Extreme Athlete Spends 500 Days Alone in Cave in Spain, Emerges Into Daylight: ‘Already? Surely Not’

Extreme Athlete Spends 500 Days Alone in Cave in Spain, Emerges Into Daylight: ‘Already? Surely Not’
Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS
Reuters
Updated:
0:00

A 50-year-old Spanish extreme athlete emerged on April 14, from a 500-day challenge living 230 feet (70 meters) deep in a cave outside Granada with minimal contact with the outside.

Wearing dark glasses and smiling as she adjusted to the light of spring in southern Spain, elite mountaineer Beatriz Flamini told reporters that time had flown by and she did not want to come out.

“When they came in to get me, I was asleep. I thought something had happened. I said: ‘Already? Surely not.’ I hadn’t finished my book,” she said.

Beatriz Flamini entered a cave in southern Spain in 2021 and spent 500 days in isolation before surfacing in March. (Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS)
Beatriz Flamini entered a cave in southern Spain in 2021 and spent 500 days in isolation before surfacing in March. Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS

Flamini’s support team said she broke a world record for the longest time spent in a cave in an experiment monitored by scientists studying the human mind and circadian rhythms.

She was 48 when she went into the cave, celebrating two birthdays alone underground.

Flamini began her challenge on Nov. 20, 2021—before the outbreak of the Ukraine war, the end of Spain’s COVID mask requirement, and the death of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

Beatriz Flamini, a Spanish mountaineer, was isolated for 500 days in a cave in Motril, Spain. (Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS)
Beatriz Flamini, a Spanish mountaineer, was isolated for 500 days in a cave in Motril, Spain. Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS

She did come out for eight days, her team disclosed, but stayed isolated in a tent waiting for repairs to a router used to send audio and video to tell her team how she was doing.

On Friday, she was greeted by a phalanx of cameras and her support team, who encircled her in a hug.

Asked if she ever thought about pressing her panic button or leaving the cave, she replied: “Never. In fact, I didn’t want to come out.”

Knitting and Reading

Flamini spent her time underground doing exercises, painting and drawing, and knitting woolly hats. She took two GoPro cameras to document her time and got through 60 books and 1,000 liters of water, according to her support team.
Beatriz Flamini, a Spanish mountaineer, was isolated for 500 days in a cave in Motril, Spain. (Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS)
Beatriz Flamini, a Spanish mountaineer, was isolated for 500 days in a cave in Motril, Spain. Dokumalia Producciones/Handout via REUTERS

She said she began her challenge by trying to keep track of time. “On day 65 I stopped counting and lost perception of time,” she said.

There were hard moments—such as when the cave was invaded by flies—and some “beautiful ones,” she said. “If this is your dream, and you’re realizing it, why are you going to cry?”

She said she had focused on retaining “coherence,” eating well, and relishing the silence. She looked forward to treats such as avocados, fresh eggs, and clean t-shirts that her support team sent down before, “like gods,” also removing her waste.

“I didn’t talk to myself out loud, but I had internal conversations and got on very well with myself,” she said.

Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini reacts as she leaves a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. (JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images)
Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini reacts as she leaves a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images
Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini leaves a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. (JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images)
Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini leaves a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images

“You have to remain conscious of your feelings. If you’re afraid, that’s something natural but never let panic in or you get paralyzed.”

She said her team had been told to contact her under no circumstances, even about a family death. “If it’s no communication, it’s no communication regardless of the circumstances,” she said. “The people who know me knew and respected that.”

Flamini was monitored by a group of psychologists, researchers, cave specialists, and physical trainers looking for insight into how social isolation and disorientation can affect time, brain patterns, and sleep.

Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini reacts upon getting out of a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. (JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images)
Spanish sportswoman Beatriz Flamini reacts upon getting out of a cave in Los Gauchos, near Motril on April 14, 2023, after spending 500 days inside. JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images

She was looking forward to a shower and sharing a plate of fried eggs and chips with friends. She said she would put herself in the hands of doctors to study the impact on her body and mind before planning new mountaineering and caving projects.

The Guinness Book of Records website awards the “longest time survived trapped underground” to 33 Chilean and Bolivian miners who spent 69 days at 2,257 feet (688 meters), trapped in 2010.

A spokesperson for Guinness was not able to immediately confirm whether there was a separate record for voluntary time living in a cave and whether Flamini had broken it.

(Video Credit: Reuters)
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