

Last week I went exploring with my friends Rob and Sherrie.  We hiked up the old grade of the Argentine Railroad from near Silver Plume up to Pavilion Point, the site of an old hotel that no longer exists.

Mining tracks coming out of collapsed tunnel entrance.

Oh look! A hole!

Compared to the bright sunlight, the flashlight barely accomplishes anything.

But I crawled down in there to shoot a photo.

The tracks we saw in the first photo are visible under the water.  The water is being dammed up by all of the debris at the tunnel entrance.  I would love to drain that water and go in a little further. The ceiling of the tunnel looks very stable and has no signs of caving in.  The tunnel appears to stop about 50 feet in.  As you can see by the ripples in the water, there was air moving through the tunnel.  It either goes around the corner, or it goes up.  There could also be a flooded shaft that goes down.

Another entrance further up the trail. This too appears to curve to the right.

We crawled into another entrance near Pavilion point. There was a shaft that went straight down. This is looking straight down that shaft. There is a remnant of a ladder on the right. There are some timbers on the left, which might be another tunnel intersecting with the shaft. The shaft appears to angle eastward (upward in the photo), which might connect it with the Wide West Mine.

An ore chute coming down the mountain side.

I liked the shadow of the fir on the aspen trunk.

A small portion of the nearby cemetery.

8 thoughts on “The Argentine Grade

  1. yay holes! awesome pics…since i didn’t go down them too…your flash is illuminating in more ways than one.

      • that old song ‘behind the green door’ is playing in my head now. 😉

        that’s the one just before pavilion point, isn’t it?

        again, your camera/flash reveals more than i could ever hope to see or have seen before. i don’t need flashlights and headlamps, i need a camera with a flash! :-O

  2. Great photographs! I love tunnels and caves. We used to call it ‘potholing’. My brother met his wife down one of them!

    • I wish I knew more about how to evaluate the risks with exploring these holes. The state tells everyone not to go into these holes due to dangerous gases, collapsing tunnels, rotting support timbers, etc. But it can’t apply to all of them.

      • I wonder if there are any ‘caving’ groups in your area, they would most likely know the good tunnels and those to avoid.

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