Archive for the ‘Extended trips’ Category

New Year Meet 2009

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

This year's new year trip was to the Alex Macintyre Hut, near Glencoe. A dozen of us made the journey north, and for once the snow didn't all melt the day before we arrived. Carmen and I drove up on Boxing Day, everyone else turned up a day or two later.

December 27. Sron na Lairig, grade II. Supposed to be an easy warm up day, but the deep snow put paid to that! The 4km walk in took a couple of hours, under grey skies with occasional snow flurries. The climb itself was trickier than expected, with no ice but loads of powder over rock with a little mostly frozen turf. A great mountaineering route, with some mildly terrifying pinnacles and an a cheval snow arete near the top, for which we roped up. The continuation to the summit took an age, as it was knee-deep snow all the way with little sign of any recent visitors, but also because the skies had cleared so we had to keep stopping to take photos. The summit too was deserted, nobody else had been that way all day despite its being a Munro. The descent was down the NE ridge, with its notorious bad step. Again, harder than expected – all possibilities looked too scary so in the end we abbed down the last section just as the last of the daylight disappeared. Luckily the full moon was bright enough to throw shadows as we continued along the ridge. We opted for an early descent into the valley, at a point where we could see there were no major crags to find a way round. It still took a good hour to cover the 1/2km to the bottom!

December 28. Definitely a short day this time, a walk up the twin Munros of Buachaille Etive Beag. We'd both done them before but not on as glorious day as this. Plenty of other people about (though most only did the main summit) so the paths were well trodden. Spectacular views in all directions, but especially of Bidean nam Bian and our previous day's route. Meanwhile, Alan and Nigel went for a long walk up Gulvain (near Glenfinnan), finishing long after dark.

December 29. Aonach Eagach (grade II/III). A winter traverse has been on my "to do" list for years, but every previous winter trip to Glencoe has been preceded by a massive thaw. Not so this year! Strong winds were forecast so it was without much optimism that Alan, Rich, Jenny, Carmen and I slogged up the hill. But somehow we managed to be sheltered along the whole ridge – Peter and Annie were on the other side of the valley and had trouble walking due to the wind (or was it the pies?), and Simon, Debra and Ben had a similar experience on Beinn an Dothaidh. It was worth the long wait for winter conditions, we had a magnificent day in clear cold conditions (between -6 and -8 along the ridge). Quick progress at first gradually slowed as we all started to tire, and the ropes came out to safe guard the pinnacled section. But we had passed the tricky bits before the sun set, all that remained was the ascent of the final Munro and the long descent in the dark back to the car we'd left at the Youth Hostel. 12 hours car-to-car, a great day.

December 30. Wild weather was forecast, and duly arrived. Ben and Nigel joined us for a short walk up Sgurr na' h-Eanchainne, a Corbett on the other side of the Corran Ferry. At least I thought it was a Corbett, but realised half way up it was actually a few metres short, so no ticks today, much to Nigel's disgust A nice little hill, with superb views across to the Glencoe hills and further north to Ben Nevis. Peter and Annie pushed their bikes round some snowy woods, I'm not sure about the others!

December 31. Expecting a sunny day, we plumped for the Ballachulish Horseshoe (Beinn a' Bheithir). The ascent up the NE ridge of Sgorr Bhan proved trickier than expected, and soon Carmen and I were on our own. Ben took a long detour round the awkward bit, hoping to meet us later, while Simon and Debra retreated to the nice warm hut. Sadly the forecast sun never arrived and we spent most of the day in the clag. We briefly considered heading back from the col between the Munros, but Ben had left his car at the far end so we pressed on. There was no sign of Ben, but not much sign of anything else either, so we decided not to wait. Navigation on the last section proved tricky, with undulating terrain and loads of identical small lochans, many not marked on the map. But eventually we emerged from the cloud, in roughly the right place. The final descent was a little more entertaining than hoped for, as we had to find a way in the dark round countless small outcrops and a couple of large cliffs, but we made it to the road and soon met Ben, who in best Annie style had bumped into an old friend on the hill and taken the descent from the col. I'm not sure what everyone else did – I think Annie and Peter went up Gulvain, but cheated by taking mountain bikes for the long approach.

New Years Eve. Preparation of the haggis supper was well under way, when suddenly we were plunged into darkness. The main fuse had blown! So we adjourned to a quiet and atmosphere-free Kings House for dinner before returning to the hut – where Nigel had nobly remained to organise an emergency electrician, so we had light in time for the customary new year falling asleep.

January 1. A return to the Beinn a' Bheithir for Carmen and me, this time for some ice climbing. Very slow going through deep powder with a hard crust which sometimes supported, and sometimes gave way. When we reached the north ridge of Sgorr Bhan we saw a small icefall and took the opportunity to stop for a rest and climb it. Nice easy climbing on fantastic ice, Carmen led straight up the middle for a good little 30m grade II. After this, some more crusty powder led to the main route of the day, Russian Roulette II/III. I say 'main' but it's only 50m high! Loads of ice, though more brittle than our first route, with lots of dinner-plating. Back to the sacks just as the last of the light disappeared, and the standard walk-out in the dark.

January 2. We decided on an easy day with a short walk in so went for a look at the Aonach Dubh cliffs on Bidean nam Bian. We didn't bother with a guidebook as we were just looking for some short easy angled ice to play on. Firstly we tried the Allt Coire nam Beithach but there was too much flowing water and not enough ice. Higher up though, there was loads of ice. A steep icy gully looked tempting but probably too hard, and there was a group of 3 just starting (we later found that this was Number 6 Gully, grade IV ***). So we went for an easy looking line of ice further right, which looked about grade II and one or two pitches. One minor epic and 3 pitches later, we reached the top – much steeper than it looked, the last pitch was vertical for a few metres! Harder than anything else we'd done, I reckoned about III/IV. Consulting the book later it turned out to be Squaddies Climb, grade II/III, only mildly humiliating – fun though.

A great week, in great weather – and it was just the beginning of a great winter!

Loads of photos here.
Peter's bike-pushing pictures here.
Debra's photos here.

Free Sunday in Vegas

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Although tempted to join Simon, Carmen, Rob and Peri on a cold and wet scramble up Elbow Ridge, I decided instead to spend last Sunday climbing at Red Rocks just outside Las Vegas…

The walk in - Mescalito is the peak in the centre.

Ok, so I didn't actually take a 10 hour flight just for a Sunday's climbing. I was in Las Vegas for a conference for work and fortuitously had Sunday free. With no partner to climb with, I had hired a guide (Mark Limage) through Jackson Hole Mountain Guides to take me out. After a jetlag-aided wakeup, I set off at 5.30am from my hotel, leaving behind the gamblers still emptying their bank accounts into slot machines. Mark suggested an early start as it was Thanksgiving weekend and likely to be very busy. This turned out to be a great decision as by the time we parked up, there were only two other cars there and no other climbers visible.

Birdland climbs the middle of the second buttress from the left.

I said in my email to Mark that I was looking to do classic, low grade multi-pitch. When I booked it sounded like I wouldn't be able to lead but luckily it turned out he was happy to let me. We parked at the head of Pine Creek Canyon and set off walking towards the obvious peak of Mescalito. After about 30 minutes walking, we decided to head for the 5 pitch, 190m, 5.7+ route Birdland, which it subsequently transpired had been put up by Mark. Most of the popular routes here have bolted belays and this route also had one lead bolt. Bolting is now forbidden so any new routes will rely on natural belays.

Exiting the chimney at the top of pitch 2.

Mark led the first two pitches, the first a juggy face pitch up incredibly featured rock at about vdiff. The second a harder chimney pitch leading out onto a large belay ledge. The first two pitches are shared with another route which then heads up a large corner crack to the left. On the first ascent, Mark said they were expecting the route to be much harder from here but some clever route finding means you get into some spectacular positions without any difficult climbing.

Leading up the leaning flake at the start of pitch 3.

The crux third pitch had good gear so Mark suggested I give it a go, first traversing up a rising flake, then a few harder moves getting over a bulge followed by easy climbing to a wonderfully positioned belay. The rock was very amenable to climb on with tons of good nut placements and combinations of cracks and face holds. By the time I reached the belay, hordes of climbers could be seen approaching from the car park (by the time we abbed from the top, there were 4 other parties on the route!)

Finger crack on pitch 5 slab (nicked from another site).

The 4th pitch moved out onto a more open face with more variable rock to a small belay in the middle of the face. Mark handed me back the lead for the final 5th pitch. This began with an easy but run out traverse followed by a steep but juggy finger crack over a bulge. Past the bulge, the perfect finger crack continued up the middle of a spectacular hanging slab which got increasingly difficult and harder to protect. The last couple of moves on small holds to reach the tiny belay ledge took me quite a while to work out. Once I'd clipped the belay I could take in the airy position and spectacular views across the canyon.

5 abseils took us back to the bottom with plenty of the day still left, so we hiked further up the canyon to a couple of single pitch crack climbs. The first, "Remote Control" – a 5.9 up a corner crack, was reasonably straightforward with good face holds where needed. I seconded it ok but am not sure I would have led the 5m run out to the belay! The second, "Out of Control" – a 5.10a jamming/offwidth, was a real battle and very reminiscent of gritstone (my guess is this would be a 3* E1 on a peak crag). I jammed the first third reasonably well but ran out of strength when the crack narrowed to finger width. After a rest, I then launched into the offwidth section where I thrashed around slowly gaining height and eventually falling onto the rope again. By the time I got back down I felt like I'd been beaten up. A classic single pitch route (if you're better than me).

Spot the climbers - a pair on Y2K

Before walking out, we looked across the canyon at a spectacularly positioned pair on Y2K – a 5.10a up the north east side of Mescalito. The whole area is really impressive and according to Mark, massively undeveloped. He pointed out whole huge buttresses which have no recorded routes – many with obvious cracks and chimneys running the full height. To have so much climbing so near to a big city is amazing – I'd definitely recommend it!

Jim's Australia Trip

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

Here is a brief trip report on some of the climbing we did while in Oz. We were planning to go to Point Perp for some sea cliff climbing, but found out the cliff was closed for militiary operations (operation safe haven). So stayed in the Bluies and had a day at The Zig Zag, climbing Bumflute, grade 17 and some unnamed climb to the right about grade 16. The following day, Saturday 8th August, we did a bushwalk out to a place called the Ruined Castle via The Golden Stairs. It was close to where the British backpacker recently went missing for 12 days. We even discovered a goodbye from his father chiselled into a rock out there complete with a red rose.

Climbing Bumflute, a 2 star sports climb at Zig Zag Cliff.

The next day Mike and I decided we had done enough sandstone and took the drive out to Tarana, this is a great place for a change with Granite slab climbing being the order. Mainly bolted, but often very run out. We managed several climbs, but the best were Save the Whale (1 bolt!), grade 19, Spare the Hammer, grade 19 and hard at that, a couple of unnamed climbs that we had not found before at grades 16 and 14 and my best effort on this trip, Bloodbath, grade 20. It follows a water polished slab to a dyke and luckily has enough bolts to make feel OK. Despite the cool temps it still felt very slippy and required every move to be made carefully. We finished the day with a walk along the escarpment finding a couple of new lines to go and do, while bouldering the first moves of a crack there I almost grabbed hold of a small Eastern Brown Snake! I mangaged to leap backwards a couple of metres when I spotted it.

Mike following Spare the Hammer. Tarana.

Leading an unnamed grade 18 on Deckout Buttress, Tarana.

After this we drove down to Jervis Bay for 3 days camping and bushwalking and were treated to a full on electric storm and cheeky wildlife, a possum stole our chocolate biscuits and cheese and even had a kangaroo trying to get in the back of our car.

The Far North West

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Prior to the club meet in Glencoe over the Bank Holiday weekend, Carmen and I took a week off to explore the far north of Scotland.

It was pouring with horizontal rain for most of the journey, getting gradually worse the closer we got to our destination. So we decided we couldn't face camping, and stopped at the Craske Inn, a small hotel/pub/hill farm in the middle of nowhere. It's a great place, just 3 rooms, and bags of atmosphere, highly recommended. And the landlord/farmer, despite having been up there for 40 years, turns out to have been brought up in Malton!

Next day it was cloudy but expected to improve, so we went for Ben Klibreck (a Munro). The normal route seemed to have little to commend it, apart from being short, so we did a longer route from Altnaharra to the north. Altnaharra may be familiar from the weather forecasts in the middle of winter when it is often the coldest place in the UK. The sun did indeed arrive, and we had a great day with excellent views, loads of lapwings, and even more baby baa lambs. We took a detour to the east ridge where there was a surprisingly large monument to two airmen killed in a flying accident in the 1950s. Despite being a sunny Sunday we only met 3 people all day, all of them on the 'tourist route'.

After a very nice night camped by the road (the sort of road with grass up the middle), the next day we went for the other Munro in the area, Ben Hope. Again, this is usually climbed as a quick there-and-back from the road, and is often done in the same day as Klibreck, with a short drive in between. Again though we wanted to make a full day of it, so contoured round the hill to reach the north ridge. Once we'd left the tourist route behind, there was little sign that anyone else had ever been there, despite this being the finest way up the hill. A little easy scrambling and a deer-path up the fine grassy ridge was followed just below the summit by the 'bad step' , and easy-ish (about Diff) but dirty and extremely exposed 10m section. On my last visit, I was on my own, and bottled this bit in favour of a dirty gully off to the left. But this time we had a scrambling rope and a bit of gear, so were successful. Passing a handful of people on the summit we set off to the south-east (the tourist path goes south west), heading for the south ridge, but soon abandoned this plan as heavy rain arrived and sent us running down the normal route to the car.

We set up camp in the site at Durness, on the top of the cliffs overlooking sandy beaches, idyllic. Next day was forecast to be wet, so we took the ferry across to the bird sanctuary of Handa Island, where we wandered round taking photos of puffins. Not surprisingly, it was the sunniest day of the week, so when back on the mainland we took the opportunity to do a few climbs on roadside outcrops. Mostly fairly ordinary climbing in a stunning setting, but one in particular was superb, Updraught (Severe **) on Creag an Dubh Loch, overlooking Handa and the tiny port of Tarbet. There was no sign that anybody had ever been there before, let alone climbed the route.

After the usual dithering, we decided to have another mountain day after this, and went for Foinaven. This narrowly escaped being promoted to Munro status recently, but fortunately turned out to be a couple of metres too short, and so nobody ever goes there. A controversial new landrover track up the glen made for a quick if blemished approach, but it was still a couple of hours until we left the track and took to open country to approach the top of A' Ch'eir Ghorm. This is largely composed of scree, but has a series of relatively solid buttresses on one side, and our intended route was up one of these.

The guidebook offers three routes, at Mod, Diff, and VDiff, and the total description given is that there is a cairn at the foot of each route. We meant to do either the Diff or the Mod and so had left rock shoes behind in favour of climbing in walking boots. It took forever to cross the loose scree slope to reach the rock, and by this time, the increasingly threatening weather had unleashed some heavy showers, so the rock was dripping wet. We found what might have been the remains of one cairn, but there was no sign of any others – as it was probably several years since anyone else had been daft enough to come up here, they have probably merged into the scree by now. As we debated whether to head up into the unknown, another heavy shower intervened, and we headed back along the scree, where we opted for the easy-but-tortuous way up, a 300m 45-degree scree slope.

After admiring some spectacular rainbows, we headed along the shattered ridge, mostly bypassing some rather fragile pinnacles, and up into the cloud, where we stayed. We had to imagine the fine views, with steep scree falling either side of the ridge and even the vague hints of a path, as there was nowhere else to go. From the summit, we decided to miss the final top (the inside of one cloud being much the same as the inside of another), and headed down the seldom-visited NE ridge of Ganu Mor. I picked up a discarded sweet wrapper on the way, with a best before date of 25th December 2005.

After picking our way slowly down the craggy hillside to the Skye-like corrie of Glass-Choire Granda, we contoured to the next bealach before cutting across open lochan-studded moorland back to the car. A fine day on a fine hill, and plenty of failed plans to return for!

The next day we took things a bit easier, broke camp, and drove to Sheigra (near Sandwood Bay) for some sea-cliff climbing. A seriously good crag, with dozens on 3 and even 4-star routes at all grades from Diff to E-silly, but despite unbroken sunshine all day, there were no other climbers to be seen, just a handful of people walking their dogs. The need for abseil approaches limited us to just 4 routes.
Tall Paul *** Severe – fantastically exposed with huge holds
Flamingo *** Severe – a superb line up a pink ramp. Carmen led, and I narrowly missed being submerged by the incoming tide.
Shark Crack *** Hard Severe – unfeasibly overhanging for HS but with climbing-wall-sized holds in strange black crystalline rock
Blackjack ** Diff – a bit of a sandbag at the start, but a jugfest above.

Friday was our last day before the long drive south to Glencoe, and on the strength of an excellent forecast, planned on climbing the triple-Corbett mountain of Quinag. Sadly it was not to be, the rain was heavy and the cloud down to road level, but as we drove south conditions improved, and we stopped off to bag the Munro of Ben Wyvis. A newly built path was more like a staircase and took us quickly to 800m, from where a nice grassy ridge led to the summit. Everyone else we met just turned round at this point and retrace their steps, but we continued over a subsidiary top and down a pathless ridge before picking up a forestry track, and back to the car 4 hours after setting off.

We arrived at the hut half an hour before Nigel, and an hour before Margaret, in glorious sunshine – almost the last we saw until the drive home, 3 days later…

Lots more photos here

A Towering Achievement

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Having booked 6 spaces in the CIC hut almost a year in advance, me, Rob, Simon, Carmen and two non-YAC members Andy and Matt headed up to Fort William for the Easter weekend. On the drive up, me, Rob and Matt stopped off to buy the food. Me and Matt were shopping for so long that Rob almost called the police to report two people missing in Tescos. When we eventually arrived at the car, amazement was expressed at how much food we had bought for a weekend away. In particular, our complete disregard for weight (i.e. buying precooked noodles instead of dry ones and one pack of pitta bread per person). Oh well, carrying heavy packs is bound to be good training for something.

Ah, teaWe met up with Andy (who had driven from Portsmouth!) and Simon and Carmen and spent Thursday night in a bunkhouse. Friday morning was very wet and miserable so enthusiasm for setting off was limited. Forecasts and conditions reports were mixed, so I was really having to spread my optimism around generously to keep any hopes of winter climbing alive.  While packing our ridiculously large packs, Matt noticed he'd forgotten his boots – this provided an excellent excuse to go shopping in Fort William and waste a bit of time drinking tea. With Matt £350 worse off, we finally headed for the north face car park and slogged our way up to the CIC hut. The general consensus was that this did permanent damage to all of our shoulders. Also, the large selection of fresh vegetables I had carried up had somehow managed to turn into a putrid juice which infected all of my belongings.

Castle RidgeWith a cat 4 avalanche forecast and everyone we met saying the snow was dangerously wet, we decided to spend the afternoon scrambling up castle ridge. This gave a good couple of hours entertainment and a good exercise in scrambling in the wet in plastic boots. We finished in the snow with a taxing descent over scree back to the halfway lochan. Our hopes for anything wintery were all but dashed at this point and we resolved to go for a "summer" ascent of tower ridge the following day.

 

Tower RidgeWe set off in two teams of three (rob/simon/carmen and me/matt/andy) in the morning and were pleased to note that the snow at the foot of observatory gully had refrozen hard. Also, much of the ridge had a cover of fresh snow. Once we were on the ridge, the sun came out and we were all waxing lyrical about "alpine conditions". At the first steep step, verglas made us put on crampons and move together (the other three took this opportunity to overtake by soloing ahead). From this point on, the whole route was on good snow, with occasional mixed and ice steps. We caught them back up at the little tower where a queue had formed getting past a tricky step.

Tower RidgeFour more pitches beyond this got us to easy but exposed snow leading to the great tower. The eastern traverse looked fantastic, really easy but outrageously exposed. It was matt's lead but I got equivalent excitement going last. By this point it had started snowing and it was getting very cold waiting on belays. We heard some shouts drifting down from the top suggesting the other team were on the final snow slopes. So we were quite relieved to round a corner and find ourselves at tower gap, my lead – argh! I teetered along the narrow snow ridge as far as the final boulder and got in some bomber opposing nuts, then lowered myself into the void. I made the mistake of climbing right down to the top of glover's chimney (the other two just made a large stride over the gap) and spent a good ten minutes trying to work out how to climb back out. Eventually I commited to hanging off a one axe torque and bellyflopped onto the other side (rob later told me it was much easier to bridge up the gap – oh well!) A bit more snow led to the bottom of a small chimney, with an obvious belay at the top – "no more rope" Matt shouted. Bugger! We had to move together for a few metres until I could reach the belay and bring matt and andy over.

Tower RidgeThe end now felt very close, but for the first time we had to move together with no protection and the top out looked interesting. With matt belaying me from a bucket seat, I headed up and placed a small nut in the final wall before thrashing my way up the loose snow slope and cornice. We were all delighted to find ourselves on flat ground again, although we couldn't see much of it as it was almost a whiteout. We began following bearings to get back to the zig zags when we stumbled across a family sitting in the snow in jeans and trainers – "are you mountain rescue?" they said. They tagged along at the back as we continued on our way. We then found another group of walkers – "do you have a gps?" they said "no, but we know where we are". They also tagged on the back. Like the pied piper, we picked up various other stragglers along the way until once we left the cloud we had a group of 15 people following us! A long walk back to the halfway lochan and then back to the hut got us home in time for tea. Tower ridge took us 8.5 hours in total so no records for speed, but it was an absolutely brilliant experience and in excellent condition for a winter ascent.

Tower ScoopThe forecast for the next day was looking perfect for some ice, so me, matt and rob headed up observatory gully for tower scoop, while simon and carmen headed into coire na ciste. Many more people were out on the sunday, queues on indicator wall, parties on smith's route, point 5 and good friday climb as well as lots on tower ridge. After a long slog we arrived at the bottom of tower scoop to find lovely thick plasticy ice. I led the first pitch and finally got to use my petzl ice flutes (which are brilliant). Some rather complicated rope arrangements for our party of three ended up with Rob leading the final steep ice pitch belayed by both me and matt. Me and matt were certain the final ice must have been vertical but rob assured us it was nowhere near.

Tower Gully CorniceWe finished up tower gully, spurred on by the ginormous drooping double cornices. There were some tracks outflanking the cornice on the right, but this looked horrendously exposed. Rob opted for an alternative: smash through the bottom cornice, crawl along for 10 feet between the two and then smash out through the second cornice onto the plateau. I found this mildly terrifying and was very pleased to arrive on the plateau in bright sunshine to join the crowds at the summit.

A quick romp round the carn mor dearg arete led us to the summit of carn mor dearg from where a series of snow patches could be linked to allow a 600m glissade almost back to the door of the hut. All that remained was to repack all the food we hadn't eaten and carry it all back down. My strategy was to minimise the time spent with the pack on my back so I ran from the CIC hut back to the car in 49 minutes (probably doing permanent damage to my knees in the process).

CIC HutHopes of a warm bed in a bunk house were dashed as they were all full, so we wild camped in glen etive. Gluttons for punishment that they are, Rob, Simon and Carmen squeezed in a munro on the monday while me, andy and matt devoured a scottish breakfast.

Overall, a fantastic weekend that defied the apparent lack of winter to give 3 days of adventure. The extension to the CIC hut has turned it into a very comfortable place to stay (though the SMC members we met could barely have been more stinging in their criticism of the workmanship!) Perhaps we'll take a bit less food next time though.

Ice

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Four of us visited Rjukan for a week 7th to 14th March, Rob, Keith, Peri & Guido. On arrival we found that despite excellent ice conditions there had been heavy snowfall across southern Norway this made significant restrictions to what we were able to do during the week.



Many big multipitch climbs were out as they were blanketed in deep snow with access was difficult at best & in some cases dangerous due to avalanche.

This left us with the single pitch venues & areas that with reasonable access.

Despite these conditions we managed to climb on every day of the week & between us we managed several multipitch
classics.

List of icefalls climbed, many of these were wide falls climbed by several variations easier or harder than the official line marked in the guidebook.

As always the grades are just guidelines some routes being easy & others much harder than stated.

Trappfoss WI4 *** Upper Gorge
LP-plata WI3 *** Lower Gorge
Trippel WI3* Lower Gorge
Kaminfossen WI4 *** Lower Gorge
Hjemreisen WI4 *** Lower Gorge
Lillebror WI3 * Lower Gorge
Knerton WI3 * Lower Gorge
Nedre Svingfoss WI3 * Upper Gorge
Svingfoss WI4 * Upper Gorge
Tracy`s eyes WI3 * Upper Gorge
Anakje WI3 * Lead Ozzimosis
Minidisken WI3 Ozzimosis
Ozzimosis WI4 ** Ozzimosis
Klassisk 4 WI4 * Ozzimosis
Juledusj WI4 * Ozzimosis
Vemorkbrufoss Ost WI4 *** Vemork Bridge
Camillas Foss WI3 *** Lower Gorge
Pentium WI2 Lower Gorge
Unknown (RF 0.2) WI2 * Krokan
Unknown (RF 0.5) WI3 Krokan
Unknown (RF 2.8) WI5 Krokan
Kjøkkentrappa WI4 * Krokan
Gaustaspøkelse WI4 *** Krokan
Bullen*** WI2 Krokan
Host WI4 * Vemork Bridge
Knerton * WI4 Lower Gorge
Tungtvann *** WI4 Vemork Bridge
Rjukanfosse *** WI4 Upper Gorge

Hopefully I have not missed any.

All in all a very enjoyable & productive week.

The Raeburn Hut – New Year Meet 2008/9

Friday, January 16th, 2009

The raeburn HutWe did far too much for a detailed report (cue audible sighs of relief all round) so here's a summary. 

There was not much snow about, but temperatures were around freezing all week (usually well below) so the ground was frozen hard, with quite a bit of water ice, especially on paths and in the glens. A high pressure system was sat over us for the whole trip, giving mostly light winds and sunny skies. The main occasional problem was the low cloud that often came in from the east, except when it came from the west, so predicting the best direction to head in was largely down to luck. So we travelled east, west, north, and south, and occasionally stayed close to the hut. Overview on Google Maps.

Beinn a\' Chlachair from Geal CharnSaturday 27/12. Wall-to-wall sunshine for a round of the three Munros south of Loch Laggan – Creag Pitridh, Geal Charn, and Beinn a' Chlachair – with Rob. Good views of the clouds that obscured all hills east of Ben Alder, so a lucky choice of hills. Descended by the rarely visited SW ridge of Beinn a' Chlachair in order to stay in the sun for as long as possible. Route Map.

Ben AlderSunday 28/12. A big day. Cycled 8 miles from Dalwhinnie to Loch Pattack, then abandoned bikes for a walk up Ben Alder (via a scramble on the Long Leachas) and Beinn Bheoil (where we unexpectedly met 2 other walkers), before a long cycle out in the dark. Rather overcast for most of the day with the summits mainly in cloud, which made navigation across the Ben Alder plateau quite interesting. Route Map.

Beinn UdlamainMonday 29/12. A shorter day round the Munros west of Drumochter Pass. In the clag all day, with a bitterly cold wind.  Carmen only needed the first summit (Sgairneach Mhor), and I'd done them all before, but we made more of a day of it by carrying on to the next two (Beinn Udlamain and A' Mharconaich) before leaving Rob to add the fourth (another Geal Charn). Route Map.

The Lairig GhruTuesday 30/01. The forecast was for sun, and it didn't disappoint. We left the Whitewell carpark (near Aviemore) at 8.25, just before sunrise, and walked down Glen Einich with the intention of climbing just Braeriach. Conditions were so good when we reached the plateau that we added on Cairn Toul and Sgor an Lochain Uaine for good measure (narrowly missing heading south towards Monadh Mor by mistake!), finally reaching the summit of Braeriach at sunset. All that remained was a 7.5 mile walk out via the Lairig Ghru, most of it in the dark, arriving at the car at about 7.10. Total distance 22 miles. Arrived back at the hut to find that the water supply (ie burn) had frozen so there were no showers for the rest of the week. Joined the others in the pub. Route Map.

Brocken SpectreWednesday 31/01. Another forecast of sunshine. A 6.30 alarm call got us to Tulloch Station in time for the first train to Corrour, to do the 2 Munros SE of Loch Ossian (Sgor Gaibhre and Carn Dearg). Disappointingly cloudy for the long walk by the loch, with the hills obscured. But we walked up through the clag for the most magnificient inversion I can recall, peaks in all directions emerging from a sea of cloud. And it got even better on the last summit, with a series of Brocken Spectres added to the mix. It was a shame we had to descend back into the gloom to get the last train back. Route Map.

Crossing Markie BurnThursday 01/01. A late start after a late night, we set off to do Geal Charn (the one in the Monadhliath this time). We left Ben's car at Garva Bridge, and started walking from the Spey Dam. We walked up via Glen Markie (interesting river crossing, luckily the ice held!) and descended via Beinn Sgiath and the SW ridge. More clouds today, and no inversion. But we did find ourselves in a gap between layers, with clouds below us, and above us, and a view of cloud-draped summits in between. Route Map.

A\' ChailleachFriday 02/01. Carmen's final Monadhliath Munro, Sgurr Dearg. A cold mist in the valley, but sadly no inversion. However the clouds did clear gradually, giving superb views of the Cairngorms which were completely clear of cloud, and then the hills to the northwest, similarly bathed in sunshine. Our hills took a little longer to clear, but did so in time to decide to extend the day, following the old fence posts for a few miles to add the two easterly Munros (Carn Sgulain and A' Chailleach). Route Map.

Loch QuoichSaturday 03/01. Decided to head northwest to get some of the sunshine they'd been enjoying for most of the week, so drove for 90 minutes to Loch Quoich, just south of Glen Shiel to climb Gleouraich and Spidean Mialach. Unfortunately this seemed to be just about the only part of Scotland that didn't get sunshine that day. But at least the cloud base was above the summits, so we got good views of the sunny hills elsewhere! The view up Loch Quoich towards Sgurr na Ciste is a contender for the finest in the country. Route Map.

Sunday 04/01. Cloudy with light snow. Drove home.

A tiring week, we kept waiting for the weather to break so we could have a rest day, but it stayed stubbornly fine. A total of 19 Munros in 8 days, and I even managed 6 that were new to me!

Lots more photos can be found here.

Prince of Darkness

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Prince of Darkness (POD) 700’+/-, 6 Pitches, 5.10c was one of the classic routes for me to check off in Black Velvet Canyon (BVC) at Red Rocks Conservation Area near Vegas. I prefer trad climbing to sport and had placed less emphasis on POD than other classics like Dream of Wild Turkeys (DOWT), that was of course until I stood beneath this must do line.


Approach to Black Velvet Canyon

On the day we climbed POD, we arrived at the parking area & there were at least 7 other vehicles, so we feared the worst, one team was just setting off & they told us they were going for DOWT the 5.10a line to the right of our route.

Third Pitch of Prince of Darkness

Off they went & we geared up & followed, the approach to BVC takes about an hour & involves a lot of scrambling about &/or a lot of Bushwhacking in a streambed so we were amazed to find when we got to the bottom of the route we were the first ones there.
BVC is regarded as the home of the best cluster of mid grade routes in the Red Rocks area, the guide book will tell you that POD is not the best line on the wall as both its left & right neighbour’s are finer climbs, so on the day we arrived faced with choosing one of the 3, I had no hesitation which route to get on.

Second Pitch of Prince of Darkness

The start of POD and DOWT is an obvious large light colored flake feature that ends at the start of the intense climbing on the solid dark wall above. DOWT takes off on a right angled long crack and POD goes straight up the center of the wall.

1st Pitch- 70’- 5.7/ Head up fast and furious across easy ground staying out of the corner to the right, up and to a small ledge with fancy cold shuts. The bolts to the right relate to DOTW who shares this first pitch.

2nd Pitch- 140’- 5.10b/ Yes you go straight up. Even though the 6th pitch is rated at a higher grade, this is the crux of the climb as it never lets up. In reality, pitches 2, 3, 5 and 6 are all sustained and challenging for their respective grades. Pitches 3 and 5 require more gear placement. Follow bolts straight up maybe placing a piece or two along the way.

3rd Pitch- 130’- 5.10a/ the 3rd and 5th pitches require more gear placements then the other four. This is the third hardest lead of the route.

4th Pitch- 130’- 5.9/ this is the easiest pitch of the sustained climbing.

5th Pitch- 140’- 5.10a/ this is the 2nd easiest pitch of the sustained climbing and again offers some nice gear placements
In a thin seam

6th Pitch- 100’- 5.10c/ The crux move of this pitch and perhaps the route is the vertical varnished slab of to the left of a small finger crack through three bolts to easier ground. The route continues more like 5.9-5.10a through more bolts slanting right towards the shared station with DOWT.

A view across at the Turkeys

Descent is by 6 Rappels it’s quite easy to get the ropes back as there is very little for them to catch on.

While we had been on the climb several other parties had arrived & gone onto various climbs, none had followed us, the worrying thing was that none of the other teams were nearing the top of their respective climbs. By the time we had bushwhacked our way back to the car it was quite late & darkness caught us before we got back to Las Vegas maybe a 15 mile drive. I would not of liked to be any of the other parties in the canyon that day.

POD was one of the highlights of our US road trip, it was my choice of route & Chuck declined to lead any of the pitches so I was very pleased with the way it went. Grade I would grade POD solid E3 5c in English money, a very big undertaking.

On the road

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

On the Road Oct/Nov 2008

 

The objective of this 4000 mile road trip round the USA was to try and climb or walk in every state we visited, a journey  that would hopefully take us through Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Illinois & Kansas.

The trip was generally very successful but we made a few mistakes had some bad luck mixed in with the good so here is how it went.

Arkansas

We drove to Arkansas from our base in  St Louis, about 300 miles, arriving early afternoon & eager to get onto the rock. Horseshoe Canyon Ranch is a very new sandstone sport climbing area & still being developed all routes are post 2002.

        One of the short hiking trails in Bryce Canyon Utah

On arrival we found that there was a Rocktoberfest event on that would bring local climbers in by the hordes. So we were soon joined by hundreds of college kids intent on partying, it was going to be a couple of noisy nights.

Crowded alongside the Blondes & Brunettes toproping we fair rattled thro the routes over the 3 day period managing to complete 24 routes between 5.8 & 5.11a. Joking apart the kids were great fun & not a bit of bother.

Oklahoma

We are now on route 66 luckily a friend had lent us a guidebook for OK so we overnighted at the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge regarded as a mecca for climbers & climbed at a Granite crag called the Narrows on the first day this gave superb crack & face climbing. We managed 6 routes ranging from 5.6 to 5.10d.

   Chuck leading Dihedral 5.6 (severe) in the Narrows-Wichita Mountains-Oklahoma

The 2nd day we moved onto Quartz Mountain approx 45 min from Wichita to another superb granite venue. The climbs are mixed trad with minimal bolts, so the climbs here are well run out & necky. The big problem we had here was that we could not do the best routes because we were using the standard US single rope method, this system really sucks, needless to say we started to look for a pair of 8.5mm ropes after today.

On the day we climbed 5 routes between 5.8 & 5.10d.

New Mexico

There is loads of climbing in New Mexico but we were depending on a laptop to get access, not having a working computer was probably the biggest mistake we made, it restricted our climbing & cost us a lot of time & dollars buying guides.

     We did no climbing in New Mexico as we were not able to locate any of the climbing areas-still on route 66 the scenery starts to get very impressive. 

  Mori Mori roof a 5.9 (E15b) at Potash Road nr Moab Utah

Arizona

Without the Laptop we had to get to a major town & buy a guidebook, so we drove to Flagstaff, a great little spot.

The locals could not do enough to help us & directed us to a limestone venue called the Pit aka Petit Verdon, 7 miles from the town centre.

Here we found fantastic climbing on very steep pocketed walls, some may call them roofs-Good training for the main wall at Leeds.

   Fold out 5.8 (Hvs) at Necromancer in Ice Box Canyon Nevada

Once again we found friendly natives & even managed to do the 2nd ascent of a new route bolted on the day, the first ascentionist wanted a confirmation of the grade.

 The grades were quite tough here we did 5 routes between 5.10b & 5.10d.

That night we drove 80 mls to the Grand Canyon, with rooms at 200 dollars we slept in the car at 9000ft we woke to find frost coating the windows inside the car

  Rappelling of the excellent Dark Shadows in Pine Tree Canyon Nevada

The next day we set of on a walk down the Bright Angel Trail our intention was to have an easy day but we bumped into a couple of girls who talked us into going down Bright Angel to the river & linking up with the Kabaib trail to walk out.

They neglected to say there was no water on the way out so we had a rough time getting back out.

Nevada

Home of the famous Red Rocks a couple of miles from the outskirts of the infamous Los Vegas.

Red Rocks is truly a world class venue up there with Chamonix, Yosemite, Verdon, El Dorado Springs Canyon etc it has routes of all grades & all sizes.

   Chicken Eruptus a 3*** 5.10c (E3) at Ragged Edge Willow Springs Nevada

We spent 8 days climbing here did 24 routes between 5.6 & 5.11a my favorite was a rout called Prince of Darkness in Black Velvet Canyon, a six pitch route graded 5.10c translated as solid E3 5c in English money. The route went directly up the most difficult line on the wall giving sustained face climbing with hanging belays. It is known as the Prince of Footpain by the locals.

Utah

After the excess’s of Los Vegas we leave route 66 go to the restrictions of Mormon Utah First stop Zion National Park. This is a beautiful National Park complete with shuttle services & Disney like trappings. The climbing is geared towards big walls, we did not have the gear for this so we had to make do with the smaller climbs.

   Ashgar Command a 2 pitch route 5.7 & 5.9 in Zion Nat park Utah

The best route we did was called Ashgar Command a superb 2 pitcher the rest were ok just but it was all a bit disappointing. We did 4 routes in our 2 days here. Grades between 5.7 & 5.9.

On the way out of the park it rained which gave us opportunity to take some awesome photos using the stormy sky as a backdrop.

The next stop was Bryce Canyon once again superb stormy photos.

    Amazing rock formations in Zion Nat park Utah

The next climbing stop in Utah was Moab which is a bit wacky like a micro version of Boulder.

We had one days climbing here at the Potash road area, where we climbed 6 routes between 5.8 & 5.10b one outstanding name here Lucy in the sky with Potash 5.10b love it. Our main problem here was lack of gear to do the big crack lines, you need to beg, borrow, buy or otherwise obtain as many cams as possible in this venue.

Colorado

Running ahead of predicted 9 inch of snow in the mountains we decided to have a pit stop ascent of Bastille Crack in El Dorado Springs Canyon another world class venue.

   First pitch of Bastille Crack one of the new top 50 climbs in North America-El Dorado Springs Canyon Colorado.

This is one of the routes on the new proposed list of top 50 routes in North America it’s a 4/5 pitch 5.7 that never eases up on you. While I was on it my eyes were drawn up to another top 50 route across the canyon the Naked Edge is a 6 pitch 5.11 stacked ontop ot a 7 pitch 5.8.  I was lucky enouth to have climbed the route 18 years ago when I was in my prime. I still remember the epic descent in a torrential thunder storm, very scary.

Illinois

We visited 2 areas in Illinois Jackson Falls & Cedar Bluff, this is a relatively little known outside Illinois, its totally underrated, Jackson Falls alone probably has twice as much climbing on it as Stanage & its much higher.

On my last day in the US we visited Cedar Bluff with a team of locals, they pushed me a little & after ‘sending’ a 5.11a I got talked into doing a 5.12a new territory for me, I did not get the route clean having one fall but would have been confident of getting the redpoint on the next visit.

In the 2 visits to this area we did 24 routes grades between 5.7 & 5.12a.

The trip stats

Over 5000 miles traveling through 10 states, we did 115 routes & 150 pitch’s the easiest route was 5.6 & the hardest was 5.12a the longest route was 10 pitches. We visited & hiked round 11National or state parks & we managed to walk or climb in 7 of the 10 states visited.

One point I think is worth mentioning is that everywhere we went we were welcomed  and assisted by the local climbing community, many people went out of their way to help us on our travels, big thanx to all.

Birthdays, Beaches, Bolts and Bends

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Corsica has plenty of all of the latter and Tracy had one of the former. Joining Tracy in her celebrations Dan, Jules, Pete Bradshaw and I started the holiday in a south London curry house and followed by cake and champers and bed by 10! Leaving Dan behind at stupid o'clock we set off for Gatwick and a 2hr sleep flight. Our accommodation was a fine newish house in the Haute Corse, a small village Veraco, where we met the landlord in the Bar Central and chilled. Being up high meant we were going to have to drive up and down quite a few times and whilst central, may not be the best place to base yourself if you want to get about.

Famous for the GR20 – one of the best and toughest long distance walks through spectacular mountains, Corsica is a real playground for the active person. We only walked a tiny bit of the trail but its now on the tick list. A week is nowhere near enough time to explore all that is to be offered but as our aim was a bit of all sorts and a chilled holiday. Bolt clipping (there are some awesome trad alpine style routes on offer but too much hassle for a relaxed holiday) Via Feratta and beaches were our stated aims.

Climbing is a mix of limestone and mostly granite, no holds and weird holes – strange combination. Well bolted and masses of easy (F4, F5 even some F3) routes to have a pop at in all manner of locations. We climbed at the Col de Bevalla at 1400m and on the beach itself. Mostly the routes were quite short and in Sept not too busy. We managed a couple of multipitch – which were really good.

There are 5 Via Ferrata (VF) listed the island, though we couldn't buy the guide on the island (not for want of trying).

We were told that they are all private (ie cost money) and have to hire their kit. These VF are not like the traditional routes through the mountains, they are designed activities in 'adventure parks ' which means they lack some character but are often quite hairy scary. We managed to get on one reckoned to be amongst the best in France, and it was definitely fun, more so as we failed to find anyone to pay 🙂 Great fun but don't bother going to Corsica just to do these and expect to pay 20..30 euros for the pleasure.

One of the great pleasures in going to the med in Sept is not only have the Euros gone home from their holidays but the sun has done its job on the Med and its warm enough for even Jules to swim. With virtually no industry there is little pollution and beaches range from excellent sand to pebbles – usually very clean and always safe. Great way to relax after the driving about, take a snorkel! We'd hoped to get a few dips in some stream pools of which there are many excellent ones but this time of year you need full sun to warm you up when getting out, midday is better but we never made that. Still next time..

 

Far too many pictures on Rob's Pictures Site