Zipline Tres Pueblos Sinkhole
Zipline inside the Camuy River Cave Park. Zipline Puerto Rico.
Tres Pueblos, Camuy Zipline
Puerto Rico
Sumidero Tres Pueblos, Camuy, Hatillo y Lares.
Sumidero Tres Pueblos
Sobrevolando el sumidero 3 Pueblos, Hatillo - Camuy - Lares. Este sumidero forma parte del complejo de cavernas del río Camuy. Gracias a Martín Hernández y la administración del Parque de las Cavernas del Río Camuy, el Sr. Carlos Morales por habernos permitido lograr este video.
Parque De Las Cavernas, Camuy-Hatillo-Lares, Puerto Rico, North America
The Camuy River Cave Park is a cave system in Puerto Rico. It is located between the municipalities of Camuy, Hatillo and Lares in northwestern Puerto Rico, but the main entrance to the park is located in Quebrada, Camuy. The caverns are part of a large network of natural limestone caves and underground waterways carved out by the third-largest underground river in the world, the Río Camuy (Camuy River). The cave system was discovered in 1958 and was first documented in the 1973 book Discovery At The Río Camuy by Russell and Jeanne Gurnee, but there is archaeological evidence that these caves were explored hundreds of years ago by the Taíno Indians, Puerto Rico's first inhabitants. Over 10 miles of caverns, 220 caves and 17 entrances to the Camuy cave system have been mapped so far. This, however, is only a fraction of the entire system which many experts believe still holds another 800 caves. Only a small part of the complex is open to the public. The 268-acre park built around the cave system features tours of some of the caves and sinkholes, and is one of the most popular natural attractions in Puerto Rico. Visitors must be in good physical conditions in order to walk into Cueva Clara and reach Sumidero y Cueva Espiral to see the mouth of this cave. They must go down to it through a scenic 205-step boardwalk. The challenge is getting the way back to the tram. Once walking down the 205 steps into the sinkhole, the cave itself is off limits to reach. Only experienced spelunkers can penetrate the cave and the underground river with special permission from the National Parks Company of Puerto Rico. This sinkhole is believed to have once been an enormous cavern that collapsed thousands of years ago. At the opening of the cave there is an impressive sight. Sumidero Tres Pueblos is a giant sinkhole measuring 650 ft (195m) wide. The Camuy River can be seen 400 ft (120m) below from three observation platforms that are located at different points alongside the opening of the impressive crater. The sinkhole is located where the borders of the towns of Camuy, Hatillo and Lares meet. Each town has its own platform overlooking the sinkhole. The Camuy River Cave Park is home to more than 13 species of bats, and hundreds of other insect, arachnid and frog species.
The Río Camuy is the world's third-largest subterranean river. The park closes once reaches its 1,500 visitors daily capacity. 16 entrances, over 220 caves, two other smaller cave systems and more than 10 miles have been mapped so far and experts still say the cave system could be much larger. Cueva Clara de Empalme or Clara Cave is the main attraction at the Rio Camuy Cave Park. A single chamber of this cave system has been developed for the public, starting in 1986. Regular cavern guided tour and audio tours are available at the site. Since November 2010, night tours called ECO NIGHTS have been organized weekly under special reservations. The tours start with the screening a short movie in a 90-seat theater, explaining the Rio Camuy Cave System and site safety rules, followed by a tram ride that takes visitors into the entrance of Clara Cave. The huge chamber is 700 ft (212m) in length and 215 ft (65m) high. Once inside this chamber, visitors are able to see an entrance from the roof of Sumidero de Empalme that is 60m from the surface, as well as stalactites, stalagmites, unique formations and thousands of bats.
Parque De Las Cavernas, Camuy-Hatillo-Lares, Puerto Rico, North America
The Camuy River Cave Park is a cave system in Puerto Rico. It is located between the municipalities of Camuy, Hatillo and Lares in northwestern Puerto Rico, but the main entrance to the park is located in Quebrada, Camuy. The caverns are part of a large network of natural limestone caves and underground waterways carved out by the third-largest underground river in the world, the Río Camuy (Camuy River). The cave system was discovered in 1958 and was first documented in the 1973 book Discovery At The Río Camuy by Russell and Jeanne Gurnee, but there is archaeological evidence that these caves were explored hundreds of years ago by the Taíno Indians, Puerto Rico's first inhabitants. Over 10 miles of caverns, 220 caves and 17 entrances to the Camuy cave system have been mapped so far. This, however, is only a fraction of the entire system which many experts believe still holds another 800 caves. Only a small part of the complex is open to the public. The 268-acre park built around the cave system features tours of some of the caves and sinkholes, and is one of the most popular natural attractions in Puerto Rico. Visitors must be in good physical conditions in order to walk into Cueva Clara and reach Sumidero y Cueva Espiral to see the mouth of this cave. They must go down to it through a scenic 205-step boardwalk. The challenge is getting the way back to the tram. Once walking down the 205 steps into the sinkhole, the cave itself is off limits to reach. Only experienced spelunkers can penetrate the cave and the underground river with special permission from the National Parks Company of Puerto Rico. This sinkhole is believed to have once been an enormous cavern that collapsed thousands of years ago. At the opening of the cave there is an impressive sight. Sumidero Tres Pueblos is a giant sinkhole measuring 650 ft (195m) wide. The Camuy River can be seen 400 ft (120m) below from three observation platforms that are located at different points alongside the opening of the impressive crater. The sinkhole is located where the borders of the towns of Camuy, Hatillo and Lares meet. Each town has its own platform overlooking the sinkhole. The Camuy River Cave Park is home to more than 13 species of bats, and hundreds of other insect, arachnid and frog species.
The Río Camuy is the world's third-largest subterranean river. The park closes once reaches its 1,500 visitors daily capacity. 16 entrances, over 220 caves, two other smaller cave systems and more than 10 miles have been mapped so far and experts still say the cave system could be much larger. Cueva Clara de Empalme or Clara Cave is the main attraction at the Rio Camuy Cave Park. A single chamber of this cave system has been developed for the public, starting in 1986. Regular cavern guided tour and audio tours are available at the site. Since November 2010, night tours called ECO NIGHTS have been organized weekly under special reservations. The tours start with the screening a short movie in a 90-seat theater, explaining the Rio Camuy Cave System and site safety rules, followed by a tram ride that takes visitors into the entrance of Clara Cave. The huge chamber is 700 ft (212m) in length and 215 ft (65m) high. Once inside this chamber, visitors are able to see an entrance from the roof of Sumidero de Empalme that is 60m from the surface, as well as stalactites, stalagmites, unique formations and thousands of bats.
Sinkhole in Puerto Rico
or just a shitty construction work?
Extreme 750' Zipline Adventure over Rio Camuy P.R. HD
There are two really long, really high zip lines that go across the Tres Pueblos Sinkhole (Lares,Camuy y Hatillo ) and you get to see some of the cave system from above. Is located within the Río Camuy Caves Park (Parque Las Cavernas del Río Camuy PR).
Apoya lo local y haz turismo interno. Gracias a Noel y a su equipo de trabajo por la aventura.
Info :
IslandCorps Adventure in Second Longest Zipline in the world
Island Corps/ GU Students Ziplining Toro Verde in Puerto Rico
Balseada Del Río Camuy 2016
THERE & BACK AGAIN; Puerto Rico [Parte Dos] Central Area
Deutschland! Falls ihr mein Video nicht sehen könnt, liegt es daran, dass SME es geblockt hat, nur weil ich Musik von einem Künstler aus Puerto Rico benutzt habe! Wie bescheuert ist das bitte?
Um das Video trotzdem sehen zu können, ladet euch einfach einen Proxy-Server wie z.B. Hola runter :) Danke!
On this episode of the Journey, scuba classes get cancelled, leaving our heroes to venture up to the mountains of Jayuya so as to not waste a day of exploration. Then, we head to the world famous Camuy Caves system for some serious spelunking in Lares, PR.
BOSQUE TORO NEGRO:
CUEVAS DE CAMUY:
AVENTURAS TIERRA ADENTRO (The team responsible for taking us into the caves: an AWESOME adventure if you're in Puerto Rico!)
MUSIC:
Alers, de Mon Rivera
Edge of Night, from The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Karakatis, de Mon Rivera
Mis Amores, de Simon Madera
Atrevete-Te-Te!, de Calle 13
Adentro, de Calle 13
Rocky Theme Remix, by Cam'ron
I See The Light, from Disney's Tangled, sung by Joshua Schwartz and Drusilla Thrace
Blazin', by Nicki Minaj
FOLLOW @drusillathrace on INSTAGRAM for the daily adventure!
Zipline Camuy
Trey ziplining across the Angeles Sink Hole in Camuy, Puerto Rico.
Camuy Zipline
Zipline in Puerto Rico. This Zipline is one of the highest in Puerto Rico
Camuy river zip line Puerto Rico/Last Step w/Katie
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (
072017 getting ready to Zipline over Camuy caves sinkhole
Megan's Zip Line Rio Camuy, Puerto Rico
Cueva de Aguas Buenas, Puerto Rico (DJI Phantom 3)
Aqui les dejo un video que tome con mi Drone!
Utuado: Landslide on roads #111 & #140 (2)
Second part.
Landslide on road #111 & part of #140 toward Jayuya. This was recorded on 10/17/2017.
Went to my parents house and decided to record my the road that connects the main town and their house.
The road 111 & 140 connects between Utuado and Jayuya.
Inauguración: Nuevas instalaciones Parque Cavernas de Camuy
Inauguran el Parque de Las Cavernas del Río Camuy
Tras una inversión millonaria para mejoras, el Gobernador inauguró la nueva estructura del Parque Nacional Las Cavernas del Río Camuy. Con la apertura de una nueva caverna los estudiantes de la UPR de Arecibo y Aguadilla podrán realizar trabajos académicos, esto gracias a un acuerdo colaborativo entre las instituciones educativas y el parque.