TOURIST CAVES - WHO SHOULD ADMINISTER THEM? 
 

D.R. WILLIAMS



Delegates may  recall that  at  the  last  conference  in Waitomo I  stated  in  my  paper  on  “Planning  for  the Development of  a Tourist  Cave” that  the responsibility for developing a tourist cave should always rest with the State, that the lifetime of a cave was infinitely greater than that  of any  one generation  and that  a cave  once modified can  never be  returned to  its natural state. I still hold  the premise  that tourist caves like National Parks and  Scenic Reserves should have some kind of state control especially in their development phase, but do the assumptions we make about State involvement always apply?

Can we  assume that  the state  is the best operator of a tourist cave. Can we assume that public scrutiny of state enterprise always  functions for  the public good and can we assume  that it  will not allow commercial interest to over-rule conservation?

A  look   at  the  administration  of  tourist  caves  in Australia and  New Zealand  reveals the  involvement of a large number  of state  agencies and a great diversity of management   styles,    departmental   philosophies   and attitudes and  a varying  degree of  involvement  in  the planning, decision  making and  day to day running of the cave itself.  This diversity of involvement I expect will be seen  here at  this conference  and this may be a good opportunity to  categorise the  various types  of tourist cave administration systems that exist today.

Three broad categories can be defined.

1.  State owned, State operated by

    a)   a land management body
    b)   a government tourist body
    c)   a local body.

2.  State owned, privately operated.

3.  Privately owned, privately operated.

By far  the great  majority of  the seventy or so tourist caves in  Australasia fall  into the  category  of  state owned,  state   operated,  again   most  of   those   are administered by a land management body. In Australia this can be,  for example,  the Department  of Crown Lands and Survey   as at  Buchan Caves  in Victoria;  the  National Parks and Wildlife Services as in Yarrangobilly Caves New South Wales;  the  Forestry  Commission  as  in  Princess Margaret Rose  Cave  in  Victoria.  In  New  Zealand  the equivalent land management authority is the Department of Conservation who  administer, for  example, Metro Cave in Westland.

The long  established tourist  caves that  fall into this category  are  amongst  the  most  successfully  managed. Conservation,  interpretation   and  education  are  high priorities and  if  sometimes  financial  efficiency  and profit motives  are not the same as would be found in the private sector departmental policies often allow carrying to occur,  usually to the benefit of the visiting public.

In the past in some caves there has been problems turning rangers into cave guides, rangers sometimes are reluctant to get  too close  to tourists on an every hour every day basis.   These attitudes however are fast disappearing on both sides of the Tasman as the “user pays principle” and the growing  awareness of tourism as an economic force in state owned  land become  part of  policy making  at  the state and national government level.

Australasia’s two  biggest tourist  cave operations  fall into the  category “State  owned caves  administered by a government tourist  body”. Jenolan Caves are administered by the  New South Wales Department of Tourism and Waitomo Caves are  administered by  the Tourist Hotel Corporation of New  Zealand. It  is no  accident that  the  two  most visited  and   profitable  tourist  cave  operations  are administered by  government tourist  agencies with a long established obligation for revenue generation and with an operating   philosophy   vastly   different   from   land management departments.  In their long history of service these caves  have been  developed without  good long term planning and  very little effective public scrutiny. Many mistakes have  been made  and the question has been asked - is  a profit  oriented Government tourist body the most suitable agency  to  administer  our  most  delicate  and fragile natural wonders?

On the  positive side  because of  their  sheer  size  of operation and profitability both Waitomo and Jenolan have broken new  ground in cave management techniques and cave research and  have been keen to share ideas and knowledge with  others.   Guiding  and   interpretation  are   well developed and  both  the  public  and  the  administering bodies are well serviced by these caves.

The remaining  categories tend  to include  those tourist cave operations  at the  lower end  of the visitor number scale. Because  of the  low number of visitors investment in development  and management is often limited.  Some of the caves  are open  for short  periods during  the year, others are  struggling to stay open and many have already been abandoned.  Often the  administering body  or owners are  reluctant   or  unable  to  take  advantage  of  the considerable expertise  in cave  management now available in Australasia. There are many notable exceptions to this generalisation  and  some  fine  examples  of  successful well-managed  small   tourist  cave  operations  both  in Australia and New Zealand are evident.

Examples of state owned, local body administered caves in Australia  are   Yallingup  Caves   administered  by  the Busselton Tourist  Bureau and  in New  Zealand,  Motupipi Council  Cave  administered  by  the  Golden  Bay  County Council.

Examples of state owned, privately operated tourist caves in Australia  are Murrindal  Caves  administered  by  the Victorian  Department  of  Crown  Lands  and  Survey  but operated privately  under permit  and in  New Zealand  Te Ana-au Caves  in  Fiordland  National  Park  operated  by Fiordland Trave

Private enterprise operating adventure services such  as white  water  rafting  and  fishing  or hunting safaris  is growing fast in New Zealand and there is indeed the potential for adventure caving to grow. The combination  of   a  private  concession  and  restraints imposed by  a land  management authority  could be one of the more successful ways of administering and operating a conventional tourist cave.

What are the functions of a tourist cave, what ethics and principals are  involved and  what are the obligations of
the tourist cave operator?

The Conservation Ethic

Many  of   our   tourist   caves   were   developed   and commercialised to  provide some kind of protection to the cave. Tourist  cave operators must look after their caves or their  appeal will  be lost and visitors will not come but cave  conservation is  much  deeper  than  that.  All aspects of  the cave environment need protecting not just those that  appeal to  the visual  senses, this  includes cave atmosphere,  cave life  form (apparent  or not)  and cave water  quality.  Caves  also  need  protection  from unsympathetic development,  too many people, souveniring, vandalism,  bad   guiding  and  misleading  or  incorrect interpretation.

The Obligation to the Visiting Public

A tourist cave provides visitors with a safe and exciting‘cave experience’, but as well as being stimulated by the
visual experience  visitors  expect  to  learn  something about what  they are  looking at.  The experience must be safe yet  awe-inspiring,  entertaining  yet  informative. Like the cave itself the cave experience needs protection from  too  many  people.  Cave  visitors  expect  a  high standard  of   guiding  and   public   facilities,   good availability of  tour times  and good  value for money. A successful cave  experience reinforces  the  conservation ethic.

The Commercial Function

Tourist caves  should be  profitable to  economically and environmentally justify  the alteration to them caused by development. If  the tourist  cave  is  not  commercially viable there  is a risk that it will be abandoned, but it
can also  be wrong  to extract  too much revenue from the cave, overcrowding  can not  only  destroy  the  visitors
experience but  pose a  very  real  threat  to  the  cave itself. Private enterprise operating adventure services such  as white  water  rafting  and  fishing  or hunting safaris  is growing fast in New Zealand and there is indeed the potential for adventure caving to grow. The combination  of   a  private  concession  and  restraints imposed by  a land  management authority  could be one of the more successful ways of administering and operating a conventional tourist cave.

What are the functions of a tourist cave, what ethics and principals are  involved and  what are the obligations of
the tourist cave operator?

The Conservation Ethic

Many  of   our   tourist   caves   were   developed   and commercialised to  provide some kind of protection to the cave. Tourist  cave operators must look after their caves or their  appeal will  be lost and visitors will not come but cave  conservation is  much  deeper  than  that.  All aspects of  the cave environment need protecting not just those that  appeal to  the visual  senses, this  includes cave atmosphere,  cave life  form (apparent  or not)  and cave water  quality.  Caves  also  need  protection  from unsympathetic development,  too many people, souveniring, vandalism,  bad   guiding  and  misleading  or  incorrect interpretation.

The Obligation to the Visiting Public

A tourist cave provides visitors with a safe and exciting ‘cave experience’, but as well as being stimulated by the
visual experience  visitors  expect  to  learn  something about what  they are  looking at.  The experience must be safe yet  awe-inspiring,  entertaining  yet  informative. Like the cave itself the cave experience needs protection from  too  many  people.  Cave  visitors  expect  a  high standard  of   guiding  and   public   facilities,   good availability of  tour times  and good  value for money. A successful cave  experience reinforces  the  conservation
ethic.

The Commercial Function

Tourist caves  should be  profitable to  economically and environmentally justify  the alteration to them caused by
development. If  the tourist  cave  is  not  commercially viable there  is a risk that it will be abandoned, but it can also  be wrong  to extract  too much revenue from the cave, overcrowding  can not  only  destroy  the  visitors
experience but  pose a  very  real  threat  to  the  cave itself. 

Contents