Posts Tagged ‘classic’

Pick a grade, any grade…

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

As a club we've not had a good success rate in terms of the weather for our recent trips to Northumberland, and perhaps because of this it was a sadly depleted group of 2 who made it to Bellingham last weekend. Either that, or everyone wanted to stay at home and watch the foopball.

For once, the weekend was forecast to be warm and sunny, but form seemed to have reasserted itself when Saturday dawned overcast and windy with occasional drizzle. Not to be deterred by a bit of discomfort, we headed for Selby's Cove, which the guidebook said was sheltered; also it faced west, which we hoped would offer some protection from the cold north wind. Some protection was indeed given, though not quite enough, and we spent most of the day climbing in more clothes than we wore in the depths of winter.

It's not a bad little crag, but judging by the vegetation, not climbed on that much. The main routes were clean enough though. We started with The Corner (Severe ***), Carmen kindly offering me the lead when she saw how steep it was. An excellent route, which would be top end HS anywhere other than Northumberland. Next Carmen led The Arete, a nice Diff (more like boldish VDiff), then it was my turn again with Lichen Wall, allegedly VDiff. This turned out to involve about 5m of unprotected climbing up a slightly overhanging wall on ever-shrinking holds, and by the line described in the book would be at least VS 4b, probably harder. I took a line slightly further left, which was less steep, with bigger holds, and allowed some side runners to be placed, but still felt VS 4b. Finally, I led Holly Tree Wall (Severe *), which would be a good route (with a hard jamming start, maybe S 4c) if it weren't for the fact that the ledge at the top had been recently vacated by nesting ravens, so the rock was mainly white and smelly.

The only remaining routes were a 3 pitch Severe traverse (which we didn't fancy as the 'best' pitch led through the deepest section of guano), or were VS and above, which given the harsh grading we didn't fancy risking. But by now the sun was out, so we stopped off at Simonside North on the walk back. Carmen led Innominate Crack (VDiff **) a nice route and amazingly the grade was right. After I'd spent an age repeatedly failing to work out the crux move of Flake Corner (MVS 4c*) before retreating ignominiously, we finished with a quick ascent of Great Chimney, a brilliant 3-star Diff.

Sunday's weather was much better – bright sun with just enough breeze to keep the midges off, so we headed for Crag Lough, a fine crag on the Whin Sill buttresses immediately below Hadrian's Wall. Despite the weather, the fantastic views, and the large number of multi-starred routes at VS and below, we had the entire crag to ourselves until about 5pm when 2 other pairs arrived. We'd hopped to have a look at the classic HS's of Main Wall and Great Chimney, but a nesting kestrel made it clear that our presence wasn't welcome, so we stayed well clear of that part of the cliff!

Once again the guidebook grades bore little resemblance to the actual difficulty. Routes climbed:
– Spuggie's Gully (VDiff **). A fine lead by Carmen up steeper-than-they-looked cracks, passing nesting jackdaws (sorry) on the way.
– Raven's Tower (MVS 4b ***). My lead, that rarest of beasts an overgraded Northumbrian route. It deserved all of its stars though.
– Tarzan's Mate (VDiff **). Carmen again, and a return to reliable Northumberland sandbaggery. Probably (H)S 4b, but at least the gear was good.
– Hadrian's Buttress (Severe ***). This one took a while! I spent ages working out how to leave the ground, and then higher up I met another impasse that took another aeon to solve. A classic route, but definitely VS 4c!

Finally we wandered along to Peel Crag, a continuation of Crag Lough, where I led Sunset (MS ***). I'd already done this on our previous visit (7 years ago!), and it was just as good as I remembered it – thoroughly recommended to anyone, whatever grade you climb at (unless it's Mild Severe or below, as this one is really a tricky severe, especially the start).

A fantastic weekend – for those who stayed at home, I hope the England match was half as good!

More photos here.

A last taste of winter?

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

With a thaw threatened for the weekend, we had one last chance to take advantage of the superb early winter conditions, so Carmen and I took Thursday off and headed for the Lake District after work on Wednesday. The A66 was shut (and had been since Saturday) so we took the long way round to Borrowdale, over 4 hours, via A59, A65, and M6, with a short detour to Penrith chippy.

When I'd phoned earlier that day to ask if the Rosthwaite campsite was open, the owners just laughed, I can't think why. All the facilities were frozen of course, but they let us pitch the tent free of charge (good site, must go back in the summer). It snowed lightly all night, and was still snowing when we got up, so we didn't hang around too long and were soon wading knee-deep snow towards the Raven Crag – home of the summer classic Corvus, and the winter classic Raven Crag Gully, our chosen route. It's a route that comes into condition more often than you might think for a crag at such low altitude, but more often than not has little ice and is therefore correspondingly harder. This year, it's been in what must have been 'normal' condition in years gone by!

The advantage of breaking trail was that it meant we were first on the route for a change. Another pair arrived as Carmen was starting the first pitch, and as I led the second another 6 turned up, so we'd timed it well!

There was a lot more ice than I've seen in most recent photos of the route, we'd found it in excellent condition – which had the advantage of breaking the grade closer to 3 than the 5 threatened in the guidebook for lean conditions.

Pitch 1, an easy warm-up on cruddy ice and powder-covered rock, led to the first main pitch, up a steep icy ramp. The next pitch repaid all the time spent thrutching in gritstone, as a wide icy offwidth led to a splendid ice chimney. Next was the Cave Pitch, described in Cold Climbs with mitts removed to make use of the rock holds, but today covered in thick ice, making for a fine steep pitch, though rather unnerving as the ice wasn't quite thick enough to take screws until after the hard bit!

After bringing Carmen up with the sort of belay best described as 'optimistic', she led the next pitch – a walk up snow to the foot of the final icefall. She obviously felt it wasn't hard enough, so continued up steep snow to a small ice cave part way up the pitch. The icefall pitch is supposed to be the crux, and is often described as the most beautiful in the Lake District. In the conditions we found, it was actually the easiest of the harder pitches, with just a short but well-protected hard step to get over the final lip. And the icicles that presumably contribute to its fabled beauty were long gone, victim to the countless climbers passing by over the last few weeks.

As I topped out, the light snow that had been falling all day, turned briefly to rain before stopping. The icicles on the sides of the gully were dripping. The thaw had begun. A quick descent through wet snow brought us back to the valley, where most of the previous night's snow has already gone, to leave green fields. As we drove off, it started to rain.

Winter's end?

Let's hope not. There's plenty of snow left higher up, waiting for the next freeze. And in any case, we've been spoiled this year – for the past few years (including the excellent ones of 2005 and 2006) winter didn't get properly under way until the end of February!

More photos here.