Until modern times the high mountain villages such as Dehibolo used to be self-sufficient, especially as the snow covered the trails to outside world for half a year.
Villagers wove carpets from sheep and goat wool, pressed felt for winter garments, they sewed cow hides.
A rich widow, Bibi Shah, who owned a large herd of sheep and goats, cattle and horses, and employed many shepherds and servants, proposed to finance a wide trail which would cross the wall.
The stonemasons, led by master Olim, built a 500-meter long trail west of the village, in places cut into the cliff and, where necessary, reinforced with wooden rebars.
[2][8][9] According to Aleksej V. Arapov, a Tashkent author in the field of history and culture of Central Asia, until the middle of the twentieth century a large wooden idol, with crossed legs and hands in front, sat in a niche high up the Chul-Bair wall above the village.
Donkeys serve for transportation of both goods and people to the pastures, small fields, orchards and homes in the outlying valleys.
[2][4] As in other the most distant mountain villages of Boysun District, such as Alachapan, Kurgancha or Dugoba, Dehibolo has retained original architecture, where houses are built, with the exception of corrugated sheet metal roofs, of locally available timber, stone and clay.
[13] In the valley under the village, just above the river Zervaroz and the road to Kurgancha (Qurghoncha in Uzbek), 1,455 meters a. s. l., there is a large source of potable water, Holtan Chashma.
[18] In 1970 Mustafo Holmominov, a farmer and folk healer from Dehibolo, the first known explorer, departed to the cave (a 4-hour trek) with his son.
In 1985 a group of Russian cavers, part of an expedition by SGS – Ekaterinburg Speleo Club, was scouting the surrounding area for new caves.
In the following summers large expeditions followed, by SGS and ASU – Assoсiation of Ural speleologists, with participation of Italian and British cavers.
[19] Focus of SGS and ASU expeditions to Uzbekistan, which resumed in 2007, shifted from Chul-Bair to neighbouring mountain ridge, Hodja-Gur-Gur-Ata.
Later it was named after Aleksandr Višnevskij, longtime leader of expeditions to Boybuloq in previous years, and till 2024 explored to a depth of 1,283 meters.