Friday 30 December 2011

Ledge Route, Ben Nevis

Plans to camp out in North Face car park fell with dreadful weather, so we bunked in the Bank St hostel - not the best place with drunks etc o/s at 2am. However, a 5am rise saw us leaving the NF carpark around 6am ahead of the queues.

We trudged up the path in the dark with no snow until about 500m. The path became indistinguishable and we ended up above the CIC hut entering the main corrie. Once we got our bearings, we saw that the ridges were bare, and gullies were out, (North East Buttress was my objective, but no-one felt it was on - they were right). We wandered up to No 5 gully and saw evidence of the earlier avalanche


The Curtain was pretty bare! 

After a quick strategy chat, we headed for a look at Ledge Route but wondered if the wind would prevent us crossing the ledge, higher up. We set off in windy snowdrift and found ourselves at the start of the higher ledge. Mark took a harder line to the left of the ledge but dislodged a huge bolder which thankfully stuck in the snow beside us. Suitably satisfied the line was for another day, we headed up the ledge proper.



We neared the top in nice conditions but as soon as we hit the plateau, the westerly winds hit us with a vengeance and it was struggle to stay upright. Mark had a route card for nav'ing off points on the Ben and we took a dog leg around the dangers and hit the Red Burn spot on.  We wandered down in the gale to a boulder for some shelter and a well earned sarnie and obligatory tomato soup, thence to the car.

The Red Burn

A great day and my new glove's strategy worked a treat - brilliant industrial rubber gloves courtesy of Mike - they work...just need to buy a jacket to match them now


All in, a great day in the hills, and wall to wall smiles at the end of the day still gave us enough time to visit Nevis Sport for a quick coffee and cake before a mad dash down the road (with two stops for desperately sore cramp for me on the way :( )




Sunday 18 December 2011

Mark's Crack - new line on the Cobbler

A very late in the day change of mind saw me, Bill and Mark head for the Cobbler to do MacLay's Crack which Mark and I looked at last year but never got on. The early views were stunning.
It was a wonderful morning but the forecast was to close in with more snow. We swam up to the start ahead of some crowds and were amazed by the quantity of soft unconsolidated snow - indeed the was evidence of a monster avalanche out of the gully heading up towards the peak.
Mark took the lead and swam, literally, up first pitch, and part of the second to belay in a neat little cave (very similar to Vanishing Gully on the Ben). The next pitch looked interesting and Mark steamed up it in no time, with Bill and I following on. This is no doubt a lovely climb in better conditions but was really not very reassuring in what we had. That said, we renamed it Mark's Crack in honour of his lead.
We came down in jig time but I still managed to incur some wrath for a late home for family dinner :( Conditions would have been amazing if the snow was wetter with a freeze but it is very powdery, has at least two layers in the first foot which are avalanche prone - 2" and 4" down and the turf is decidedly warm - not at all frozen. With a little rain and a good freeze the conditions will be stellar but forecast is not promising for a freeze. Ever hopeful my back recovers soon, as it is a proverbial pain in the ass, just a little higher tho!! Lower back pain is a real hinderance when carrying a sack and climbing, even tho Bill and Mark lugged the heavy stuff, but hey ho, that's what friends do. All in a great climb under normal conditions - we just never had them. The approx line - book is not overly helpful - climb in two pitches (not three); first to fork (20m) and follow groove on left to cave belay (another 10m tops - pic of me sitting therein). Continue directly up on corner to left out of cave to steep wall 5m; climb wall direct and follow for 5m then cut back right on ledge to steep groove (5m) and climb direct to poor belay (10m) by very small fir tree :) Climb direct thereafter on easy ground to top (2 pitches in total and ignore poor directions in book!)
As you can see, weather deteriorated!!

Thursday 15 December 2011

...rather than a Night at the Opera

Bill and I chose some night time navigation practice rather than heading for a re-run of the inaugural performance of Antonio Salieri's Europa riconosciuta at Nuovo Regio Ducale Teatro alla Scala, in Milano - night time nav has never had such appeal :) Anyway, we headed for Shantron Hill off the A817 near Faslane and did a bit of pacing, timing and walking on a bearing. We did a lot of contour interpretation and matching bearings to the map and vice a versa too. Mark couldn't make it due to carrying me at the weekend; we missed him terribly and let him know we were enjoying ourselves on some grade two ground;
Other than having fun, it was actually damn cold near the top in a chilly, biting wind, evidenced by ice on the pavement back home. Sadly, it was all gone in the morning as a warm front moved over us. Wednesday's remain nav night, Thursday are Opera and Sunday's are climbing, and biking...in what order is determined by the weather. Sadly, we missed the Opera, which was apparently half decent; the location might catch on :)

Sunday 11 December 2011

Mixed bag in SCNL - and first suicide deer!

Mark and I had our first real alpine start this morning and made SCNL car park in the dark. The usual slog up there left us exhausted - it is a hard walk but today the snow was mushy and breaking under foot up to the thigh at times...it did not bode for great conditions when some young lad walked out saying it was not in.
Undeterred, we slogged on and made the lochans in good time. It was too warm tho and the conditions were not good - snow just pulled through, no ice and no frozen turf.
Without hooking, it was a bit sketchy at times and the work to get to the base of Boomerang Arete damn near killed us old guys :) - in my defence, my back was agony after a recent muscle strain.
However, we got on route and made the best of a bad deal - not great and took a safer variation nearer the top to avoid some dicey conditions.
We moved together a bit and finished off to the summit in a flurry of horrible spindrift - there was loads of it thro the day, blowing soft snow and graupel all around the mountain. There was quite a lot of new snow about, so a good freeze thaw will likely make the routes bomber, as there is enough snow, but continued warm days will rise the avalanche threat probably...I wouldn't be rushing back in the next few days unless we got a great freeze.
All in, a 50-50 day; great to get out, glad we made the effort but pity about the conditions. Plenty teams on Dorsal, one swimming up Central Buttress Ordinary Route and maybe one rope went for SC Gully, but not sure. The walk out just reminded me why SCNL is always a long, hard day (need to get fitter) - guide book out for more on the Bookle! On the drive down the road, we nearly came to an inglorious end when a deer walked out, rather nonchalantly to be sure, in front of the car blissfully unaware of his near impending death...Mark's keen eye to protect his 'hairdresser's car' saved the day and the deer. Suicide deer should wear fluorescent jackets!!!

Sunday 4 December 2011

First Winter Climb - worst hot aches - EVER!

Mark and I ramped up at CR for the first winter climb of the winter and found it in nice nick - plenty winter cold, snow under foot but no ice - a full on mix route today but great. We moved together mostly but pitched the first steep pitch and the pitch up to the open book corner. I had the crappest Mountain Hardware gloves on - going straight back to the shop - burst after 2 wears and waterproof as my £1 watch I got off the looky-looky man in Majorca! Anyway, had the worst hot aches ever after the first pitch as my hands were cold and wet - screaming in pain but they then warmed up for the rest of the day :) Got to the top in a white out and down into the tourist route corrie in dreadful, driving spindrift - great fun...what a great day :) Back to the car with my feeet screaming in anger at my ill fitting new Scarpas - need a new strategy to last the day. All in a fantastic opener to the season - two super-nice pitches to test winter skills and placing gear on front points on rock - always fun. Can hardly believe we saw no-one all day - where was everyone? Plenty of snow in the lee of the wind and the corrie down had bucket loads. Hopefully it all stays and consolidates a bit with the cold and more snow coming. Turf was only beginning to freeze high up where exposed - a real cold snap is needed to turn it into an ice fest for the harder routes. All in - smiles all round and another 5 star day. Bill enjoyed himself too....decorating :( Some pics - first is my favourite.
First pitch
Hot aches
Mark coming up to the open book corner nr the top
Coming up to Crowberry Gap

Sunday 30 October 2011

Mountain Leader Assessment Success!!!

Monday 24 to Friday 28 October - what a week! Had my Summer ML with MLTS thro Abacus Mountaineering and Kenny Grant MIC (Point Five Mountaineering) around the Fort William area, and what a week. Day one had us doing 1.50 nav on Meall Bhanabhie, and what a task - featureless horrid terrain which does not hep confidence. A bit of emergency carry and stream crossing saw day 1 close with a dip in confidence after a poor days nav :(
The next day saw us on Meall Cumhainn for steep ground and emergency rope work which went well after good prep work with Mark, helping with confidence for the approaching 3 day Expedition. Home for food and a shower at Kimber's place and packing the sack for the exped saw me take over the kitchen, but got everything in to my excellent Osprey 45l bag ready for the days ahead looking positively iffy (not like the coffee!)
We headed for Garven to the south of Loch Shiel and headed into the hills. To be honest, I was nervous and wondered if I had the skills but some early successes proved I had the skills and gave renewed confidence to make the right choices. Things remained good throughout the day with one or two moments of 'OMG' but generally things were solid and my legs were sound. The crux for me was an excellent night nav session with Kenny finding all the points on the way and having confidence to say we were definitely at various points despite others apprehensions - this session really clinched things for me and the following day with Mike was good with some sound nav and minor mistakes (made by all tbh) were within scope of award, although the penultimate leg left me wondering if I'd blown it as I missed the fact we didn't hit the top on Ewan's leg...although I think we all missed it. We strode down the path back to the car having a good chat and got back to base for the big decision. Sadly, one of the guys deferred on nav but the other 5 got the tick, much to my relief and immense personal satisfaction :) After a bit of chat with Mike and Kenny, I headed off elated to Ellis Brigham for a reward of some window shopping, although it was hard not to buy some Haglofs or ArcTeryx gear..... Low points of the week were the first day's nav and my compass reversing polarity on the morning of the exped...high points were the night nav, security on steep ground and getting the pass. I can safely say it is a hard earned and much respected award - by me now anyway, and others I have spoken to - requiring a great deal of prep work and damn good nav skills. I was fair chuffed to get the award and sang merrily to myself on the way down in the car, to my dear wife's open arms for a well earned well done. Now that's out he way, seems winter ML is next on the agenda...aaargh?!?!? Big thanks to Mike and Kenny and Mike @ Abacus Mountain Guiding for the pics...hope you don't mind Mike??

Sunday 9 October 2011

Tomato soup in the conservatory?

Good days nav and rope work in the hills in Glen Kinglas, past the Rest and Be Thankful. Very wet, but good practice then some nice soup in an open cave, come conservatory
Eventually cleared to a view of sorts but burns raging all over the place. Coffee in Arrochar and home for a hot bath and a kip :)

Friday 7 October 2011

MoD Plod to the Rescue

Out on the hill in, initially, poor weather but cleared into a quite lovely starry night for a bit of night navigation with Markus Baghdatus, aka Dan Draper! Anyway, nice plod up the hill, apart from 'Day of the Ferns' again and found a nice spot out the wind for the perfunctory Tomato soup. Good contour interp' saw us pick up the burn down hill, traverse across to the next and follow it down hill picking up some good features. I'd forgotten my Ay-Up lights, world's best head torch and biking lights, so borrowed Mark's pesky Petzl thingy...how on earth can you nav with that...I could hardly read the map with it!! Anyways, 200m up, Mark's Ay Up picked out the MoDs checking my car (?), so a sprint down to the car saw us gassing with him for 5, and him wondering what the heck he was seeing out the mist; thankfully he kept Fang and Tyson in the back of his car, so we scooted back to Glw in warp time and in bed for midnight. Good night, with conours showing nice, tho used 1.25k as visibility poor without uber Ay Up :) No pics but Sunday on the hills for more fun and games...patience my son! This will keep you going...
Oh yes...it's coming soon :)

Sunday 2 October 2011

Suunto - cheapo - busto - buyo...and more soupo too

Another good day in the hills with Markus, who still has his grandfather's Suunto watch still going, tho dying a death when it hits 2 rain drops a year...buyo newzo :)
Good handrailing and burn climbing (canyoning in reverse) to the summit for statutory soup and sarnie. Amazing rock formation on the way down, then car for a quick change and home. Good nav day with poor vis and much rough terrain...never lost

Saturday 24 September 2011

Paradise Lost...Paradise found?

Hard day in the hills nav'ing around craggy ground above Ardlui. After a few weeks of good nav practice, today proved more challenging and despite knowing where I was, I just couldn't tick the boxes in terms of contour interpretation; a knock to the confidence but good to learn from my mistakes.
On the promise of tomato soup, Mark will do many things...thankfully nav is one of them, and he is a good coach despite his age. Lots of rope work too despite my attempts to kills us all :) Anyway, timings, pacing good up, across and down but interpretation needs polished. After a very long day in the hills, Mark managed to get his carnation sorted at late o'clock, while I got kicked like a dog on arriving home :(
A wee video to entertain...the ground we covered was super for climbing, scrambling, nav'ing and walking...shows you don't need Munro ticks to have a great day. We even saw a herd of deer and got a damn good soaking to finish off the good day.

Wednesday 14 September 2011

Cadbury's milk chocolate...worked it out yet?

Great couple of nights over a week with Marko nav'ing in the Arrochar Alps nr Beinn Ime. Super clear one time, the tail end of a hurricane the next...can you identify which is which??? Bet you can. Burns in uber spate last night but good nav practice was rewarding; timing, pacing and walking on a bearing in the dark all worked fine. Wild life was interesting to say the least
Never even knew he was there... Great rock structures also seen - neat mica schist boulder split around a million years ago...good for climbing on tho'.
All in, great value nights and hopefully things going in at a faster rate than they go out...Mark, the every present coach, was fed and watered at every opportunity...he's even putting weight on...but Tuesdays are out for marriage...take note Jane; Sunday's too and the occasional Saturday :)

Wednesday 31 August 2011

Applecross - and more...

Final update from my trip to Applecross with Colin. Great fun, average weather, great food, mre than average chance of a return... Some surprises to add too.......fantastic memories :)))

Applecross and more... from C Coid on Vimeo.

Monday 22 August 2011

Thursday 11 August 2011

Glen Shiel and Applecross Peninsula - via Toronto and Copenhagen

Great time up north with my cuz Colin from Canada. We did the Forcan Ridge in great weather then saw some wonderful parts of Applecross and its environs, including a wee thatched cottage in Lobains which was occupied up until 1995 or thereabouts by an elderly gent.

It is a truly beautiful part of the country, worth visiting on many occasions. Hopefully this wee video gives a feel for its splendour - visit it, as the communities up there need your time and money to survive :)

Untitled from C Coid on Vimeo.

Monday 11 July 2011

Torridon Mountain Biking

Great few days MTBing in Scotland's greatest trails with Bill and Andy, from Go-Where Scotland.

Simply epic days in the hills - and a few spills...no names, but not me or Andy :)

Simply Epic Mountain Biking in Torridon from C Coid on Vimeo.

Friday 8 July 2011

Some Road Biking and Climbing on the Argyle Peninsula and the Cobbler

Great days with Peter, Mark and Bill in the Argyle area and the Cobbler. Great fun day again
Four Amigos

Sunset over Loch Fyne


Simply Epic do road tour and climbing on Argyle Peninsula from C Coid on Vimeo.

Nice wee video of our exploits

Thursday 7 July 2011

Monday 27 June 2011

Neilston Quarry - climbing with Valerie

Nice evening so headed to NQ with Valerie, my beautiful daughter, and Mark the offio photographer for a spot of climbing and abseil.

Val was unimpressed I left the lids and quickdraws behind...doh...but always one to improvise, she got Mark's lid and we made draws from the slings.

Nice climbing on dry warm rock was good fun for Val's first trip on rock for some time. She really enjoyed it tho and wants more :)

That was music to Dad's ears.

Neilston Quarry with Valerie from C Coid on Vimeo.

Wednesday 22 June 2011

Loch Ard and Lewis - Downhill superstar in the making

Good night out with Milgavie Youth Cafe followed by a day out with Can You Experience at Loch Lomond.

Great time and Lewis, downhill WC racer at Fort William recently, was on tow to show off his considerable skills on the bike. Super skills at the stairs and the kids stood in awe.

All in a great day and what a bike carrier Can You have...Bill and I looked at it with envy!! :)

Untitled from C Coid on Vimeo.

Saturday 18 June 2011

Cobbler - in the cold

Summer should be for climbing in shorts, bitten by midges and nice warm rock to shake off winter chills.

On the other hand, this is Scotland...so a late planned trip up the Cobbler on 16 June saw us on the rock at 830 pm. Windmills with the arms to get blood back in the fingers did not harbinge summer thrills.

Frozen fingers and more at the first belay was not expected and Mark, fast approaching with every piece of clothing on, compounded my thoughts of an early bail.

Mark pulled over the lip on p2 and we set up the abseil, avoiding the crux final pitch in probable rain and deeper cold...JUNE...SUMMER...ur havin' larff!


Interestingly our tat from last year was still in place; so we cut it out, put new stuff in and off I went. A slip on the way down shifted the tat over a sharp edge and cut the sheath on it...aaargh - altho it was fine, it was backed up and so never in danger :)) Mark did a quick repair on it and down he came for a sprint back to the car in 46 mins from the bealach; that's fast!!
Should have shared ur crisps earlier!! :))

Great night out; good exercise, nav and two top pitches made it worth the 2 days of gardening revenge Fiona punished me with :)

She's a star for letting me go tho :)))))