To cut a long story short, misplaced my new TK75, £180 worth of torch + battery, spent the best part of 2 hours finding it and had to set off before it got too late to find food, the only unsuccessfulĪnd to top it all off, I ended up driving back in my undercrackers, without any shoes, which included an awkward stop at a tiny local petrol station, for local people.
Didn't get any pictures of the large cavern although there is some SJcam footage once I get round to sorting it all. There was a lot of undergrowth blocking the view down, including foot-deep solid looking moss and we decided against this also. Credit to revility for the meshes and textures I used (except for the ones that are versions of the original textures) from the Cliffside Outdoor Tileset resource. Surprisingly, the water within the cave is well lit and does NOT require a SCUBA Mask. A vast portion of the cave is underwater. The cave contains the Artifact of the Brute, needed to summon the Megapithecus. All the props and bridges blend in perfectly with the environment. The Caverns of Lost Faith (more commonly referred to as Brute Cave) is an underwater Cave on the west coast of The Island map.
Here I found a large cavern with an incredibly steep, slippy slope down. Caverns: Lost Sky is a single player action-adventure RPG set in a fully destructible, voxelized subterranean realm. Forest Caverns This mod makes the caverns into a cool underground forest. We decided against it, and walked round the corner. I got in to waist depth, however the mud was incredibly sticky and was getting deeper and deeper. The first one was a dead end, and the second one was waist deep, and extremely silted. We walked up near the waterfall, past the old stone building and found 2 adits. I'm not sure what we found, looking for the cavern. We snapped a few pics and walked back to check out the other side of the valley, the 'Cavern of Lost Souls'. Further into the quarry we found a small portal which led one way to rockfall, the other way led to another portal through knee deep water. The borehole appeared to carry on in another part of the cliff, suggesting that there had been some serious rock fall, or one hell of an experimental machine. Not much to see (that we found) but it was interesting. The scramble up the loose slate was interesting, but we got in. We took the path down, and suddenly the large boreholes creep into view. After walking a tidy road with an interesting slate gutter, for what seemed like an age, we came across a cliff overlooking a slate quarry.