Showing posts with label Munro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Munro. Show all posts

Sunday, September 01, 2024

Cnoc Dearg & Stob Coire Sgriodain, Geal Charn, Ben Klibreck

Prelogue

It's been a weird old year.  September is here and yet, my planned ambitious desire to complete the munroes before I am 60 came to a grinding halt between March and September as I single-handedly failed to travel North of the border for my own needs.  

I got unfit (see "Not Gairich" post) and convinced myself that to be successful I needed to train first and I never got chance. Our summer holidays were the first opportunity to set things straight and train into it.

I warmed up with some approach reccies and mianders along highland trails with my support crew (family) and generally tried to relax and cheer up.  It was easily done, give or take a few midges and downpours which are all part of the experience.

Munro walk 1 - Chno Dearg and Stob Coire Sgriodain Thursday, 8th August 2024

TSK dropped Lena and me off at the carpark at Fersit near Loch Treig and after a short walk to the bottom of the route, went off to do his own thing.  Every time I memorise the booky description of the hill route and I don't memorise it well so I take photos of it. I then get my camera out and read the book as well as interpreting the map.  I was at a farmyard, figuring out where to go as buzzy things flew by and I hoped I wasn't standing in someone's driveway.  All was quiet.

We followed the obvious path, tantalisingly labelled Corrour Station - miles away across the moorland track.  After the bookish km, a faint path did indeed head out across boggy moorland towards a shoulder leading down from the main summit.  We were mildly distracted by a quad bike track rather than accessing the shoulder and after quite some time bog-hopping, decided we should've stuck to the route description.  We spent the next forever trying to achieve the ridgeline, giving up in the end and cutting over to a grassy slope that went up to the ridgeline at around 45 - 50 degrees incline.  It was hard work but we sprinted it in a heather-bashing kind of way then sat down to eat crisps to celebrate being back on the route before the next bit.

The wind was pouring over the shoulder of the mountain and we had a great cool-down from earlier midge bites. I thought of work once - realising that there was no reception and I was missing a meeting with Aberdeen Council that I had said I would attend if I had reception.  I put my phone away for the rest of the day.  Even if I got reception they'd not be able to hear a word I said.

The view of Loch Treig told me TSK had no success with photographay unless he'd tried to get some gritty shots of the low shoreline.  The water level was low - whethter that's its hydro status or it is in maintenance, I don't know.

Grasping at the last tangible edges of any views from the summit, we rushed to the top of Stob Coire Sgriodain, camera in hand.  It was blusteringly windy and there was no shelter so the summit photo from there was rushed.  Impressive cliffs pointed down towards the loch so there was a semblance of reward from a relatively simple and close-quarters hill.  I won't say "easy" because the alloted ammount of heather bashing and swearing and lack of path had already put it in to the far-from-easy category which was satisfying for the proximity to a carpark.

I chose to do these two (slightly harder) peaks so that I could save their solo neighbour for another time on a weekend when I had limited hours to spare to climb a peak before heading back south.

As soon as we left the summit of Sgriodain, the clag started to descend so I took an inordinate number of photos of the view before it disapeared, and the route ahead.  I got out the compas just in case. The garmin was doing fine but it was suddenly easier to work in a more analogue way and follow the guidebook's more vague "north a bit then north east a bit", and there is, indeed, a sketchy path.  

I would later find out from TSK that some of the reviews of Chno Dearg describe it as "a really boring lump of a hill which no-one would ever bother to climb if it weren't a munro".  That's fine by me.  I'm in munro bagging as a reason to be in the hills places where I wouldn't normally go, sometimes in conditions I wouldn't necessarily choose, not to tick off the big-name items.  I understand that conflict of list-ticking, it's not lost of me.

What I enjoyed about Chno Dearg was the absolute sense of isolation we got from it.  Appart from it being a blustery, cloudy Thursday, it was still the middle of holiday season and we didn't see a damn soul all day. Even if they'd been up there, we might not have seen them.  The sensory deprivation that came from the clag was both eerie and all-consuming.  Chno Dearg did have a summit cairn and we sat on it, out of the wind, and celebrated with the second sandwich, frazzles and dog biscuits.  Lena stole herself a frazzle.

The clag was still down when we set off but we were rewarded by startling a grey ptarmigan in part plumage shift - or maybe a youngster.  They clattered greyly into the grey sky.

The route description changed to "North East a bit then North" but without the warning to avoid the quad bike tracks again.  We descended (as described) down some slippery rocks but then the whole hillside seemed to be a batch of slippery rocks and the path quickly disappeared.

We descended below the clag again so we could clearly see the way off the mountain but the illusive track disappeared so when we found a quad track we followed it hoping it would swing around and rejoin the earlier quad track to base.  We were wrong.

I finally gave up on the bog hopping through quad sinks when I caught sight of the forest and reservoir road below and the farm buildings where I'd looked at the book first thing this morning.  A suitable "paralell road" feature appeared in the hillside.  Not actually a road but a natural phenomena of ice-age deposits - an old shoreline - that was half way up the valley side and long-since abandoned by receeding water levels.  We attained it then followed it Eastwards aways before rejoining the Northerly direction across more bogs and moorlands to get back onto the Corrour Station trail.  

I'd been in my shoes all day which were new and very comfortable and successful.  My feet were still dry in them but I no longer had the energy to keep them that way with the car park only 1km away.  I trudged straight through the last river and instantly regretted it as the cold water seeped into my new shoes.  It made my feet feel lovely and refreshed but I could forsee days of waiting for the shoes to dry out again before I could wear them.

Back at the road through Fersit, I marvelled again at the remote yet beautiful houses lining the road side.  There was more to it than met the eye and for my next trip I recognised that leaving the van to nip off for a wild camp would not be an issue.  We were still the only ones in the car park in August.  Midges abounded, even as we moved and I started to formulate a plan to get us into the car as quickly and midge free as possible - involving dumping my rucsac, getting the dog towel to wipe the dog then bailing her in while I removed my layers and boots.  TSK helped.  Then I did a lap of the carpark on foot to wipe off the last of the bitey wee bastards.

In the car, I set about a killing spree before turning on the cool air conditioning while Andrew drove my tired feet back to the tent.

Rest day

The next day we had a sunny rest day trip to Mallaig to look at the sea and have seafood.  It was too windy for swims or walks and we had a townie day.  

Geal Charn, Cairngorms National Park, Laggan Saturday 10th August, 2024

TSK was keen to do a mountain with us so I scoured the book for one that I could drag my arthritic old man up.  We stepped outside the local area a little but it was worth it to find something that should be doable in 3 hours or so.  Particularly pertinent since we'd been lazy about the prep (and I wasn'st really rested enough to do another one but hey) and it was getting on for lunchtime by the time we got to Laggan.

We stopped in the cafe in the village, a little too early for lunch and were restrained since I had put sandwiches together.  We had coffee and cake then set off up the hill.  

After a short drive, I realised where I was.  I had not recognised it due to the slightly bizare approach and I'd rarely driven in the East of Scotland but I found myself driving along the Highland Trail route... or rather my comment to TSK was, "I have cried my way up this hill many times" - and this is just the first day!  We were on the road that turns into General Wade's Military road and "the Coireayrick Pass". We passed the bizare waterway which looks like a dutch canal dyke in the middle of the scottish highlands and it suddenly makes sense that it's part of a larger fishery and hydro network of waterways.

I looked at the farmyards I have dreamt of tresspassing in for a sleep or some shelter and, usefully, knew to bypass the over-prescribed car park and continue over the bridge to additional parking... also right on the bottom of the approah path to Geal Charn.  It's necessary to state where your Geal Charn is, for there are 6 munros called Geal Charn and 3 of them are in this area.

The day started bright, sunny and warm and we shed layers and I considered a swim in the natural river but decided to save it for the way down.  I did not want to burn my family mountain passes with frivolity at this early stage.  The going was good as a path (which was intentional) and took us over minor hillocks to the start of a more substantial climb up the hillside.  We stopped to take in lunch at a point that was out of the high winds but sufficiently breezy to keep bitey things off.  People count on the way up was two sets of hikers, a pair of fell runners and some muddy dog walkers... then we had the place to ourselves except for a few sheep.

The summit plateau reached, I took heed to the guidebook's warning that the first cairn was not actually the summit but it was a litte further along.  I also took the opportunity to walk to the right to avoid the breeze coming from our left.  I say breeze, I mean, "stay upright".  I shepherded TSK to leave the cairn alone and follow the well trodden breeze-avoidance path that had formed over the years.  At one point he had to whistle to me to avoid getting lost in the clag as Lena and I strode out to get the wind flapping done with asap.

I can't remember if there was a cairn or no cairn but we had a spectacular view over the wind farm at the top of the C-Pass and the hills around and beyond.  It felt odd for me to be near somewhere so familiar and yet somewhere so new to me - at the top of one of the peaks I have so regularly wondered at when I ride by, underneath, on my way to something much bigger.  I marvelled at the difference between my historic self and my self, now - clinging on the edge of one-day trips and reminded myself to get in shape.

We ate snacks and I stuffed a sandwich into my pocket to get us off the hill quicker.  Me and Lena strode ahead and then sat on a rock to eat marmalade sandwiches while TSK caught up and laughed at me, "you're going to get fat if you start eating a sandwich every time you have to sit and wait for me".  It's photography and dank humour that will get us through ageing.

I helped myself to skipping down the rocks on the descent to practice a bit of running and fast descending.  Back at our lunch spot I sat near the river then we skipped on through the heather.  It warmed up but not much, the wind getting a better grip on the day.  The draw of the water had waned with the increasing cloud and we re-traced tired, praying that the van would appear around the corner and hadn't been stollen or moved out of (it wasn't in) the way.

It was there.  A hiking pole was left behind.  I propped it up for its owners to return for it.

We re-traced down the road.  The cafe was now closed, we'd been up late and were back late.  We retreated to the increasingly blowy tent to cook and easy dinner of pasta and sleep off the days wonders.

Recovery day

The recovery day was, as often happens in Scotland - packing up to depart in glorious sunshine.  We packed our bags and disassembled our dry (hallelujah) tent and drove on up to Lairg.

Thanks to TSK, we punctuated the trip with a visit to Dundregan Trees for Life, a Scottish charity "fattening up" saplings for planting out on rewilding projects, giving nature a helping hand to re-establish the ground cover of history, lost to the clearances and deer stalking for recreation.  It's likely that their results will save your children's lives.  Climate drama asside, they have a lovely cafe, visitor centre and shop and some nice walks to do  - some of which take you up to the highest points on their estate, overlooking Ben Nevis, Glen Garry (site of March's holiday fail) and Knoydart beyond (on the list).

What a difference 24 hours makes to the weather.  We sat by waterfalls in shorts and dangled our feet then I walked through bogs in my sandles and returned to the car happy and with soaking feet - and a full belly of delicious salad after 30 minutes watching the pond skaters and swallows, whilst I ate ice cream.

Lairg camp site is incredible.  It's run by a couple whose grandma ran the campsite before.  They're still working multiple jobs to make ends meet, having sunk all their money into the toilet block and kitchen.  The campsite spots are a free-for-all so we picked somewhere flat with a bit of breeze to keep the midges off but prepared ourselves to move the van should it get windy and feisty (which was the forecast). 

On our first morning I was awake at 5am - symptomatic of a day of driving and restless muscles which haven't quite recovered yet.  The sky was dark but the sun was on its way so I watched it on my way back from the luxury toiletblock then stood around some more.  We got up and ate breakfast, faffed and did some short walks nearby to recover from Geal Charn and a day in the car.  At the end of the day I walked out on to the campsite and did yoga into the setting sun, pressing my face and body into the dry grass.  I never thought I'd be doing that this far north.  When I checked the weather here the week before we travelled it had been 4 degrees C over night.  On our day out, we had investigated the next few days weather.  In the evening, we sat and watched the sunset which was cloud-filled and equally as crimson, the layers and intensity drawing across the whole sky until suddenly it was just dark and dull with a faint orange glow beyond the horizon.

Ben Klibreck Tuesday, August 13th 2024

Although I'd not had much rest or long sleeps, I joked with TSK that if I was awake at 5am the next day, I was going to pack my rucsac and go for another munro.  In my head, it was still a bit iffy.  The weather forecast was for high winds - upland gales I think is the technical term.  Tuesday was to be the better day before things deteriorated.  

From Lairg, I really have two choices - Ben Hope or Ben Klibreck (excluding the high number of other hills in the area that I want to walk on / past because they look good and are in a cool place).  With a solid weather prediction for mostly clear skies, I wanted to do something and I was ready for something a little challenging.  Although Ben Hope is the most Northerly Munro and has a reputation for being bleak and monsterous, it's actually an easy walk with a big path and not much time required.  in fact, the guidebook quips, you can walk both hills in the day - not together - but using a car to drive between the two - three hours in the morning, three in the afternoon?  I don't think so!

I decided to honour Ben Klibreck with the pleasant weather and do the longer, harder route.  That way I could attend to Ben Hope at my leisure, at the whim of tenuous weather and preferably out of season when there were fewer people on it... I have something in mind!

I had the route for Ben Klibreck plotted on my Garmin plus the book author's recommendation of an easier exit to the Cluannie Inn, at a different pickup spot to the drop off point.  I set my alarm for 7am and drifted into a sound sleep, uninterupted by the normalcy of city life - banging car doors, alarm sirens, streetlights and barking dogs.

At 1:30am my bladder spoked to me and, rather than try (unsuccessfully) to ignore it, I decided to deal with it and get back to sleep as quickly as possible.  There were too many on the campsite to wee in the field so i set off towards the toilet block, checking up at the sky which was awash with stars, the milky way being particularly prevelant.  This far North, there's very little difference between sunset and sunrise locations this far north so roughly where the sun set, to the North, streaks of cloud remained from the sunset and then I realised that they were curved and streaked and was it... was it really the Northern Lights?  I stared.  It wasn't moving.  One thing was for sure, I wanted to enjoy this in silence for myself but also, if I didn't fetch Andrew and the thing kicked off properly, I'd be gutted.  I woke him from his sleep, told him not to get his hopes up (it was, after all, very faint and very still) and dragged both him and the dog out of bed to look.

We stared for ages, postulated that it was just clouds and went for a week.  When we re-emerged from the indoor lighting, the streaks across the sky were still visible.  We watched a few shooting stars from the summer Perseids meteor shower, stared at the "clouds" a bit longer then went back to bed - thinking there was no point to getting out the camera.  
 
Again, I was awake at 5:45, this time being punched in the head by a dog who wanted to tell me that outside was on fire.  Actually, it was the sun making it's (now accusstomed) firey appearance on the Eastern Horizon.  I kept my word and ate breakfast with the kids from an Edinburgh Academy whose teacher confirmed the presence of the Aurora Borealis in the night and we cursed not getting the fancy cameras out.  As promised, I packed a rucsac and was dropped off beyond the Cluannie Inn at a carpark turn-out. I turned the GPS on and followed a combo of the route description in the book and the pink line on the map which was plotted from info in the book.  I thought I was on the route as I took great strides across the heather and tussocks of a headland past some small tarns and headed for a headland that led to the larger slopes of Ben Klibreck.  

After quite some time and effort I realised something was wrong.  I lookked for the easy way back so that I was informed later, when I would be more tired.  Unfortunately, the way back seemed to be exactly the way I had come and there I realised it.  Rather than starting from the hard start and finishing with the easy way out, I had actually made the easy way out difficult (by heather bashing instead of following the obvious path to the Cluannie Inn) and was going to have to walk out the hard way.  I had also missed the new appearance of a perfectly good path up from a new wind turbine centre where there was a perfectly good carpark giving perfectly good acess to this Northerly Munro.  I was a bit pissed off with my (old) book but also kind of smug because I like doing things the hard way and it was good training.  I sat by a spring and had snacks and watched the dog face-plant into the heather and blaeberries, smearing the purple juice across her forehead and legs so I had a multi-coloured dog.

Once we reached the big path from across the heather we had a sit in a sheep shelter to eat early lunch and change out of the early morning waterproofs.  I didn't even bother to change out of shorts and into long trousers.  The weather was holding out nicely.  Again the dog waved her feet in the air and I looked out across the flow country to Ben Hope and the sea beyond.  

For a good 2 hours I strode across the ridge which led to Ben Klibreck and the route up that I should have taken.  Eventually I was beaten by the wind to start walking along a sheep-trod-turned-footpath which ran along the leeward side of the hill to get respite.  Second lunch was consumed in another sheep shelter, changing into those long trousers and adding my waterproof coat for warmth rather than rain proofing.

I tried to reccy the route down on the way past but "straight up there" (or now, "straight down there") just seemed like a mental concept.  I decided I'd make the decision later and was thankful for my Spot which would actually let TSK where to come and meet me at the end of the day. 

When we got to the end of the leewards path, we finally had to come to terms with the full force of the wind as we made our way over a number of rock bluffs, exactly where the wind was tearing over a low col.  The path to the summit set off in the wind and never got out of it.  Only my legs, below the knee, were safe from the breeze and the rocky path disappeared into a bit of a rut in places.  I decided to ditch my rucsac to summit.  I don't usually like to leave my safety kit behind but the bag was making my progress more difficult and dangerous as the wind snatched at it sideways, pulling me off ballance even more than necessary.

A convenient boulder emerged and I hung my rucsac off it upside down, using the waist strap to secure the bag to the top of the boulder.  I took my camera and one pole because the other was useless and merely served to blow in the wind and try to trip over my left foot with every step.

The top was truly beautiful - even on the leward side.  Inside the shelter cairn, the trig point lay on its side - presumably blown over by decades of gales.  An attempt had been made to errect a post of some kind but that was gone too.  I ate something then dared, momentarily - to stand up and photograph the rest of the scene.  I should have stayed longer but I was concious I was already going to be late for my pick up and I didn't want someone to find my rucsac and worry that I was gone or lying inured somewhere.  I'd seen one couple walking on the hill - quite some way behind me.

Still, when I turned to descend, I found quite a troupe of people on their way towards us.  

Lena and I recovered my rucsac then, still being blasted by the wind, we took to the leeward side of the hill again and rather than use the windy path, I staggered down a moss-covered boulder-field, carrying my rucsac in my hand, from time to time dragging or heaving it against the breeze instead of wearing it on my shoulders where it got blasted and blew me off my feet.  It was embarrasing.  At the bottom of the steep descent, everyone else looked so composed.  A couple smiled, an elderly couple (seriously, they looked about 70!) waved hello and proceeded like lightening.  At their age, I'd be worrying about my capacity to stand in the conditions I decided I was incredibly out of shape and as a solo mountaineer, didn't regret my over-packing in the slightest.

Back at the steep descent, I attempted to find any trace of a path described in the guidebook as "mostly pathless exept for where one has established itself near the top across some greasy rocks".  At the 60 degree slope, greasy rocks didn't sound like a healthy thing.  We found what we could which was probably a sheep trod rather than a greasy rock and that deteriorated into a steep stream / spring which oozed from the ground.  The descent had 2 things going for it - it wasn't a 3 hour re-trace the way we had come, it was as described - a grassy slope.  Not once did I find a sketchy boulder to fall over or off.  It was long-winded and awkward but terrifyingly simple and its bark was worse than its bite.  I constantly thought, "one foot wrong and I'm a gonner" and I constantly put feet wrong. The worst thing that happened was I fell on my bum and slid a bit.  I wondered if it would be the fastest way off the hill but didn't have the guts to try.

Up the valley in the coire, I heard deer bark and huff at us.  I watched them stare.  Thankfully the wind was blowing the wrong way for Lena to even notice them. 

We acquired the lake shore which we should have passed on the way out in the morning.  It was beautiful. It had a little sandy beach.  I should've stripped off for a swim but I was a bit behind my timeschedule.  I still regret not doing so.  The constraints of time and space were weighing down on me.  I appreciate everything Andrew does for me but I have a guilty conscious which makes me try to stick to time as best I can.  I suspected I'd already be 1 hour late.  Future note to self - add an extra 90 minutes to all estimated trip times!

We picked our way around the loch shore following sheep trods again.  Any path the writer of the book might have imagined were long gone to the convenience of the path from the wind turbines.  At the edge of the Loch we followed the book to the North side of a smaller lochan before striking off up the hillside over a headland.  There were tracks in the grass here - our old friends Quad bike tracks but at least here they went vaguely in the direcion we wanted and all we had to do was put up with a few bogs where they'd dropped down off the hillside at speed through stream beds.

I knew there were two headlands to clear and in between the two I was washed with depression.  Effectively this was to be the last big hill day of my holiday and I was sad.  Like the last day of a bike tour/race, I didn't want the simplicity to end.  I needed a wee so before I got back to civilisation and watchful eyes, I dropped trou and sat on a tussock of grass to have a wee.  The flow country lived up to its name and drained my bodily fluids into the ground away from my tired, damp skin. It was like a natural nappy.  Tired dog lay down in the heather and went to sleep.  Still not wearing any pants, I had a few biscuits then packed up my stuff, re-dressed and set off over that last bluff.

For all that I didn't want it to end, I was very relieved to see the van parked in a large carpark at the top of the main road climb.  He was parked below me but my easiest way off the hill was to descend to the river directly ahead then cross it and join the road on the other side.  The quad bike tracks plunged into the river there so I assumed there would be a sensible crossing point.  I pinged my spot then set off down the hillside, stopping only to get the dog over some wire fencing that had been ploughed down by the quads. 

I told Lena to "Go find dad" at just the moment a couple of touring cyclists were riding up the hill so she started pulling me towards them, rather than the van that I had my eye on.

Everything was as it should be.  The stony bed of the river permitted easy crossing and we just about managed to scramble out of the other side to attain the road as the mercu trundled down and I indicated at the driveway to the forest land on the other side of the road where TSK dutifully parked up and picked me up.  Lena crashed out in the back, I crashed out in the front and we trundled back into the village to the perdiam question of what to have for tea.  Easy - pasta and sauce.  

Epilogue

We had days of wind storms to follow.  2 nights of tending to the tent to ensure it didn't fail... and it didn't - nice one alpkit!  As a new tent, we were unsure about how it would respond and it felt touch-and-go.  At one point I got up in the night to move the van, reversed over the guy ropes then had to lie on the ground to move the peg from under the van and ensure the van didn't saw through the guys.  The wind was so fierce, the ground wasn't even wet, despite it raining quite intensely.  Andrew thought I'd collapsed in the night.  The tent survived and we just about survived two nights of noisy flapping and intermittent sleep.  At one point I thought about switching for the low-level tent and kipping in its porch while Andrew and Lena slept inside it.  Might have worked but we didn't get that extreme.  There was no damage to the Alpkit Axiom and it lives to protect us another day.

I thoroughly enjoyed this trip.  It was everything I expected from Scotland and nothing less.  I'm disappointed I didn't get to swim or take the kayak out but it will come another day.

I came away with a renewed enthusiasm for walking the scottish hills and started making plans.  Those plans get put to one side every now and then in favour of the house sale / purchase and work commitments but what I need to do is make time for the hills so that I remain a happy person and keep going with my absolutely pointless quest.

Because I like it.



Sunday, December 31, 2023

2023 in Pictures and Stats

January

January was there for me to learn about Lena.  I was quite quick to learn that she likes to sniff the breeze and we've been out in no stiffer winds this year than in January above Stanage.  The flap-o-meter reading was high.

 

February

While there were many special moments in Whtitby in February, our visit to RSPB Bempton was mind-blowing - mentally and physically.

 

March

There were a few walks in March that were pretty special, in that TSK managed to come along, or Lena and I were out nice and late to catch the moon, or  just those special, crispy icy days.  Then there was also a trip to Wombwell to the pedal car races, where me and Lena sneaked off with the camera and, until today, I did not know I got this shot.

April

April was so FULL but our trip to Aberdeen has to take the top spot.  Such wonderful sunshine and great to catch up with friends I haven't seen in years.
 
However, this is my cheat month since there were also some excellent camping trips in April. 

May

All right!  All right! When you've got an incredibly photogenic dog, it's really difficult to chose highlights of each month.  Our camp out for a summer fell race was ideal - secluded, pitched in daylight, undisturbed.  Evesham had more sunshine and smiles than I could shake a stick at.  I can't choose!


 

June

June rolled by in a series of toasting summer days.  Glyn and Marie came to visit which gave us the brilliant opportunity for a lift out to the peak and a dog-walk home.

 July

July had us in Surrey for a visit and no trip to Surrey is complete without some serious forestry.
 

August

August had a lot of good sunshine days and it was difficult to pick one but this day Lena had a photogenic moment and I sat in a deck chair and sketched a landscape for a few hours while she had a nap so it went down as one of the best long days in a while.

 

September

Everyone's seen my Glen Affric 3-day hike photos but I'm not sure I shared the sunset - from my bivi spot high up on the mountain.  We went on to spend the best high-level day known to man (zero human interaction) and the hike out wasn't bad either.  I realised I'd rather spend a few nice days in the Yorkshire Dales than ever again, repeat the 3 Peaks bike race without any cycling in my legs. 



October

I really enjoyed Autumn flourishing in the Peak. Reservoir pics come as standard but you can't beat climbers on sun-baked rock in bracken.

 

November

November saw the arrival of the scooter but, more photogenic than that, a long, drawn out snap of hoary frost that's not been repeated in December.  For 10 straight days, everything sparkled.

December 

In December, I celebrated a major birthday with the shortest of trips to the Lakes.  Driving half way across the country for one big walk and a couple of nights sleep has been something that's been missing from my life for a while.  Let's call it environmental consciousness.
 

One week later and we've done more hikes from the back-door than is possible to enjoy.  I admit, I tuned some of them out in favour of spending time with my favourite family people... but when we've got outside the edges of the valley, we've mourned for the loss of green, embraced the brown and looked forward to the renewal of the seasons next year...

then we slipped away to the coast to wash the sea into our hair again.

What's in the bag for next year?

On the final day of 2023, I packed my old 3-4 season tent, big sleeping bag and a day's worth of food and headed out for a final lap of the valley "fully loaded" to see if it's still do-able and to start my weight training programme for next year one day early.  I'm not big on gyms any more so this way seemed more productive.

I over-packed tent weight and under-packed on food / fuel for a full 24 hours out so I will at least know what the weight feels like - even though we won't be committing to a night out because the dog hates fireworks.  So tonight we'll be sleeping under a slate roof.  
 
Why the backpack? Well this year, I'm aiming to tally up a bunch more Munros, having realised I covered a lot of the hard ones during my twenteens and am now at an age where I relish the more "boring" ones - starting with those that have a big walk-in - while I still can.

Carrying the pack reminded me that I need to strengthen my big muscles some more but also how important my little core muscles are too, to the balance of Trep.  So if I can sneak myself away to the yoga mat a few more times a week, that's also on the cards.  I've had enough of being unfit and "a bit shit" this year so my resolution for '24 is to get back to fitness with purpose and start getting myself "out there" again, back to my happy place (mountains), without the encumbrance of any race performances.

And I'm really rather looking forward to it.  I hope you're looking forward to 2024 too.

In stats (walking this year)
January - 274 km
February - 237 km
March - 298 km
April - 271 km
May - 270 km
June - 164 km
July - 270 km
August - 218 km
September - 264 km
October - 261 km
November - 168 km + scooter - 129 km = 297 km
December - 212 km + scooter - 128 km = 340 km

Thursday, September 07, 2023

Glen Affric: Mullach na Dheiragan, Sgurr nan Ceathreamhnan, (not An Socach )

My prep for the biggest walk I've done in a long time: Packing while I had covid and didn't really have belief I'd be able to achieve it; chosing my route 2 days before and realising it was much longer than expected; packing my rucsac and getting drop off on the day of departure, using up the whole morning and then setting off in the heat of the day. 

"Setting off in the heat of the day"!  That's not something you expect to find yourself saying in Scotland. 

It was a very Tepid Explorer and her dog that were abandoned in Glen Affric car park. For a start, Lena doesn't like to watch the van drive away. I was a poor companion substitute. Especially as the first thing I did was cram her in a toilet cubicle with me while I had a pee. The midges were already out r it seemed less cruel than leaving her outside. 

Lena had a drink from the dog water bowls then we set off to walk the HT Glen Affric route in reverse. I was a little concerned: it's long and gruelling by bike so assumed walking it would be harder. It was so beautiful though. We had no timescale, no fixed agenda. Our priorities quickly narrowed to taking pics of the great weather, bird watching, and finding enough water. I took multiple excursions into the undergrowth to allow Lena the opportunity to paddle and drink in a stream.

We measured 30 minutes out (allowing for sniffing time) when we could ping the Spot and summons Tsk tomorrow to come and collect us, though secretly, I had my doubts we could achieve this hike in 2 days, given the late starting time on day 1 (12pm).  I'd already packed enough calories for 2 nights on the hill -almost through luck rather than planning. We'd hunched out in a cafe before departure so I was, in effect, carrying an extra meal. 

We passed the Affric Lodge where posh people fired guns and passed the beach where lucky teens were skinny dipping. I had my eye on the Munro prize amd wanted to make as much progress on Day 1 as possible to guarantee the success of my Day 2 agenda, though I sorely wished I had all the time, pre planning and food - in the world to have my own swim. Instead we sat on a boulder by the track and I ate while the dog lounged in a the damp remnants of a puddle. We momentarily had to scrabble our things together to allow the, "Trees for Life" tree planting people to rumble through with 4x4s and quad bikes.

Crossing the bridge at the activity centre was the last time we'd see the main river again but the hunt for water got easier as the mountains closed in and their streams frequently crossed the open path.

The number of people we saw dwindled with the day, the last pair being 2 women - one my age, the other looked like her mum and they both looked like seasoned hikers. They were interested about my camping arrangements for the dog and I said reassuring things about the bivi bag being big enough for two with one half of my brain saying, "that's bullshit, it's too small" but it's ok for one, fine night right? 

We made our excuses and I crossed the bridge and promptly dropped down to the river to let the dog paddle - which she did a bit too deeply - and I took off my lower layers and sat in the water, legs fully submerged. Complete bliss. There was even enough water rushing to generate a local breeze to keep the midgets away long enough to get dressed. It was so warm that I air dried quickly. 

 It seemed to take forever to reach the high point of the hike: where the Glen almost flattens out and there only a gradual rise to the YHA. Dog water became more difficult to find as many of the streams ran dry leaving stagnant puddles. I tried to encourage her to drink my water but she'd stopped using the bowl I was carrying and I needed to let her drink something. 

Eventually the river got close enough to the path for Lena to paddle in and there was enough breeze coming along the water's edge for me to be able to sit on a water-smoothed rock, take off my boots & brew up water for a dehydrated chilli meal which, at 6pm, was wholeheartedly devoured. The dog lay in the long grass, sighed, scratched at midges a few times then went to sleep. I watched meadow pipits flit about their business as I tucked into my dinner. 

As the sun started to dwindle, the breeze died and the bitey beasties got us moving. My plan was to get as far into my planned route as possible at the end of day 1 then complete the route and hike out as far as possible on day 2 then get picked up at the carpark. If I needed the extra night out I was prepared. 

We rushed past the YHA as quickly as possible. I didn't want to get stuck chatting. couldn't face any unsolicited advice, and didn't want to get tempted in by a comfy bed and end up missing out on one of the best high-mountain opportunities I'd had in months. Was it going to be better than my bike packing experiences? No, just different. But definitely one of the best hiking experiences I've ever had. 

My only multi- day hike with my last dog ended in a disastrous wet night on Snowdon and a trip back to the car the next day. We looked through the windows as we passed. Weathered middle aged men with beards drank tea + poured over maps and books. There was the clatter of aluminum dishes in a sink. We scurried by. At least they'd be open tomorrow if we needed them. 

We climbed the steep slope behind the YHA then skirted across the hillside into the next gully. My watch had buzzed 2 hrs to sunset over an hour ago, I needed to gain as much height as possible to find breeze and some flat ground for pitching. The beallach would be perfect - it was warm enough for a high bivi - but we were unlikely to make that. 

There was a lower area of flattish ground I had spotted on the map and plenty of flat-topped moraines visible from the track below. My watch tells me the time of the next sunrise/set event. I checked it to see what time sundown was but after some time peering at it without my glasses on I concluded it said 6:15-am! The sun had already set. There was no orange glow, just a gentle darkening of the skies with high cloud cover but at least a warm night was more or less guaranteed. 

I loaded up with more water at the river crossing, in preparation for the night ahead. As the colourful landscape turned to greyscale, the lookout for flat ground commenced. There was quite a lot of bog around but also it had been really dry recently and dry bog can make an excellent mattress. I'd pitched my hooped bivi and blown up my camp mat before I noticed that the stomping of my boots was causing any available moisture to rise to the surface. As usual the dog had dismissed my efforts, frowned, found the best spot and excavated herself a perfect pitch on a mound of moss and bracken right next to my bag. She had a point, it was the only truly dry spot on the hillside. I lay my pack on it and set about pitching half my tarp over it. At least I could keep my kit out of the bivi bag and keep the dew moisture off it. The shelter that came up with was truly weak and pathetic so after about an hour I gave my tired brain a rest, concluding I was achieving nothing more than giving myself a late night. 

Just as I was about to go to bed I had the almighty brainwave that I should use the other half of the tarp as a groundsheet for my bivi bag to reduce the likelihood of the bog soaking through to my mat and skin in the night.

All that was left was to persuade the dog to leave her perfect pitch and come to join me in my sweaty plastic bag. I momentarily tried leaving her alone but there were too many what-if scenarios in my head and the midges would have pissed her off eventually. She joined me, somewhat reluctantly, and made herself as broad as possible right where I wanted to put my shoulders. Eventually it was easier for me to arrange myself around her, moving towards the midge net so that I could actually breathe.

I cursed myself for not bringing the tent. We could have been so much more comfortable. As I strained the seams of the bi vi between my sleeping position, the dog's arse and the solid rock preventing us from sliding away, I resolved never to use the bivi for the two of us again unless the dog has her own accommodation.  

The dog steadfastly rolled into a ball, so much so I was convinced she couldn't be getting any oxygen. Even I was struggling in the humid air with my face pressed up to the midge net. Most of my clothes were off and the sleeping bag was in there somewhere on a just-in-case basis. I attempted to move the dog's snout towards fresh air but she just shoved it in my armpit.

At midnight she desperately wanted to go out. I did not so I fed her long lead out of the door and observed from a horizontal position as she troughed-out on moorland grasses then honked up twice. Great. Icky dog. However, she trundled back to bed and we slept for a further 5 hours with only one more vomit excursion in the night.

Poor bean. I hoped it was a short- lived thing resulting from attempting to eat toads - her latest fascination - or just sleeping without any oxygen.

I'd had around 4 hrs sleep when the pre-sunrise alarm sounded. so getting up didn't appeal. I did get up at 6.30 because I wanted some time on the hill to myself before the inevitable surge of YHA residents arrived. I didn't feel like being judged on the camp pitch that I was so disappointed with.

It was too midgey out so I quickly packed my rucsac with the things I wanted for the day and left my sleep kit behind in the bivi. I took my Tarp as emergency cover and decided I could tolerate the weight of my brew kit for the luxury of breakfast and coffee in a breezy location.. It was, in retrospect, a heavy pack for the glorious conditions but there were little annoyances/could have left behind like 2 batteries to charge Tech Plus cables + Spare map + thick gloves on a summer's day!

It could have been a heavier pack. I toyed with the idea of taking everything in case I decided to call it a day on the first ridge and descent via 2 munroes I'd already done before - cutting the trudge" home" to the car park down from 18 to 15 (but much hillier) kms. At least if I left my kit behind I'd force myself to complete the planned route and go back for my stuff.

Despite loathing my pitch I already had an hour of my 10 hour day in the bag and I soon decided there was no way I would have been successful at route-finding the tenuous path through the bogs below the beallach as I repeatedly dug out the Garmin to keep myself roughly en route in daylight. The beallach was everything I'd dreamed of though. It really was a shame we hadn't set out earlier yesterday and made it there for dinner.

I curled up on a flat rock and made my stove a makeshift shelter from boots, rucsac and my map case and burned far too much fuel heating water against the power of a midge-busting breeze. It was worth it though, the coffee and porridge brought renewed life. The only worry was the dog refusing her breakfast - or water and the lack of fuel left in my stove canister at the end. Cold rice pudding for tomorrow then! Our first challenge on (my) full belly was to cross the corrie below An Sodhail to reach the ridge out to Cam Na Darmnh and Meall a Dharmaigh. It wasn't quite the Tiramasu of Foinnaven on the HT but it wasn't easy going. We had to navigate a few peaty drop-offs and I wasn't quite ready to take the rucsac off so I slithered around a little off-kilter, finding the path again here and there before it disappeared into another rocky bluff. Lena frequently found it for me as presumably at some point another dog - or maybe deer - had used it before.

The exit route up a stream bed couldn't be lost and we were faced with another perfect rest stop where I consumed 11:45 lunch and persuaded Lena to eat a few biscuits and drink water. Her digestive system was coming back to life &she had more energy. Frustratingly this meant that after every little rocky scramble she would randomly want to travel 90degrees to the path.

My first Munro in 5-or-so years proved to be a battle of wills. 

I persevered over a rocky bluff then insisted we avoid the next lump by passing it on the left-the opposite direction to the one the dog wanted to take. On the other side I dropped to my knees on what I thought was the summit, only to find I'd just walked past it. Oh well, this bit was an out-and-back.  I'd get it on the return trip. 

We dropped down, climbed back up to the Meahl. Sure enough, the views from here were incredible. Torridon, Skye, Fisherfield, Glen Shiel! We didn't stop for long though. The breeze was getting up and I didn't know what the forecast held, except that things were set to deteriorate much later and into tomorrow. I also knew that one of the rocky pinnacles was described as "difficult" in high winds. I'd also dropped my monocular at my early lunch break and wanted it back - not that I'd seen anyone else all day that might pick it up. 

Where were all those wizened old men? Maybe they knew the forecast and the bad weather was due earlier. Should I bail? Well I couldn't - my bivibag was still sitting in a bog waiting for me - with quite a bit of other bits inside that I'd really like back.  We got our missed Munro on the way back (and found the monocular). 

The dog quite impressed me with her boulder-hopping skills though we agreed that scaling a 4ft tall pinnacle with a sloped cross section wasn't worth it to claim the extra 20cm height for the true "top" so we touched it instead and carried on back to the beallach above the boggy Corrie. 

I realised the cause of the dogs navigational distraction - a 30-headstrong deer heard .5 km away and 200 vertical metres down in the Corrie below. We watched them for a while then agreed retracing our steps through the bog for an early finish was not an attractive prospect.

The dog likes to sniff the breeze and all the scent was coming our way. The deer on the other hand, had no idea we were there. This all made me think about my bivi bag and as the wind buffeted our feet around when we walked, I resorted to carrying my walking pole horizontally so it didn't trip me up. I wondered if the bivi bag would even be there when I returned. I'd pegged it out but I've never left a pitch on a hill for the day - it didn't even occur to me to plan for changing conditions.

Our next Munro towered above us-the tallest in the chain.  I read through the notes in the book on my phone screen. It turns out we'd already done the hard scrambling that was "only risky on a windy day" and sure enough, a clear pathlet led us through the boulder field with relative ease and again, the dog moved at a measured and responsible pace and picked herself some good lines.

I was unreasonably gleeful to discover this one had a proper summit cairn although due to the freak weather, it was angled directly into the warm wind. We took a seat outside the circle of stacked stones on a couple of perfect flat rocks. Mine even had a backrest! It was around 4:30pm. I ate the last of the food that I wasn't saving for dinner, breakfast or day 3 snacks and added the Kintail ridges, Ben Nevis and Aanoch Eagach and, too many mountains I couldn't name, to the scenery. I could not believe I was so lucky. I saw my first other humans a few hundred metres away on the next summit. That must be what the people from the YHA were up to. They set off towards us just as soon as I had finished eating and was ready to leave so I did.  There was no point in ruining my record of not speaking to anyone (but the dog) all day. The people were both double-poling heavily and I wanted to avoid that. 

I thought they might catch us up as my knee started to ache and the dog wasn't faring much better. She started to use me as a gravity break and took every opportunity to sniff in all directions on the flat, grassy sections. At every obstacle I declared "We don't have to climb that??" And then we didn't anymore.* We were back at our breakfast spot and ready to start the trudge down.

In my enthusiasm to check my bivi was still there, I forgot to keep an eye out for the lense cap I dropped. If that's my mountain sacrifice for the trip I'll take it. 

I wasn't really looking forwards to getting back to my bivi pitch but I did want to know that all was well.  Rock-hopping down the streambed with a lazy dog was bad enough. How would I manage with the extra weight of the rucsac? My left knee was starting to twinge and lock with every step. I remembered the technique of putting the dog behind and she seemed content - for once - to follow my knees so that made things much easier - besides, we now knew the route down. 

I couldn't believe how low our pitch was - or how much climbing we'd done before breakfast on the beallach. As we crested the lip of the Corrie I was both overjoyed and disappointed to see my tiny bivi bag clinging to the bog far below. Now I'd have carry the feking thing home. I pondered what to do with it when I got there. It would be dinner time and quite frankly we were both ready to call it quits and have a lie down. 

My thoughts passed the time on the descent: finding a nice, breezy spot by the stream to sit, filter more water for overnight and eat the last of my packed "lunch" as dinner.A squashed beef and mustard sandwich, crisps and my last apple.There were no people noises, only flies. The other hikers had clearly climbed their peak then headed down a different way. The dog scoffed her meal willingly - finally - but I was careful not to overfeed her, in case that was my earlier mistake (it's usually not possible). 

Our spot by the stream was really pleasant and I considered just dragging the whole bivi pitch over but, despite my earlier concerns about everything blowing away, the breeze wasn't sustainable and already dying off with the fading evening light. 

We stumbled across the bog. Lena resumed her position atop the dry mossy mound and I lay down inside on the mat and rested my head for a moment before realising I was probably only making the damn thing wet again before packing it up as it had dried out nicely during the day. I deflated and packed away my bed and packed the bivi onto the bottom of my pack. I felt thoroughly justified in making use of the YHA now that I had made this commitment to descend into the valley. I'd need the Hostel to get away from the midges and, possibly, the impending rain clouds.

Reaching the deer gates that protect the forestry plantations and small YHA gardens from marauding deer herds, I felt like we'd made it. Only the hike-out to go. I knew I had enough food to survive on.  The only question was whether I could face eating more walnuts and dried apricots. The dog had more real full meals left than I did. 

Of more concern was the impending rain cloud which sauntered down the valley towards us. I had been willing it to stay-put but its progression was relentless. It was a wall of rain and more concerning was the warm wind traveling towards it - the perfect mixture for an electric storm and all I had with me was a neurotic dog and a tin shed for shelter on a high mountain pass.

I should have stopped to put my camera away and pull out my waterproofs but instead we marched on, conscious that we might miss some imaginary 7pm check-in at the YHA. Cruelly, we were 200m from the hostel when the pattering started. I ran as fast as I could with a heavy pack and the dog followed willingly under some kind of illusion that it would help. We didn't really understand that the hostel door was not open but once that was established we had to turn tail and run back around the building to the only bit which had a vague porch. It was a dreadful shelter facing straight into the wind. The dog got the only dry corner as she cowered into it. I put my back to the wind and struggled into my coat and waterproof trousers.

I cursed I'd bought my lightweight cycling ones, only good enough for pulling on over a pair of Sidi's-so I had to take my boots off first and pulled the trousers up over my skirt - what a mess. 

With everyone - including my Camera - in a waterproof state we completed a more controlled circuit of the buildings, still finding all doors locked. I banged loudly on doors and windows s called out, "anybody there?", hoping at least to raise a care­taker warden or kindly resident, and blag a night. There was no answer. 

I returned us to our temporary shelter and persuaded the dog to lie down and stay while I started to plan the best bivi deployment. Oh god, not this again, another bad nights sleep. 

A building offered my best option for shelter and some remote hope we'd be discovered and rescued at a later hour. All edges of the building were smooth. There were no pins or brackets or drain pipes anywhere useful. The low benches were not much inspiration for comfortable exit and entry to my tarp. Solar panels provided a useful sloping cover and a frame structure but seemed to be erected in a bog- and possibly a bog which formed the sewage treatment system for the site. 

At last, I reached the outside toilet. On first inspection it seemed locked but the lock hasp wasn't attached to an eyelet, it just hung there. The slider was in place just to keep the door shut in the wind. I pinched at it with my wet fingers and after the third attempt persuaded the damn thing to open. I ran back around the building to grab my backpack and dog.  She entered gladly and curled up on the lino. 

The pack went under the sink and I shut the door and sat on the throne. The room was around 1. 5 m square and was about to become our home for the night. I emptied my bladder into the ensuite facilities and took off every item of damp, hot clothing - everything then.  The toilet room was boiling! I knew I was late on my HRT patch but this room was its own personal heat wave. 

Over the next 3 hours I did the following things: moved my dog poo stash outside; used my VBL as a floor cover; had a full-body wipe-down in the sink; worried about getting locked in; slept; rested with my knees up; decided which route to walk out to save myself 2km; rested with my feet up; worried about missing out on a room if anyone showed up; inflated my mat; slept sitting upright to stretch my legs out; attempted to use my sit mat as a neck brace for sleeping upright; worried about dying in my sleep from sewer gas asphyxiation from the drainage system; propped the door open to let some air in and shut it again quickly when the midges started attacking; watched the spiders at the window; took Ibuprofen.

By 9pm, it got so stuffy in the outhouse, I decided to make one last assault on the front entrance. I had too many worries in my head - mainly missing out. I tore a leaf out of my waterproof notebook and scribbled "Walker and tired dog holed-up in the toilet. Please come and find us if you come to unlock" I signed it "A&L". It wasn't difficult to persuade the dog to stay in the bathroom. It was still raining and midgey outside and we already know she doesn't need much oxygen. I, on the other hand, relished the fresh air on my lungs and enjoyed cooling my skin in the rain. Any thoughts of moving outside were quashed by stumbling through the ankle-deep puddles that had run off the roof... and then the midges got going.

Sleeping curled up in a 1. 6m square dunny or curled around the dog in an 8ft wet plastic bag? The dunny won out.

I finally focused on the notice in the window of the YHA "Closure Dates" the last one was 4-7 September. I squinted at my watch in the darkness. Feck it was 7th. The residents last night must have been a working party. I left my note anyway - just in case- and went back to our "camp". I'd removed the dog's harness and coat to a spot under the sink and she moved over to them to get her off the hard, flat lino surface. This allowed me to turn into the corner and get my head away from the toilet waste pipe and lie on the true diagonal which meant I could feel "curled up" rather than "crammed in". 

Satisfied that either my note would be found or I would not be disturbed, I promptly slept soundly from midnight to 5:30am. when my alarm went off. I didn't want to get woken by an angry warden on toilet - cleaning duty. I packed up, moved all food to accessible pockets and filtered a suitable quantity of cold water into my last dedicated food pouch - a rice pudding desert which I'd saved for this exact purpose. I put it in the kangaroo pouch of my waterproof to "cook".

The dog was less excited about leaving. She liked her mountain kennel, fancied more sleeps and it was cold out. I put her in her jumper for the first time since February and added a rain coat just in case. That was deemed acceptable, if not quite exciting and she got moving quite quickly though I had to be careful she didn't plough headlong into puddles wearing her fleece. 

We got going at 6:15 am. The sun was appearing from behind a headland wearing a cloud as a grass skirt. A temperature inversion hung a silky blanket of steam along the river bed ahead and dewey spider webs twinkled everywhere like a sea of ping pong paddles wafting in the breeze. And oh that breeze! keeping the midge bites cool. 

We pioneered into the sunset, captivated by it, trying and failing to capture it. Eventually it materialised into another too-hot day. The dog's coats came off first. I waited until we reached our footpath turn off when we finally found a big, smooth slab by rock with an al-fresco breeze where I could eat cold, slightly crispy, rice pud (surprisingly acceptable) and remove my waterproof layers. The path to the North shore of the Glen was infinitely better on the dogs paws and she thrived in the smells left by small creatures and the lodge hunters (judging by the scent highways on Quad bike tracks). 

On the one hand I was targeting being back before 12. On the other hand, the wildlife kept providing me reasons to stop and stare. I also had my first human conversations in 2 days (while the dog made canine friends) and Lena contributed to the shoot by driving some grouse out of the woods, chattering into the morning sun.

I stayed in my trousers as long as possible to keep the midges off but eventually, I was expiring from the heat and my specsavers 2-4-1 sunglasses weren't cutting it. I switched to the Skort, found my sunglasses and promptly descended into the shelter of the forest. Still, it was so hot, even that needed me to chill out and the sunglasses controlled the blinding effects of dappling sunlight. I let myself believe I could complete the last 3km in 30 minutes and sent Andrew a spot message to come and pick me up.

At the gates to the Lodge we were diverted onto the scuzzies path around the perimeter fence, allowed only to look in on the expensive cars lined up outside, the groundsman on his quad bike going to fuel up the two power boats on the loch with petrol. Portly red faced men dressed in tweed trousers, caps and check brushed cotton shirts strutted about like lords.  Lena and I descended through the trees to the approach track on the other side of the property. At least we had it to ourselves as Lena trotted along at the extent of her lead and we weren't bothered by a single vehicle.

The broad rocky track continued along the final loch but I knew it wasn't far. My body was ready to shut down. I'd been idling for a while. I now put my back into things. I tightened the straps of my pack. uncomfortably so but we became one and it seemed easier to haul.  I pressed my painful blisters down into their perpetrators - the heels of my boots - because they wouldn't need to continue for much longer. I crammed sugary gelatinous sweets in my mouth to "keep me going" till lunch.

I ignored all tempting turnoffs to the beautiful (but slightly steeper) woodland riverside paths and smiled to myself as I suddenly recognised a bivi spot from one of my HT reccies where I'd been sensible, brought a tent and burned out the midges with a smoke coil.

Then we were at the carpark and the Mercu was there and, although Tsk had taken himself off for a walk, he had parked in one of the few very slightly breezy spots in the whole parking lot. Both Lena and I collapsed into respective heaps and waited: waited for a man to appear bearing food gifts. Our wish was granted.

*A later check of the Garmin revealed that we really should have climbed one more! An Socach was not summited as it lay off beyond the beallach before the descent from the mountain.  We could have got it if we'd been quicker but as it is, we'd have been soaked and making it down to the the Youth Hostel in darkness so it looks like I need to go back another time.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Bynack Beag, Bynack More and Cairn Gorm

Driving out to places to walk isn't something I've done for a while but I decided knocking the approach hike down to 4 wild kms around Cairn Gorm's flanks was infinitely preferable to 9km hiking over stony fire roads and rocky approach tracks from the Campsite (only to have to walk down on the road and repeat Wednesday's walk" home"). So we chugged upto Coire na Ciste carpark and joined 1 car and 5 vans staring into the fog.

It was the first time we've hiked together in a couple of years, racing having taken precedence over most holidays. I was in charge of now so I cheated and used the GPS to avoid any agonising back-tracking but the paths were mostly worn to the first ridge.

Just below the rim of the Choire, an older couple were stopped, discussing where to go next and we tried our best to persuade them to venture further whilst inwardly hoping they'd move on so we could steal their rock and stop for some food. They didn't.

Just over the top of the ridgeline we made use of a few stones in the heather to consume sandwiches whilst quietly watching an eagle soar by even closer than the one I saw on the flanks of Bealach Horn.

We dropped down to the river easily, the substantial bog having been dried out by the summer sun. The book said "straight up the other side to a sandy path".

Future sandy path - about 100m from the summit
• • •

We complied but it was hard going against the grain of the heather so found a faint path to follow in a zigzag. It intermittently disappeared so was still a tough climb. A gaggle of 12 ptarmigan scattered in the sun, taking to the wing like a flock of mountain pigeons then disappearing amongst the granite rocks.


 

At the top was Bynack Beag which we summitted to add to the Corbett list then hiked over to Bynack More where bizarre granite rock formations looked more like a jumble of dumped armchairs and sofas piled up alongside the path. 


 

These "Barns" continued off our first Munro of the day looking like a combination of cosy bivi shelters or stony coffins.

• • •

More Ptarmigans mooched around on the descent, convinced we couldn't see them, even though snow hasn't yet fallen. Their fluffy feet now visible, they were so close. A mountain hare saw us before we saw it and darted across the hillside, disappearing faster than the spindly path we had been following. 

I challenge you to spot them (2)
 

The book lamented "descend to the saddle where the full glory of the Cairn Gorms opens up before you".  Smug bastard.  The cloud lifted and broke enough for us to take it in "piecemeal" rather than "full glory" but Look Eounach was exposed along with its surrounding peaks and as we crossed the (not so) boggy ridgeline from where we could see many Cairngorms summits intermittently spread across the Landscape rolling around us.


 

• • •

The path up to Cairn Gorm's South shoulder was taken at a slower pace by me, still struggling with biking last week  and 2 walks this week.

It was a beautiful place to stop and eat the rest of lunch and take in some sugar though.

We left the path too early, making a bee line for the summit up sheep flanks but it was too hard going and we didn't seem to be making any progress. We must've looked desperate and lost as the mountain rescue helicopter made 2 passes to check we were OK. It didn't help that TSK's bootlace snapped so on the helicopter's second pass, I was providing shelter whilst he repaired the lace. We gave them the signal for "No thanks, we're fine, really", at 4:30 pm, and carried on. As the chopper disappeared up the Glen, I inwardly wobbled and hoped there really *was* a nice easy descent from the top.

After what seemed like a never ending trudge across a lunar landscape, the tourist path up from the carpark finally came into view. We bailed out of our rocky, mossy trudge and enjoyed the final 50m on compacted sand. 




 

The only other 2 people we saw on the mountain were well loaded backpackers about to make their descent to the loch for the night before attempting Ben Macdui tomorrow. She reassured me they had a fine selection of layers - as we all stood chatting amongst the summit snow which fell yesterday evening.

Summit selfies taken, we started the march down the tourist path, ignoring what would have been the easier option over something we perceived to be quicker.

It was our only nav error. In our rush to go the quick way down we endured a steep harsh descent on big rocks interspersed with slippery gravel and a few close-calls on my part as I skidded around on the loose stones.

The route we should have taken was glaringly obvious as a path but we'd descended too far and there was a steep gully in the way.so we sucked it up and kept going.

• • •

While there were no "tourist hoards" around to avoid (the book recommends the descent of the Coire na Ciste ridges to avoid the tourists), we did encounter a drone pilot as I weighed up the most effective way to rid myself of the electronic hornet - a small stone or the discarded orange peel 1'd picked up on the way down. The pilot took the hint, jumped in his car and left.

 

The walk to the van along the road was predictably tedious yet quiet. Interesting noseying at the out-of-season ski infrastructure.


The distant sunset developing under cover of the mountain cloud we'd been cursing turned from yellow to gold then finally, as we got to the van and ate our sandwiches, the glow emerged, casting pink light across the highlands, including through the clouds still shrouding Cairn Gorm and I experienced The Most Enchanting evening of the whole fortnight. It could only have been more perfect if we'd lingered on the mountain a little longer but still, it was a tad chilly for that and we quickly started the engine on the van and headed down to a warm pod and a hot shower.