After a lot of reasearch we found the cave quite easily, recongnising the climb down to get below the upper clifts. Getting here required several busses and an hour long walk. Before we had even got here we found a cave not too far from the car park that extended 30m which consisted of dusty crawls some of which were flat out. Anyway at Dingli we entered by the harder west entrance. This consisted of several easy squeezes and crawls between boulders before the cave grew in size after we traversed the pitch? to chamber (H) lower. We passed the east entrance and continued down lofty rift passages. We think the whole cave was formed in a rift where the bench is breaking away from the clifts and then boulders fell in making the roof, at least partially the case. There was also a lot of archeology found in this cave. Anyway after exploring a flat out bit that was not even on the survey (which drafted) went the correct way through a challenging riggle of a squeeze (from chamber N to O). This led to the pitch. The spits likely installed in the 80s were useless but thankfully a jammed rock in the floor provided a good belay. John had not brought his SRT kit underground so it left me to descend this solo. This chamber P as it's known on the survey, was huge 15m high about 50m lomg and 5m wide. There was some side passages leading off but these all closed down in collapses. An excellent trip on an island largely devoid of significant long caves. We exited by the East entrance.