The moment caver was rescued after 54 hours trapped underground injured

The man is doing 'remarkably well' after being trapped underground for nearly two days

by · Wales Online

There were claps and cheers as an injured caver was rescued after a 54-hour ordeal underground.

The man in his 40s was brought out of Ogof Ffynnon Ddu in the Brecon Beacons at around 7.45pm on Monday after nearly two days and is now recovering in hospital.

He was helped into a cave rescue Land Rover ready to be transported down to a waiting ambulance.

Around 70 volunteers made their way down off the mountain to the rescue centre before watching as the man, who is in his 40s, was driven away to Morriston Hospital in Swansea.

The 4x4 ambulance carrying the man who fell while caving(Image: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans Agency)
(Image: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans Agency)

Gary Evans, the emergency services liaison officer, told reporters: "The casualty is doing remarkably well, if you consider how long he's been in the cave, how long he's been in a stretcher- he's doing very well indeed.

"He's being assessed at the moment and we'll know more in a short while."

Asked how he felt about the success of the operation, Mr Evans added: "We're absolutely delighted, we're delighted because it was a difficult rescue and we're delighted because the casualty has done really well considering what's happened."

Gary Mitchell, South and Mid Wales Cave Rescue Team's surface controller, said: "To get that news that he's finally out, he's on the surface and being well looked after is clearly ecstatic for all of us."

Described as an experienced caver, the man had been trapped since Saturday at around 1pm after suffering a fall.

Members of a rescue team carrying an injured caver on a stretcher through a cave(Image: PA)
The injured man was rescued from the cave after spending more than two days trapped inside(Image: PA)
(Image: MSWCRT/WALES NEWS SERVICE)

His injuries are said to be non-life threatening, but are believed to include a broken jaw, leg, and spinal injuries.

More than 240 people have been involved in the the operation, and at least eight cave rescue teams from around the UK.

Teams of rescuers had been working in shifts to bring him to safety but had been unable to airlift him to hospital by helicopter because of the weather.

Peter Francis, a SMWCRT spokesperson, said the rescue is the longest in South Wales caving history.

The 74-year-old said: "This is the longest rescue we've ever done but we're very pleased with the progress being made.

"The caver was very unlucky here. He's an experienced caver, a fit caver. And it was a matter of putting his foot in the wrong place.

"He wasn't in a dangerous part of the cave, it's just something moved from under him."

Members of the rescue team head off the hil(Image: Robert Melen)

Paul Taylor, spokesman for South and Mid Wales Cave Rescue Team, said the man had gone into the Cwmdoor entrance of the caves before he fell.

The caves located near to Penwyllt are 300 metres deep, making them the deepest in the UK.

Discovered in 1947, they are also the third longest cave in the UK stretching more than 30 miles.

The caving club's website describes Ogof Ffynnon Ddu. It says: "The through trip from the top to the bottom entrance remains a classic in the UK, and its approx 61km [31 miles] of passages provide everything from huge chambers, beautiful formations, to yawning chasms and thundering river passages," it said.

"The routes through the cave are too numerous to mention."

It adds: "Be aware that the mainstream and some other parts of the cave are prone to flooding, and in any event a journey down the mainstream is long and cold and wet, so go prepared."

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