The cave is on a steep slope at high elevation relative to the
Turopolje plain below, making access difficult and likely explaining the scarcity of human remains. The path was partly a
goat path and partly nonexistent before the advent of
alpinism. beginning with in 1905, and continuing in
SFRJ times, and beyond in
RH times, both from a tourist perspective and from a
speleological perspective. The cave consists of two parts: • The entrance chamber is long, wide at the entrance but narrowing to at the end, with similarly variable ceiling height, at the entrance but at the end.
stalactites and
stalagmites. The speleothems are small, but untouched during the 1933 Poljak exploration, which did not note any footprints and concluded they were the first that far back in the cave. The first is long, wide, and about tall. The second is long, up to wide, and tall. Some of the earliest photographs of the cave were published by Josip Poljak in 1933,
Mirko Malez in 1991, In the late 1980s, the local mountaineering society
PD Lipa published 5 issues of a periodical titled
Lipin list, which included information on the cave. The cave is protected as part of the
Medvednica Nature Park as cave number S18. Despite being legally closed to the public, the entrance is along a established trail (the
Službeni planinarski put 31/32), and a more dangerous approach to the cave. The path to the cave is marked by a sign, so it continues to be visited in that context, and is prominently featured on some
tourist maps. But the cave had already been popular with caving societies when they were first being formed in Zagreb, beginning with the visit led by for the
PD "Zagreb", which took place in 1947. It is also more specifically within the
Područje Lipa-Rog na Medvednici (br. 716). ==Climatology==