steepholm: (Default)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2024-09-18 07:33 am
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My Experiences Down the Mine

For years, I've been meaning to go Pywll Mawr, aka the Big Pit - a coal-mine-turned-heritage centre, not far from Pontypool. I see the sign for it every time I drive to work in Cardiff, and my daughter even went on a school trip about 13 years ago, but I haven't had the motivation to follow in her footsteps until Monday, when I took Yuko and Moe. The main spur was Moe's wish to soak in the background to the Ghibli film, Laputa: Castle in the Sky, which was partly based on Miyazaki's visit to the South Welsh coalfields in 1984, at the time of the miners' strike - which inspired the feisty spirit of the miners in his film, but also its landscape.

Anyway, partly due to the weather, but mostly the place itself, we had a great time. We started off with a visit to the nearby Blaenavon Ironworks, or what's left of them, with their furnaces, workers' cottages, balance tower and the rest.

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The coal mine did not allow cameras - or indeed anything with a battery - underground. This is because it's still legally classed as a working mine, even though it's 44 years since any methane-releasing mining went on down there. But believe me when I tell you that it was quite an experience, going down long tunnels that wholly justified the necessity of helmets in terms of their height. I had a strange, Baudrillardesque sense that this must be a real mine because it so strongly resembled all the fake mines I've seen in various films and TV programmes over the years - my only point of reference.

Certainly, the landscape round about did seem quite Laputa-esque (with just a hint of Ivor the Engine). And this point-by-point comparison backs up that impression.

20240916_125343WhatsApp Image 2024-09-16 at 17.47.58WhatsApp Image 2024-09-16 at 17.47.32
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2024-09-18 07:31 am (UTC)(link)
Very cool. Anyone with an interest in that aspect of history should go down a mine, just to see what it's like.

I've been down a coal mine in South Wales, many years ago now, but I guess it wasn't this one, because we went down in a lift.
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2024-09-18 12:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess it was that one, then. Your description, omitting mention of the cage lift and describing "long tunnels" (I don't recall the tunnels as particularly long, but I may be misremembering or just have a different definition of "long") led me to think this mine had a totally different entrance.

I've found it can be extraordinarily difficult to describe things the reader isn't familiar with. B. was completely puzzled when I described rushing around across campus for sessions in the CS Lewis conference, because I hadn't made it clear to her how the conference was organized. I tried to be clearer in my post, but have no idea if I succeeded.
heleninwales: (Default)

[personal profile] heleninwales 2024-09-18 10:30 am (UTC)(link)
The Big Pit has been open to the public for many years now. You do go down in a cage and as far as I know it's the only one you can visit and go underground.
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[personal profile] oursin 2024-09-18 02:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think I've ever visited a coalmine (there were still working ones in Kent when I was a littl'un but we did not I think ever have an educational school trip to one), but I have been to 2 salt mines!

The one in Cheshire which is still in operation providing salt for roads (its salt being pretty low-grade stuff) and being an archive store (we had a work jaunt there in that capacity), and the Wieliczka Salt Mine in Poland which is a tourist attraction and UNESCO World Heritage Site.
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[personal profile] oursin 2024-09-18 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Huge, though nothing compared to the Polish one.