Do you have any sand/soil anywhere else in your fort?
Once you breach the cavern, trees will start growing other places.
On my upper levels which have sand, I just dug out a huge area, and I've got more wood than I know what to do with.
Depending on what you need for mining, is there anything you really need to mine in the caves themselves? Are there some rare gems or minerals?
even then, you can mine behind walls from the top to get those out.
The caves in my fort include a lake that basically attaches to the side of the map.. for me, it would be a massive pain to try and block those off. If yours is easy with not many connections then go for it.
Well, it's as much a project as anything else. I could make do without the caverns, but my natural inclination is just to tame everything as I work my way downward. I could go around the caverns, but honestly it never occurred to me to do so until I realized I didn't know how to seal off the water, and so I posted here.
I've dug out around 90% of the soil layers in my fort and the trees just aren't coming fast enough. I've completely denuded the surface and the few trees that've grown in my underground farms, have 0 wood, 0 charcoal, and may not have beds for the next wave of immigrants depending on how many come and how many dwarves get married between now and then.
At any rate, I've already queued up over a hundred tiles of wall to be built to close off the land enclosure. It will probably take a year to complete, but my military should be able to handle anything that wanders in in the meantime. It looks like it's going to take two large sections of wall cave-ins to seal off the water, which will probably be less work than the walls, and then I'll just need to build up the walls in the ground areas to prevent flyers. Going to be some work, but should be rewarding and it's not like I have much else to do
How much harder will the second layer of caverns be? I mean in terms of fauna, not architecture.